Author: Serkadis

  • Game theory shows evolution follows most successful member




    Game theory has become a useful way to evaluate strategies for survival in evolution scenarios. In a new study, scientists set up a model where human players engage with each other and compete for resources, and can change their strategies for doing so in various ways. They found that as more rounds of the game were played, the human players developed a tendency to imitate the best player, causing the players as a group to tend to play the game the same way. This implies that in evolution, as one member of a species enjoys more and more success, its methods become hard to ignore for the others, which will eventually follow its lead.

    Evolution is a popular application of game theory, in particular to see how trends and strategies for survival spread among a group. In this situation, survival isn’t based on an absolute indicator of fitness, but instead on evaluating how others in the same community are faring based on their actions. Because of this, it is important to figure out how certain survival strategies come to be adopted. One popular method of representing this scenario is with a situation called “the prisoner’s dilemma.”

    Read the rest of this article...


    Buy This Item: [Click here to buy this item]

    Article

  • GHANA: Quietly Extending Options to Women

    By Elana Roth* ACCRA, Jan 19 (IPS) Juliana Kweais has a small scar on her bottom lip, from the first time she witnessed an abortion. The sharp blow to her mouth was delivered by her grandmother, after the then-13-year-old Kweais had asked why her auntie had given "birth" to a bloody sack.

    Kweais's eyes glaze over as she recalls that painful night, almost 20 years ago. Her aunt had been unmarried, and their family too poor to support another child.

    By swallowing a herbal medicine of ground stones, and abrototo, pepre, and hentea – leaves mostly found in the forests of rural Ghana – her aunt went into labour, she recalled.

    Non-medical abortions are frequent in Ghana, where abortion is illegal. Yet, as more people witness the suffering and deaths of women who've attempted unsafe abortions, more international organisations are trying to provide birth control, or to exploit legal loopholes to carry out abortions.

    

In Ghana, abortions are rarely permitted, and only in situations of rape, incest, or risk to the life of the mother or child.

    Rather than pressure the government to legalise abortion, groups of health experts are working toward making medical abortion available to Ghanaian women in various circumstances that could allow the government to look the other way.

    Groups such as Marie Stopes International, a UK-based reproductive health care organisation, run several maternal health clinics, charging little or nothing to women here.

    "The last thing vulnerable women need is picketers outside clinics holding anti-abortion signs," said director Faustina Fynn-Nyame.

    A clause in the law that allows abortions in cases where childbirth might cause "injury to (the mother's) physical or mental health," gives such clinics an opportunity to provide safer medical abortion services in circumstances where having a child could cause mental anguish.

    But government officials have warned that only physicians, not advocates, will be allowed to decide what constitutes "anguish."

    Information Minister Zita Okaikoi said in an interview that "there should be no abortion because a girl wants to finish her education. Abortion is not legal, and we are by no means changing it." Girls have been known to drop out of school if they get pregnant.

    Marie Stopes's operations manager, Ebenezer Aryee, said "ignorance and lack of resources" fuel the unsafe abortions. The organisation is tackling this, he said, by providing inexpensive family planning – and medical abortions when necessary. The procedure costs 25 dollars. Condoms are free at the clinic, and birth control pills and similar shots cost only 35 cents.

    Ghana has a high maternal mortality rate, a measure that reflects a woman's risk of dying during pregnancy, childbirth or a month afterward.

    There were 560 maternal deaths per every 100,000 live births in 2008 – a rate slightly better than the sub-Saharan average of 900 per 100,000 live births, but more than 50 times higher than in the United States, where the rate is 11 deaths per every 100,000 births, according to World Health Organisation data.

    Ghana's health minister, Major Courage Quashigah, has declared maternal mortality a national emergency. While the exact number of deaths resulting from unsafe abortions is disputed, some advocates believe it is responsible for 20 to 30 percent of maternal deaths here.

    "Even one maternal death is unacceptable, if that women was your mother or sister," said Vice President John Dramani Mahama, after a screening of a reproductive health documentary here in the summer of 2009.

    When pressed on the idea that safe abortions should be more widely available, he said, "I believe it is important to create avenues for those who want it to get it."

