Author: Serkadis

  • Cyrus Shepherd-Oppenheim Arrested [Cybill Shepherd Son Mugshot]

    In “OMG, Are You Serious News?!” Cyrus Shepherd-Oppenheim, the 22-year-old son of actress Cybill Shepherd, was arrested in Philadelphia on Tuesday. Police say witnesses identified Shepherd-Oppenheim as the man who allegedly stole cash, a digital camera, a leather makeup case, and a small travel bag from two passengers’ carry-on luggage during a flight from San Francisco to The City of Brotherly Love on Tuesday.

    He has been charged with Theft Unlawful Taking and Theft Receiving Stolen Property.

    What on Earth does he want with a leather makeup case? This sounds like a crackhead move! Five bucks says Sonny has a drug problem….

    Cyrus was traveling back to school at the University of Pennsylvania following winter break.

    “Another individual let the complainant know that they believe that the defendant had taken some items from that bag,” said Philadelphia Police Lt. Frank Venore. “[The individual] didn’t know that wasn’t his bag at that time.”

    Police took custody of Shepherd-Oppenheim just after 5:30 AM. “We had enough probable cause with the witness identification and the complainant statements along with the evidence recovered to charge him,” Venore said.


  • Connect With Fans + Reason To Buy; The Contest

    This is really, really cool. Filmmaker Ross Pruden — who I don’t know, other than a few quick email exchanges last month — has set up The Connect with Fans + Reason to Buy Contest, based on the CwF + RtB business model, we’ve been discussing. The idea is to try to find cool examples of the business model in practice, and to build a detailed list — with the best business models being able to win a prize. I have absolutely nothing to do with this, and didn’t even know about it until I saw a Twitter message from Ross telling me that I was excluded from the contest.

    Of course, under the “traditional” way of thinking about things, some might think I should be upset that Ross is taking this concept that I created and doing something else with it. But, that (of course) is ridiculous. I’m blown away that someone liked the concept so much that they’ve gone forward and set this up, and I really can’t wait to see what comes out of it. In the meantime, if you know of such a business model, and want to take part in the contest, you just need to send a Twitter message with the details, along with the hashtag #CwFcontest.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • GWS Technologies Now Accepting Orders for XLERATOR Hand Dryer – Consumer Electronics Net

    GWS Technologies, Inc. (OTCBB: GWSC), an alternative energy company developing renewable energy solutions, announced today that it has begun accepting orders for Excel Dryer, Inc.’s patented XLERATOR Hand Dryer. “The XLERATOR is the first hand dryer …


  • Strasbourg

    Quelques photos prises courant juillet 2009

    1.

    2.

    3.

    4.

    5.

    6.

    7.

    8.

    9.

    10.

    11.

    12.

    13.

    14.

    15.

    16.

    17.

    18.

    19.

    20.

    21.

    22.

    23.

    24.

    25.

    26.

    27.

    28.

    29.

    30.

    31.

    32.

  • Parque Nacional Henri Pittier | Edo Aragua | El Primer Parque Nacional creado en Venezuela

    | Parque Nacional Rancho Grande |

    Nuestro primer parque nacional es hijo de un suizo enamorado de los bosques, que convenció a Eleazar López Contreras de crear una reserva con las montañas de selva nublada entre Maracay y la costa, hasta entonces propiedad de Juan Vicente Gómez, que fueron expropiadas al morir el dictador.

    Henri Pittier (1857-1950) visitó Venezuela por vez primera en el año de 1913, invitado como asesor para la instalación de una escuela de agricultura en la ciudad de Maracay; regresó nuevamente en 1917, y se estableció definitivamente en el país en 1919, luego de fundar en 1918 el Herbario Nacional, comenzando a sus 62 años una nueva vida de entrega a la investigación botánica de Venezuela, la educación y la conservación. Como jefe del Servicio Botánico del Ministerio de Agricultura y Cría, en febrero de 1937 escribió un célebre memorando que dio pie a la creación, ese mismo año, del Parque Nacional Rancho Grande, utilizando argumentos climáticos, hidrológicos, de protección contra la erosión y el empuje de los vientos, así como de aprovechamiento agrícola de los rios que aguas abajo se conservarían si se protegían sus nacientes saturadas de nieblas orográficas.

    Es entonces cuando el 13 de febrero de 1937, según Decreto N° 102, Gaceta Oficial N° 19.188, nace en el Estado Aragua el Sistema de Parques Nacionales de Venezuela, con la declaración del Parque Nacional Rancho Grande, ubicado en la Cordillera de la Costa y con una superficie de Noventa Mil Hectáreas (90.000 Ha).