    Activists aren't optimistic that his sentiments will translate into a change in the law. And they aren't pressing for it, either. But they do want the law amended so that doctors who perform abortions will be protected from potential prosecution. Many doctors fear severe punishment, such as life in prison, if a procedure injures or kills a patient.

    Many women say the few doctors who would quietly perform an abortion charge as much as $500 – several months' salary for many Ghanaians. Others hesitate due to their religious beliefs.

    Despite the traumatic incident she experienced as a teenager, Kweais, now 31, claims she has had 10 non-medical abortions herself, by using various concoctions. She said she kept becoming pregnant by an abusive boyfriend she was trying to leave.

    "I feared going to the hospital," she said. "That they would say 'no', and then arrest me."

    *Special to IPS from NYU Livewire

  • GHANA: Quietly Extending Choice to Women

    By Elana Roth* ACCRA, Jan 19 (IPS) Juliana Kweais has a small scar on her bottom lip, from the first time she witnessed an abortion. The sharp blow to her mouth was delivered by her grandmother, after the then-13-year-old Kweais had asked why her auntie had given "birth" to a bloody sack.

    Kweais's eyes glaze over as she recalls that painful night, almost 20 years ago. Her aunt had been unmarried, and their family too poor to support another child.

    By swallowing a herbal medicine of ground stones, and abrototo, pepre, and hentea – leaves mostly found in the forests of rural Ghana – her aunt went into labour, she recalled.

    Non-medical abortions are frequent in Ghana, where abortion is illegal. Yet, as more people witness the suffering and deaths of women who've attempted unsafe abortions, more international organisations are trying to provide birth control, or to exploit legal loopholes to carry out abortions.

    

In Ghana, abortions are rarely permitted, and only in situations of rape, incest, or risk to the life of the mother or child.

    Rather than pressure the government to legalise abortion, groups of health experts are working toward making medical abortion available to Ghanaian women in various circumstances that could allow the government to look the other way.

    Groups such as Marie Stopes International, a UK-based reproductive health care organisation, run several maternal health clinics, charging little or nothing to women here.

    "The last thing vulnerable women need is picketers outside clinics holding anti-abortion signs," said director Faustina Fynn-Nyame.

    A clause in the law that allows abortions in cases where childbirth might cause "injury to (the mother's) physical or mental health," gives such clinics an opportunity to provide safer medical abortion services in circumstances where having a child could cause mental anguish.

    But government officials have warned that only physicians, not advocates, will be allowed to decide what constitutes "anguish."

    Information Minister Zita Okaikoi said in an interview that "there should be no abortion because a girl wants to finish her education. Abortion is not legal, and we are by no means changing it." Girls have been known to drop out of school if they get pregnant.

    Marie Stopes's operations manager, Ebenezer Aryee, said "ignorance and lack of resources" fuel the unsafe abortions. The organisation is tackling this, he said, by providing inexpensive family planning – and medical abortions when necessary. The procedure costs 25 dollars. Condoms are free at the clinic, and birth control pills and similar shots cost only 35 cents.

    Ghana has a high maternal mortality rate, a measure that reflects a woman's risk of dying during pregnancy, childbirth or a month afterward.

    There were 560 maternal deaths per every 100,000 live births in 2008 – a rate slightly better than the sub-Saharan average of 900 per 100,000 live births, but more than 50 times higher than in the United States, where the rate is 11 deaths per every 100,000 births, according to World Health Organisation data.

    Ghana's health minister, Major Courage Quashigah, has declared maternal mortality a national emergency. While the exact number of deaths resulting from unsafe abortions is disputed, some advocates believe it is responsible for 20 to 30 percent of maternal deaths here.

    "Even one maternal death is unacceptable, if that women was your mother or sister," said Vice President John Dramani Mahama, after a screening of a reproductive health documentary here in the summer of 2009.

    When pressed on the idea that safe abortions should be more widely available, he said, "I believe it is important to create avenues for those who want it to get it."

    Activists aren't optimistic that his sentiments will translate into a change in the law. And they aren't pressing for it, either. But they do want the law amended so that doctors who perform abortions will be protected from potential prosecution. Many doctors fear severe punishment, such as life in prison, if a procedure injures or kills a patient.

    Many women say the few doctors who would quietly perform an abortion charge as much as $500 – several months' salary for many Ghanaians. Others hesitate due to their religious beliefs.

    Despite the traumatic incident she experienced as a teenager, Kweais, now 31, claims she has had 10 non-medical abortions herself, by using various concoctions. She said she kept becoming pregnant by an abusive boyfriend she was trying to leave.

    "I feared going to the hospital," she said. "That they would say 'no', and then arrest me."

    *Special to IPS from NYU Livewire

  • Sears Tower Glass Platform

    Chicago, Illinois | Commercial Curiosities

    The tallest building in North America provides an unrivaled view of a cityscape, all from the comfort of being suspended 1,353 feet in the air. The Sears Tower ‘Ledge’ has walls, floors, and ceilings made of glass, jutting out from the building to give visitors a unique and vertigo worthy view of Chicago’s architectural landscape.

    The Sears Tower is the third tallest building in the world; 110 stories constitute 1,450 feet, making it the tallest building in the Western Hemisphere. The glass boxes, termed ‘the Ledges’, were opened to the public July 2, 2009. Four 10 foot by 10 foot compartments protrude 4.3 feet from the building’s 103rd floor observation room, the Skydeck.

    With three layers of glass totaling one and a half inches thick, each platform can support up to 5 tons. A completely transparent three sides, top, and bottom designed to generate the sensation of hovering over Chicago do just that, as the box extends far enough for one row of visitors to stand suspended at a time. A clear day presents a view of up to 50 miles and four states.

    Structural glass design experts of Halcrow Yolles took the original architectural plans (firm Skidmore, Owings and Merril) a step further, from the concept of devising a retractable structure for easy cleaning, to detailing each box to have near-invisible structural support. All the side and bottom perimeter steel was removed, completing the floating on air appearance.

    The idea for the Ledges supposedly originated from the constant cleaning workers had to do on the Skydeck’s windows. Tourists every day would press their foreheads against the glass, attempting to peer down at the city, leaving smudges that were becoming tiring to clean. Now the staff will need to clean the occasional footprint left by fearless children, or handprints from nervous guests ensuring the walls are still there.

    Other changes for the Sears Tower includes a name change to the Willis Towers, gone into effect the summer of 2009. Additionally, officials announced a $350 million 5-year green renovation plan that includes the installation of wind turbines, roof gardens, and solar panels.

  • DS homebrew – S8DS v0.7

    Homebrew coder FluBBa has recently released a new version of S8DS, a SEGA Master System/Game Gear/SG-1000 emulator for the Nintendo DS. The latest update of the emulator is a bug fix release.
     
     
    Download: S8DS

  • Ibirapuera ganhará nova iluminação (fiação aterrada)

    Ibirapuera ganhará nova iluminação
    Obras no parque tiveram início ontem; luzes vão ser temáticas em diferentes pontos

    ELVIS PEREIRA, [email protected]

    A AES Eletropaulo iniciou ontem as escavações que vão alterar a rede elétrica e a iluminação do Parque do Ibirapuera, na zona sul, até agosto. A ideia é remover os 248 postes e os 4,7 km de fios sustentados por eles e levar todo o sistema para dutos instalados sob a terra. A iluminação também sofrerá alterações, com postes mais baixos e lâmpadas especiais na Oca, na Marquise e no Planetário.

    A remoção da rede elétrica aérea do Ibirapuera vinha sendo discutida desde 2006, segundo o administrador do parque, Heraldo Guiaro, por dois motivos: aumentar a segurança e melhorar a paisagem. “À medida que há 15.625 árvores aqui, é necessário se manter sempre um trabalho de poda e de limpeza nas áreas por onde passam os fios de alta tensão”. O serviço evita que os galhos atinjam a rede, danificando-a e interrompendo o fornecimento de energia.

    Tornar toda a rede subterrânea custará R$ 3,7 milhões. O montante será desembolsado pela AES Eletropaulo como parte do termo de ajustamento de conduta firmado com a Prefeitura de São Paulo. O governo municipal negociou o pagamento de uma dívida de R$ 344,2 milhões com a empresa. O acordo estabeleceu que a AES Eletropaulo invista metade dessa cifra em obras para o município. E a primeira da lista foi o Parque do Ibirapuera.