    Con el pragmatismo de los argumentos de Pittier, quizá tengamos que ver en él al primero de una especie de naturalistas que en Venezuela se han revelado como constructores esenciales de nuestro desarrollo ambiental: capaces de saltar la brecha entre el científico y el político, y que han hecho ver a las autoridades la importancia de la conservación de la naturaleza, con espléndidos resultados que hoy capitalizamos, por ejemplo, en nuestro Sistema de Parques Nacionales.

    Pittier, con didáctica claridad, describe el papel de los bosques como productores de agua, a partir de ejemplos específicos de las montañas de Aragua, y exige al gobierno “…mientras quede un trazo de esperanza, declarar del dominio nacional todas las cabeceras de agua, alejar de ellas los conuqueros, reliquias de la agricultura primitiva, y suprimir, hasta el mayor límite posible, las aglomeraciones humanas allí establecidas”

    | Parque Nacional Henri Pittier|

    En 1953, el Parque Nacional Rancho Grande es rebautizado con el nombre de Parque Nacional Henri Pittier, en honor a su ilustre fundador (…)

    El 7 de noviembre de 1974, según Decreto N° 529, Gaceta Oficial N° 30.545 se amplía su superficie a Ciento Siete Mil Ochocientas Hectáreas (107.800 Ha), la cual mantiene hasta la actualidad.

    Este parque resguarda los acantilados, cubre las montañas y se extiende hasta los valles de Aragua, por lo tanto su clima varía con la altura: cálido húmedo en la costa, cálido seco en las sabanas y matorrales costaneros y frío húmedo en las selvas nubladas y las cumbres. La temperatura es de 24-28°C en los sectores costeros, de 12 a 24°C hasta los 1000 msnm y de 0 a 12°C en las máximas elevaciones.

    Se trata sin duda de un paraje afectivo fundamental para las ciencias naturales en Venezuela: en sus hermosos bosques nublados se han realizado innumerables expediciones de colecta, que han dado un aporte significativo a las colecciones de flora y fauna del país y del exterior, principalmente de la fauna, ya que con sus más de 520 especies de aves, cuenta con el 41,6% de las especies del país, y el 6,5% del total mundial de especies de aves. Posee pasos aéreos importantes para especies migratorias, tanto de aves como de insectos voladores. Y además, al menos 22 especies endémicas o de distribución restringida, algunas amenazadas de extinción.

    Se llama Selvas Nubladas a las formaciones vegetales de montaña que mantienen durante todo el año nieblas orográficas que juegan un papel dominante en todo el ecosistema, producidas por el choque con las montañas (y condensación) de masas de aire con alto contenido de vapor de agua. Se han distinguido dentro de ella varios tipos: Selva Nublada de Transición, Selva Nublada propiamente dicha, y Selva Nublada Superior.

    Un estudio comparativo de la selva de Rancho Grande con otras selvas y formaciones vegetales de Venezuela y el mundo mostró que estas selvas pueden considerarse “Prototipo de Selva Óptima” a Nivel Planetario, dado su índice de diversidad, que señala condiciones extraordinarias.

    Muchos turistas nacionales y extranjeros acuden al parque para la observación de aves, pero la gran mayoría de los turistas ve en las playas aledañas la principal atracción del parque, y no en vano las de Cuyagua, Playa Grande, La Ciénaga y la Bahía de Cata se incluyen en la lista de las más hermosas y famosas del país.

    Pero el Henri Pittier da para mucho más, la frescura del clima de montaña sobre los 1000 msnm, así como los distintos senderos para el trekking que posee el parque, atraen un alto porcentaje de visitantes locales durante todos los días de la semana, en cualquier época del año, con el “plus” del disfrute de inigualables y excitantes vistas panorámicas de las ciudades aledañas, de las selvas nubladas altas y de las áreas costeras del Norte.

  • CBC to start budget cut talks

    Published Jan. 7, 2010
    Chris Hurst, KNDU TV

    Play button

     

    PASCO, Wash.–  CBC has known they would need to trim an additional million and a half dollars from their budget pretty since the Governor gave her economic forecast last month.

    But with renewed budget talks as Olympia gets busy again, we wanted to know if they’ve decided what programs are on the chopping block.

    CBC president Rich Cummins told KNDU today he has in mind some changes to make but will meet with a special committee at the end of the month to discuss cuts. And he says everything is on the table.