    A escolha foi feita baseada no impacto simbólico da obra e da viabilidade técnica. “A retirada da rede vai dar um impacto bem visual para os frequentadores”, explicou o diretor de operações da AES Eletropaulo, Roberto Mário Di Naro. “E não vai haver nenhum impacto com o trânsito, vamos poder trabalhar à noite porque não vai haver problema de ruído, de segurança”, acrescentou.

    Inicialmente, a empresa construirá toda a rede subterrânea. Ela terá 3 km de extensão, 1,7 km a menos em relação à atual. “Ele vai encolher, mas atenderá os mesmos pontos”, ressaltou Di Naro. Formarão o sistema de seis a oito dutos, nos quais percorrerão cabos com tensão de 15 mil volts.

    Tanto o administrador do parque quanto o diretor da AES Eletropaulo asseguram que as obras não vão interferir na rotina dos frequentadores. Os locais afetados pelas escavações serão cercados com tapumes, para restringir o acesso. A troca da fonte de abastecimento será efetuada gradativamente, para que não haja cortes no fornecimento. Tudo deve estar pronto de seis a oito meses.

    Segundo Di Naro, a rede subterrânea é mais segura por não correr o risco de ser atingida por raios ou em razão de danos provocados pelas chuvas. “Em contrapartida, o nosso sistema subterrâneo é muito complexo. Temos interferência de água, por exemplo, mas a rede está preparada”.

    A iluminação do parque também deverá ser modernizada. O diretor técnico do Departamento de Iluminação Pública, Paulo Candura, disse que o projeto deve ser concluído dentro de 90 dias. Uma das principais mudanças previstas é a instalação de postes de 5 a 7 metros de altura, em substituição aos de 10 a 20 metros existentes atualmente. “Hoje os postes são muito altos e iluminam as copas das árvores”, afirma.

    “Vamos iluminar toda as vias asfaltadas do parque e as de terra por onde as pessoas geralmente andam”, afirmou Candura. A iluminação da pista de cooper deverá ser submetida a ajustes. Outra ideia é adotar esquemas de luzes temáticas. “O Planetário, por exemplo, terá uma iluminação a LED”, diz. Também deverão ganhar luzes especiais a Oca, o prédio da Bienal e a marquise. “Quando você estiver num avião passando por São Paulo será possível ver o desenho da marquise.”

    NOVIDADES

    R$ 3,7 mi
    É O VALOR
    orçado para enterrar a rede elétrica do Parque do Ibirapuera

    248
    POSTES
    deverão ser removidos de toda a área

    8
    MESES
    é prazo máximo estimado para a conclusão da obra

    http://www.jt.com.br/editorias/2010/…100119.9.1.xml

  • Demerol Overdose Nearly Killed Heidi Montag

    Heidi’s trip to the Build-A-Bitch Workshop almost turned fatal…. Certified lunatic Heidi Montag says her decision to undergo 10 plastic surgery procedures in one day last November nearly killed her. The Hills starlet came close to death after she was given an overdose of Demerol following one of nearly a dozen procedures to nip, tuck, and stuff every inch of her frame. Perhaps not suprisingly, the 23-year-old newlywed says she’d do it all again….but she’s not a plastic surgery addict. Honest!

    “I almost died after my procedure,” Heidi told Access Hollywood correspondent Billy Bush on Monday. “I had too much Demerol like Michael Jackson did and my breathing was five breaths per minute which is like almost dead. [I was] in an aftercare center, there were nurses that were supposed to be tending to me at all times.”

    “So thank God, Charles, one of my security guys used to be an EMT, and he was timing my breath on his watch and he called the nurses and they had to put oxygen on my face and called my plastic surgeon to come in for an emergency. So, it was a very traumatic experience for me.”

    Nowadays, Heidi looks more like a European hooker than one-half of “Speidi,” the terrible twosome we all know and loathe. Despite her alleged brush with death, the blonde says she is now starting to regain all of the movement in her face and can’t wait to inflate her DDD bosom to an H. The aspiring singer plays to unveil her new body on the pages of an upcoming issue of Playboy.

    For Heidi’s next cosmetic procedure, she may want to have her foot removed from her mouth.


  • Wearing your beats on your wrist drum machine

    DSC01958I suspect this would have been the watch that Herbie Hancock wore when he made his famous “Rockit” video. Back in the early 1980’s, Seiko was trying to put everything from TV’s to radio’s into watches, and along with those ill advised choices, they also made the drum machine watch. Ugly and over priced, the watch never caught on with the public.

    Now, to be fair, the technology was pretty advanced. You’ve got a little drum machine with a built in speaker, six drum patterns, and a metronome mode. It could even tell the time and had a built in alarm!

    We never saw them in the US, but you can find them on Ebay now. Just expect to spend some serious cash for a bit of nostalgia.

    [via Retrothing]


    Buy This Item: [Click here to buy this item]

    Read Original Article

  • Test your bachelor possibility

    Actually, the reason to become a bachelor is very confusion. You maybe own confidence, good job, and even rich. But the reason is why?
    Here we have a test, to see if you have the possibility to be a bachelor or not?

    One day when you see a temple on the street, your first Intuition is what?

    A. Very ornate golden temple
    B. A very solemn temple
    C. Only one monk, shabby temple
    D. Legacy of ancient monuments

    To know the answer

  • Today’s lesson: Know your opponent

    225px-Rasmus_Lerdorf_croppedI’m a big believer in open source development. The bazaar development model allows quality ideas to float to the top, albeit in sometimes contentious ways. The Linux kernel, the Apache httpd web server, and the PHP programming language are all developed in the open, and anyone is allowed to participate in their development. Filing bug reports is as important as writing the actual code. It helps, though, to have some sense of understanding of who you might be dealing with when you engage in a pissing match in a bug report.

    PHP bug #50696 seems fairly straightforward: some PHP internals were changed, which changed the way the number_format function works. The person who submitted the bug report raises some legitimate concern about this behavior change. What follows is a rather funny exchange between the original bug reporter and the PHP developer who took on the bug. In this case, it was Rasmus Lerdorf, the guy who invented PHP to begin with.

    Oh how I wish I had someone to escalate to.

    Hopefully you’ve had a better day than either of these two!


    Buy This Item: [Click here to buy this item]

    Read Original Article

  • NYC Seed Launches Summer Incubator for Startups

    nycseed_newfund.jpgEarly-stage New York City startups are about to get some tender loving care and it’s got nothing to do with Valentine’s Day. As highlighted in Jason Calacanis’ blog seed-stage investment group NYC Seed just launched an eight week incubator program where ten lucky companies will gain from startup mentorship, much-needed space and modest funding.

    Sponsor

    Led by NYC Seed’s Managing Director Owen Davis, NYC Seedstart is a joint effort between NYC Seed, Contour Venture Partners, IA Ventures, Polaris Ventures and RR Ventures.

    NYC_seed_jan10.jpgWhen asked why he’d start an incubator in New York, Davis replied, “We see the same [gap for smaller investment opportunities] in New York as they do in Boulder or the Valley. It’s hard for seed stage companies to raise the amounts they need. We’re trying to solve that and make them more fundable in the process.”

    Similar to the TechStars and YCombinator models, in exchange for 5% equity incubator program participants receive $20,000 dollars in funding as well as free office space and mentorship. Some of the program’s mentors include Peekfounder Amol Sarva and Ogilvy Entertainment president Doug Scott. The program will only accept teams of two or more who live in New York or are willing to move to New York. Applications are due by February 28, 2010 and those interested can apply here for a spot in the program.

    Discuss


    Buy This Item: [Click here to buy this item]

    Read Original Article

  • IBM vs. Microsoft: Will the Open Web Change the Game?

    Web 2.0 Camera Phone shotAt Lotusphere this year, the contrast between IBM and Microsoft could not be more distinct.