    “Well yea, everything has to be, I mean that’s one of our guiding principles in that there are no sacred cows,” said Cummins. “For a committee to do good work they have to know everything is up for consideration, otherwise you stifle ideas.”

    Employer demand is a strong factor in choosing which programs stay. The college is planning to up tuition rates seven percent. All of this comes after nearly four million dollars was slashed from the college’s budget last year.

  • EDUCATION: Richland team takes second in state civics competition

    Published Jan. 11, 2010
    By Tri-City Herald Staff

    Richland A team from River’s Edge High School in Richland took second place over the weekend at the state “We the People” competition in Olympia. It’s the highest showing ever by an alternative high school in the history of the national civics competition, said teacher Jackie Ives.

    “The kids were (really) excited. They did really well,” she said.

    Ives and colleague Denise Rosenblum teach the “We the People” class at the small Richland school. The competition tests students’ command of history and government.

    The students won the regional competition — which covered the state’s 4th Congressional District — in the fall. Ives said she hasn’t yet received a final breakdown of state scores but was told the margin between first and second place was very close.

    Tahoma High School in Covington ended up the winner.

    The Richland school has been blazing trails in “We the People” for a few years. During the 2007-08 school year, River’s Edge became the first-ever alternative high school to win a regional competition.

    Gary Bullert, a political science professor at Columbia Basin College in Pasco and one of the state “We the People” judges, said he was impressed with River’s Edge performance.

    “It reinforces my faith in the future of the country when I see these students’ knowledge of government,” he said.

    The River’s Edge students are: Meagan Grnya, Hannah Duim, Emily Charboneau, Lexor Adams, Luke Thompson, Kevin Ashley, Mary Lambel, Kristina Smith, Jessica Miller, Nala Watters, Geoff Shepperd and Becca Coronado.

    Additional news stories can be accessed online at the Tri-City Herald.

  • CBC Career Expo seeks employers

    NEWS RELEASE
    Jan. 12, 2010                                                           Contact: Erica Jesberger, 544-4916

    Businesses looking for a large pool of employee candidates are in luck. On Thursday, February 18, Columbia Basin College will hold its annual Career Expo from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. in the Byron Gjerde Center on the Pasco campus.

    CBC Student Employment is seeking employers to attend this year’s Career Expo. Employers can utilize the expo to network with other local businesses, gather resumes to consider for current and future job openings, and schedule interviews with potential candidates.

    Career Expo allows job seekers to network with as many as 80 businesses and agencies all in one place, at one time. This free informational job and internship fair gives students and community members the opportunity to explore careers, obtain employer information, establish contacts, and submit resumes. Last year, nearly 1,000 job seekers attended the Expo.

    Employers may register by contacting Daphne Lightfoot at 542-5559 or [email protected]. Early registration is encouraged. The $60 fee for participating employers includes continental breakfast and booth setup.

  • Events set to fete Martin Luther King Jr. Day

    Publsihed Jan. 12, 2010
    By Kristi Pihl, Tri-City Herald staff writer

    How do you remember a great man?

    Area schools have a few ideas on how to mark Martin Luther King Jr. Day, coming up Monday.

    Students at Washington State University Tri-Cities will hold a civil rights discussion at 6:30 p.m. Friday at Three Rivers Convention Center in Kennewick.

    Paul Strand, WSU Tri-Cities associate professor of psychology, will moderate a panel of six community leaders who will discuss civil rights achievements and today’s challenges, said Robin Mitchell, secretary of the WSU Tri-Cities Multicultural Club.

    The club is sponsoring the event with the African American Community Cultural and Education Society, the Engineering Club, Business Club, Northwest Collegiate Ministries and Associated Students of WSU Tri-Cities.

    After the panel discussion, the audience will have a chance to comment and ask questions, Mitchell said.

    The panel includes Kimberly Camp, Hanford Reach Interpretive Center CEO; Kennewick Police Chief Ken Hohenberg; attorney Norma Rodriguez; Martin Valadez, Columbia Basin College vice president for diversity and outreach; Mark Nathan Lee, Vista Youth Center director; and Joshua Wretzel, WSU Tri-Cities adjunct professor of philosophy.

    The free annual event can seat 350, Mitchell said. Last year, 280 attended.

    “We want to emphasize that Martin Luther King Jr. (Day) is a holiday for all Americans,” Mitchell said. “And we choose to celebrate and honor those who strive for inclusion and equality.”

    After the panel, a jazz concert will begin at 7:45 p.m. with a free buffet dinner for the first 350 attendees.