    IBM is making it clear it is banking on a strategy that embraces a loosely coupled framework – a foundation based upon principles that are often discussed in the context of the open Web. For instance, as we mentioned yesterday, xPages, HTML5 and RESTful Web services will all be tools that push forward efforts such as Project Vulcan, the next generation of Lotus Notes unveiled here at Lotusphere this week.

    Sharepoint, in contrast, is an enterprise collaboration service that has leveraged its proprietary framework into a $1 billion business. Tightly integrated with Microsoft Office, Sharepoint is not an open technology but does integrate with third-party applications.

    Sponsor

    IBM looks like it has momentum with Lotus Live, which now has 18 million users. It’s coming off a big win at Panasonic. Its open approach will be what sets the company apart from Microsoft.

    In return, Microsoft has made it clear that it owns the market share in the enterprise, quick to point out IBM’s shortcomings, especially with Lotus Notes email. Julia White, director of the Exchange product team, said the company has 74% market share in United States companies with 500 employees or more. She says Lotus Noted email has a 7% share. In fact, she said, the Lotus Live win at Panasonic was not a major defeat for Exchange.

    What’s striking is how the open Web may be the biggest game changer we have seen in decades. We were reminded of how far back the rivalry goes between IBM and Microsoft in a lunch conversation today with Martin Koser, a collaboration consultant based out of Stuttgart, Germany. Since the mid-1990s, Microsoft Office has ruled the enterprise with its operating system. In those years, its proprietary nature helped lock it in as the productivity suite of choice.

    But now the tide is changing.The open nature of the Web has lead to what we now know as Enterprise 2.0. Companies are developing their own API’s. RESTful Web services are helping companies like MindTouch provide corporate customers with dashboards that can pull in data from the Web. IBM’s Project Vulcan will add an analytics layer on top of its collaboration platform. It’s a hybrid that will pull data from the cloud and on-premise, making recommendations for the user.

    IBM executives are sharp in their criticism when questions are posed about the differences with Microsoft. That’s not too unusual, considering the deep and storied rivalry between the two companies.

    “A struggle for relevance,” said Lotus Software General Manager Alistair Rennie about Microsoft and its approach to the market. “It’s a tightly integrated proprietary stack… It’s an approach whose time is over.”

    It’s important to note that Microsoft Office is widely popular in the enterprise. It’s a $1 billion business for the company. Sharepoint has its own ecosystem of third-party companies that have integrated with Sharepoint.

    IBM’s Web-based approach is distinctly different than the document-centric world of Sharepoint. It’s this Web-oriented, open approach that may prove to be the difference for IBM. We’ll have to see. Microsoft remains the major power in the enterprise. Its future is in proprietary systems. But who knows. As the cloud becomes more a part of doing business, Microsoft may continue to have the upper hand, especially if it can execute on its partnerships with third-party application providers.

    Discuss


    Buy This Item: [Click here to buy this item]

    Read Original Article

  • Rumor: Lala acquistion to create “online locker” for music

    Filed under: , ,

    We’ve covered speculation about Apple’s acquisition of music-streaming service Lala in the past. General consensus has been that Apple is looking to use the service in a future version of iTunes, allowing users to stream their own music libraries to their computers, iPhones, and iPod touches from a remote server, thus freeing up memory space on the devices themselves.

    Citing “a wide variety of insider sources,” Michael Robertson, former CEO of mp3.com, claims that this speculation is correct. He says that instead of moving to a subscription-based model, Apple will indeed leverage the technology and resources of Lala to allow users to stream their music libraries from a remote server.

    It will be interesting to see if Robertson and other analysts’ speculations are correct. There are certainly some technological hurdles to surmount in letting millions of iTunes users stream billions of songs – my own music library is nearly 40 GB, which is twice the default data allowance on MobileMe – but licensing issues seem to be even thornier. While Robertson says that “…because users are in possession of the materials no new licenses are required from the record labels or publishers,” for streaming content, I’m going to go out on a limb and say that your friendly neighborhood RIAA will disagree. However, if Apple can indeed make this streaming service happen, it will be a huge win for them, and more importantly, for us users.

    [Via electronista]

    TUAWRumor: Lala acquistion to create “online locker” for music originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 19 Jan 2010 19:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

    Buy This Item: [Click here to buy this item]

    Read Original Article

  • T-Mobile Rumor Roundup

    We’ve got a handful of Android handset rumors to pass along that come to us courtesy of a TmoNews tipster.  The carrier shows no signs of letting up in terms of Android support as the next couple of months come in to focus.

    First up, the myTouch Slide seems a lock for a May 17th release.  The phone is expected to come in red, white, and black which is exactly how the first myTouch 3G was launched.  Up next, the Motorola Zeppelin.  Up until now, we were under the impression this CDMA/GSM world phone was a lock for China.  According to TmoNews, this one will be landing stateside March 10th.  The Zeppelin has a 3.7 inch touchscreen, HDMI output,  5mp camera, wifi, 3g, gps, video recording, ambient light sensor and more.

    And finally, the slightly tweaked myTouch 3G v1.2 sounds as if it will be here February 10th.  The difference in the phone appears to be the inclusion of a 3.5mm headphone jack.

    Other Great AndroidGuys Posts


  • Google Ventures’ Joe Kraus Joins OpenCandy’s Board of Directors

    OpenCandy logo
    Bruce V. Bigelow wrote:

    I profiled San Diego-based OpenCandy just last week, and the Web-based distributor of open-source software already is providing an update. Excite founder Joe Kraus, who participated in OpenCandy’s Series A funding round as an angel investor, has joined the company’s board of directors. According to a statement issued by the company, Kraus will be joining directors James Cham of Bessemer Venture Partners and Darrius Thompson, OpenCandy’s founding CEO.

    I noticed, though, that Kraus recently joined Google Ventures, the corporate venture capital arm founded last March with a $100 million commitment from Google, the Mountain View, CA-based search engine giant.

    So does that mean that Kraus could someday oversee a Google Ventures investment in OpenCandy?

    OpenCandy co-founder Chester Ng responded by e-mail: “Two of our angel investors, Joe Kraus and [LinkedIn founder] Reid Hoffman, have gone venture (Google Ventures and Greylock, respectively) since we raised our [$3.5 million] A round in late 2008. We’re excited to see this; this does not preclude their firms from leading future investments in OpenCandy. If we brought on their firms as investors, other partners would likely be involved to mitigate any conflict of interest.”

    Prior to joining Google Ventures, Kraus was a director of product management at Google, where he oversaw the OpenSocial project, the company’s effort to develop API [application programming interface] standards for social networking platforms. Kraus joined Google through its 2006 acquisition of JotSpot, where he was co-founder and CEO.







  • Wii Balance Board: decent for measuring equilibrium, medical study says

    This one’s pretty cute (or evidence of a completely uncreative healthcare industry). Researchers at the University of Melbourne and Singapore General Hospital’s Department of Physiotherapy have run a battery of tests on the Wii’s Balance Board, and found it to be somewhat useful in testing patient’s balance and equilibrium, medically speaking. Current medical equipment used to test these skills is very expensive, heavy, and in short supply. The Balance Board, on the other hand, runs about $99. The Wii accessory was tested on 30 patients, and found to be about as good as the expensive force platforms usually used by doctors… which is great news for Nintendo — this product has seemingly endless real-life applications — but rather embarrassing for the makers of medical equipment, no? Hit the source link for a fuller look at the story.

    Wii Balance Board: decent for measuring equilibrium, medical study says originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 19 Jan 2010 19:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink Reg Hardware  |  sourceScience Direct  | Email this | Comments

    Buy This Item: [Click here to buy this item]

    Article

  • It Looks Like Loic Is Getting Ready To Launch Seesmic Look

    Seesmic is going to announce a new product on Thursday. Earlier today, I received an email invitation to attend a “private event” in New York City on Thursday “at which Seesmic and several of its partners will announce a new application that has the potential change the way consumers and brand marketers experience Twitter.” What is it? The email didn’t say, but Seesmic CEO Loic Le Meur left a clue on Twitter when he broadcasted that he was “taking a look at a cool new app.” The message was sent from “from Seesmic Look.” (He left a clue like this before when he bought Ping.fm).