    The concert will feature the trio of pianist Larry Fuller of the John Pizzarelli Quartet, D’vonne Lewis and Phil Sparks. During the second set, Shilah Phillips, who in 2006 was the first black woman to be crowned Miss Texas, will sing.

    The Multicultural Club also will recognize some community members who show commitment to diversity with awards during the event, Mitchell said.

    Melissa O’Neil Perdue, WSU Tri-Cities marketing manager, said the college is proud of its students’ initiative in taking a leadership role in the community conversation. About 18 percent of WSU Tri-Cities’ 1,500 students describe themselves as people of color, she said.

    Other MLK events planned include:

    — CBC will hold the 19th annual Martin Luther King Bell-Ringing Ceremony on Monday at noon at the Martin Luther King Jr. statue outside Thorton Center on the Pasco campus.

    The program includes a short presentation, the ceremonial bell-ringing and a keynote address by Camp of the Hanford Reach Interpretive Center.

    CBC President Richard Cummins will announce and introduce the Martin Luther King Spirit Award winner. The MLK Spirit Award is given to an individual who has inspired positive social change in the community in the spirit of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

    David Arnold, CBC intercultural studies professor, will deliver the faculty address and the Federation of Choirs will perform.

    Refreshments and activities for children will follow the ceremony. For more information, call 542-4835.

    — Edgar D. Hargrow will give a public presentation on the civil rights movement at 1 p.m. Friday at New Horizons Alternative High School in Pasco. A question and answer session will follow.

    Additional news stories can be accessed online at the Tri-City Herald.

  • Sex Hormones and Diabetic Complications

    It is well established that children before the age of puberty/menarche are relatively resistant to diabetic complications. Also, experiments in the 1960s to control diabetic retinopathy by destroying the patient’s pituitary gland were found to stabilize retinal health, and through the pituitary-gonadal axis, the pituitary normally directs the production of sex hormones. Experiments in animals showed that if the sex glands were surgically removed from subjects which had been artificially made diabetic, the animals were resistant to diabetic complications. From these three facts, the evidence seemed to point to the idea that diabetic complications can only develop in the presence of sex hormones, but since it was regarded as unethical to test this by performing surgery on a human, the hypothesis could not be tested.

    Fortunately, nature herself provided us with a test. Two female dizygotic twins were born without ovaries and thus with essentially no female sex hormones. They were both type 1 diabetics, and they absolutely refused to make any effort to control their blood sugar. They were followed for twenty years, during which time their HbA1c values were typically around 15% — a huge value. But interestingly, despite this near record experience with poor blood sugar control, they exhibited no diabetic complications.

    This strongly suggests that if young type 1 diabetics, at the onset of their disease, had their sex glands surgically removed, they could live a life free of complications, the burdens of blood sugar management, and the potentially lethal threat of hypoglycemia episodes, since they could safely let their blood sugar run high. They could also probably enjoy a normal life expectancy, rather than the shortened one most diabetics experience. Although many surgeons would say that such an intervention is unethical, even if the patient wants it, I think it is a reasonable option that should be offered to every new diabetic. If I were a newly diagnosed patient today, I would definitely choose such surgery.

    See: D. Bell, "Lack of long-term diabetic complications in spite of poor glycemic control in twins with pure gonadal dysgenesis," Diabetes Care, vol. 18, no. 9, 1286 (1995)

  • Ke$ha Expected To End Susan Boyle Billboard Reign

    Quirky party girl Ke$ha will end Susan Boyle’s six week domination on the US charts this week.

    Animal, the debut album from the “Tik Tok” hitmaker, is projected to bump the Scottish spinister-turned-superstar’s critically-acclaimed platinum set, I Dreamed A Dream, from the No. 1 spot on this week’s the Billboard 200, Billboard.com said Tuesday. Ke$ha’s Animal likely moved 150,000 copies last week, easily trumping Dream.


  • Square Enix and Gamepot Bringing Fantasy Earth Zero to North America

    Fantasy Earth Zero

    The increasingly crowded free-to-play MMORPG market is going to be seeing the release of at least one fairly big name game this year as Gamepot has partnered with Square Enix to bring Fantasy Earth Zero to North America in 2010. The game’s large-scale player vs. player combat is being touted by Gamepot as a significant feature.

    “Imagine a world of perpetual warfare, legions of unique classes, and a Hyper-Active Battle System — Think the best scenes in Gladiator or Braveheart, with the action ratcheted up to 20,” said Gamepot senior director of business and marketing Thomas Lee in a press release. “It’s quite unlike any MMORPG available — our 50 vs. 50 PvP system is pure, pulse-pounding excitement. And now, for the first time ever, North American players can step into a world from the creators of so many high-quality RPGs, completely for free.”

    FEZ has three classes (Warrior, Mage, and Archer) to play as and promises immersive quests, a “nearly endless array of character customization options,” and a soundtrack from Hitoshi Sakimoto, who was one of the composers on Final Fantasy XII and also has worked on Odin Sphere, Final Fantasy Tactics, among other games.

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

    Read Original Article

  • Square Enix Kicking Off Final Fantasy XIII Bus Tour

    Final Fantasy XIII

    In what might be the best use of public transportation since Cash Cab, Square Enix has announced plans for a Final Fantasy XIII bus tour. Starting tomorrow, RPG fans in San Francisco and the Bay Area will be able to track down the Square Enix bus for their first shot at playing the U.S. version of Final Fantasy XIII.

    Wondering how you’ll be able to spot a single bus among the countless others patrolling the city? Like anything worthwhile (and under 140 characters) these days, you need look no further than Twitter. Square Enix has set up an official Final Fantasy XIII bus tour Twitter account, which will be updated with bus stop locations throughout the promotion.

    The tour is scheduled to last from tomorrow, January 13 until Saturday, January 16. San Francisco and the surrounding areas are the only announced locations, so Final Fantasy addicts outside the city will have to embark on a tour of their own to get to Square’s bus. Or, y’know, just develop some patience and wait out the game’s March 9 release date. Whichever is more convenient for you guys.

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

    Read Original Article

  • Insurgent Massachusetts Senate Candidate Posed Naked In Cosmo

    scott brown

    Wow!

    The special Senate election in Massachusetts is already way more exciting than anyone thought it would be.

    And now get this… the insurgent Republican posed naked in Cosmo in 1982

    Will it derail his campaign, which in itself could end up derailing healthcare? Maybe not.

    This was 27 years ago, and his big problem is name recognition, which this helps solve.

    (via Mediaite)

    scott brown

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • Photo of 10 inch Apple tablet screen is either totally fake, or kind of disappointing

    Could the image you see above, which really looks like it could be part of a giant iPhone, be the glass surface for the Apple tablet? If so, that giant hole on the bottom is likely where an iPhone-like home button will be, and the earpiece up top would be for a speaker. Or, and we know this could be a stretch, someone had nothing better to do and created a large-scaled replica of the iPhone’s face, drilled an extra hole into it and called it a placeholder for a camera. There are some things we see on the Internet that sends our BS meter through the roof, and this one did it at first glance. We’d be really disappointed if Apple made the tablet look nothing more like a giant iPhone, but then again, why mess with success? If rumors prove to be true, we’ll find out before the end of this month.

    Read

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

    Read Original Article

  • Apple moves to improve OpenGL support in 10.6.3 builds

    After taking a brief holiday break, Apple managed to release the first developer beta of Mac OS X 10.6.3 last week. Among the 221 code changes, there appears to be some initial support for parts of the OpenGL 3.0 spec, though Apple will have a long way to go before Snow Leopard is OpenGL 3-ready.

    OSx86 contributer netkas, known for his work in enabling graphics card support for non-Apple GPUs, noted over the weekend that the developer test build of 10.6.3 contained a number of OpenGL 3.0 extensions, as well as a few for the updated 3.1 and 3.2 specifications. Mac OS X has essentially been stuck at OpenGL 2.1 support for some time, even though GPUs in most newer Macs support the newer standards.

    Part of the issue with bringing OpenGL 3.0 support is that the newer versions deprecated many older functions from OpenGL 2.x in an attempt to modernize and simplify the overall API. All three revisions of OpenGL 3.x also include revisions to the shader language as well. Updating all the support requires work on Apple’s part as well as the cooperation of GPU vendors to get drivers into shape. OpenGL 3.1 and 3.2 were released last year, well into Snow Leopard’s development cycle, and drivers offering beta support for those versions of OpenGL were the norm on Windows Vista.

    For those who need OpenGL 3.x support, however, the good news is that most of the necessary functionality brought by OpenGL 3.0 is included by way of extensions. Shading language 1.30 still isn’t supported, and support for 3.1 and 3.2 is still in the early stages. Later revisions of Snow Leopard may include full support for the updated standards, but chances are good that 10.7 will definitely include full support.


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

    Article

  • Paula Abdul & The Drag Queens!