    Twitter identifies not just the person, but also the application from where a message originates. When you click on Seesmic Look it takes you to a landing page for an upcoming product launch on Thursday.

    So what exactly is Seesmic Look? Well, we know that it will involve “brand marketers” and thus may be the first time Seesmic brings some form of advertising to its product, which is one of the more popular Twitter clients across the desktop, the Web, a native client for Windows7, and mobile platforms (Android and Blackberry).  But all of these clients so far are aimed at Twitter power users.  Seesmic Look sounds more like a women’s magazine.  Could this be a new, simplified product which tries to appeal to the masses? Bringing Twitter to more mainstream consumers is certainly the type of application which would appeal to brand marketers.

    Now maybe I’m reading too much into things, but Loic left another clue to that effect last year when he put up a YouTube video with “30 Predictions for Twitter.”  I’ve embedded it below, but you can just jump to the 1:12 mark where he points out that mainstream users “won’t use the same tools as we do.  The current tools, including ours are really, really aiming at the power users, the very first Twitter users.”  He says that there will be a “dramatic change” in the Twitter tools and apps to make then “much easier to use” and “more accessible to the public.”  He then slips and says, “You will see, I think, at least we will make it.”

    Ever since I first saw that video, I’ve been wondering when we’ll see Seesmic’s Twitter app for the masses.  Maybe we’ll finally get a look at it on Thursday.


    Buy This Item: [Click here to buy this item]

    Read Original Article

  • “Oprah” Haiti Special Jan. 20

    The Oprah Show will dedicate a full hour to the devastating effect of last week’s catastrophic earthquake in Haiti.

    On a special episode, airing Wednesday, Jan. 20, CNN’s Dr. Sanjay Gupta will give a live update from the ravaged island nation. Haitian-born rapper Wyclef Jean will share his first-hand account of what he witnessed when he traveled back to Haiti just days ago.

    In addition, there will be live performances, too. Neo-soul pioneer Maxwell — who is half-Haitian — will sing “Fistful of Tears.” While island-born beauty Rihanna will perform a special rendition of Bob Marley’s classic “Redemption Song.”

    Both Rihanna and Maxwell’s songs will be available on iTunes, with all proceeds benefitting the relief effort.


  • Suburban woman charged in boyfriend’s stabbing

    A Carpentersville woman was in jail today in lieu of $250,000 bond after police said she stabbed her boyfriend during an argument at an apartment.

    Dorian Redwood, 30, of the 0-100 block of Oxford Drive, Carpentersville, was charged with attempted murder, aggravated battery causing great bodily harm and aggravated battery with a deadly weapon.

    Police said the 24-year-old victim was exiting an apartment 12:30 a.m. Sunday in the 0-100 block of Oak Crest Drive when he was stabbed in the back eight times.

    He was conscious when he was taken to Sherman Hospital and is expected to survive the attack, Cmdr. Tim Bosshart said.

    Staff report

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • Man pleads guilty in DUI crash that killed Elburn man

    An Elburn man pleaded guilty Tuesday to being legally intoxicated when he drove his SUV through a stop sign and smashed into a pickup truck, killing its driver.

    Earl G. Wilkison, 58, will be sentenced March 19 for aggravated driving under the influence in the collision that killed Ryan Campbell, 24, of Burlington.

    According to authorities, Wilkison was driving east on Beith Road in Campton Township around 1:30 a.m. on Oct. 11, 2008, when he failed to stop at the intersection with Illinois Highway 47. His Dodge Durango than slammed into Campbell’s northbound pickup truck.

    Campbell was ejected from his truck, and he died four days later from multiple injuries. A blood test taken after the accident reportedly showed Wilkison’s blood-alcohol level above the state legal limit of .08.

    Wilkison made a “cold plea,” meaning that Kane County Judge Allen Anderson, who accepted the guilty plea, will decide the sentence. Wilkison could face a three- to 14-year prison sentence, though probation is a possibility.

    Kane County Assistant State’s Attorney Adam Katz asked Anderson to revoke Wilkison’s bond and have him taken into custody to await sentencing. But Anderson allowed Wilkison to remain free, and instead imposed stricter bond requirements.

    Clifford Ward

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.