    She may be out of work, but Paula Abdul still remembers how to have a good time. The ex-Idol judge and “Forever Your Girl” crooner was snapped partying with gay adult film director and noted Hollywood drag queen Chi Chi LaRue at RED Nightclub in West Hollywood last Saturday night.


  • Logic Pro and MainStage updated, now 64-bit friendly

    Filed under: ,

    Two pieces of Apple’s Logic Studio suite for Mac, Logic Pro and MainStage, have been updated today and the new versions are available immediately through Software Update or the links below.

    The Logic Pro 9.1 update includes support for 64-bit native mode, compatibility with 64-bit Audio Unit plug-ins, and support for file names over 32 characters long. According to the update notes, samples are now mapped correctly when using the “Contiguous Zones” opetion in the EXS editor. The full release notes are available for viewing here.

    MainStage 2.1 also includes 64-bit native mode and compatibility with the 64-bit Audio Unit plug-ins. Other fixes and improvements include better compatibility with MainStage 1.x documents, improved recording when using the Loopback plug-in, and multiple playback plug-ins in the same group now sync reliably. Full release notes are available here.

    Enabling 64-bit native mode for both applications requires Mac OS X 10.6.2 or later.

    [A tip of the studio professional hat to TUAW reader samw for letting us know about the update]

    TUAWLogic Pro and MainStage updated, now 64-bit friendly originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 12 Jan 2010 17:15:00 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

  • A Facebook Proposal: Let’s Make Gmail Contacts & Google Reader Subscriptions Public

    Jonathan Swift argued in A Modest Proposal that children of the poor should be eaten. He went to a rhetorical extreme in order to illustrate the absurdity of a perspective he mocked and opposed.

    In order to illustrate how absurd Facebook’s new privacy policies are, I want to imagine a fictitious but analogous situation: imagine Google announcing that our Gmail contacts and Google Reader subscriptions were to be made publicly visible to the web at large. If you don’t want the world to know who you are communicating with and what you are reading, maybe you shouldn’t be communicating with those people and reading that content. The tools you’ve used to communicate and read privately must stay current with the times, right?

    Sponsor

    What Happened at Facebook

    In the middle of December, Facebook began prompting users to re-evaluate their privacy settings on the site. If users had not changed any privacy settings in the past, then the privacy of status updates, photos, videos and shared was switched to a new default: no longer visible only to approved friends, that data was now by default publicly visible to everyone.

    That default could be opted-out of, though, and users could return their activity update settings back to private, limited to friends only.

    Other user-data was switched from private to public without recourse for users. User profile pictures, fan pages followed and lists of friends on the site are now made publicly visible and cannot be limited in their visibility. A fast backlash led the company to allow friends lists to be removed from public-facing profile pages, but anyone’s friends lists are still publicly available by programs that ask for it. Friends lists can no longer be made accessible only to trusted friends on the site.

    RSS never caught on in a big way, but Facebook democratized online subscription to syndicated content. Now your interests and subscriptions are naked as a jay bird before the world.

    Requiring that Fan pages be public is important because that’s how users express their interests and subscribe to updates from organizations they care about. RSS never caught on in a big way, but Facebook democratized online subscription to syndicated content. Now your interests and subscriptions are now naked as a jay bird before the world.

    (As an aside, did you know that most people who are fans of the Facebook page ComedyTweet are also fans of the page PornstarTweet?)

    Why did Facebook do this? Company founder Mark Zuckerberg said this weekend that this is the way the world is moving – towards being more public and less private. He said that the company recently considered what settings it would apply if the site were to be created anew today and “just went for it.” I explained yesterday why I don’t think that move has been backed up by a credible argument, why privacy is still important.

    Last night I heard a story about a podcast for parents struggling to concieve a child. Some Facebook users have said they feel unable to subscribe to updates from the show as Fans on Facebook because they don’t want friends to know they are trying to concieve. Becoming a Fan but being discrete about it isn’t an option anymore. Stories like that are probably much more common than we might think.

    Consider now what it would be like if this same changes were to be made to a different set of technologies many of us use.

    Let’s Open Up GMail Contacts and Google Reader Subscriptions!

    You may have signed up for GMail and Google Reader because you thought they would be effective, private and secure ways to communicate with people and subscribe to news of interest – but you were fooling yourself if you thought that information wasn’t going to be made public someday!

    Don’t you know that privacy on the internet is an illusion? Do you know how little money Google is able to make from Gmail and Google Reader with your data left private? What do you mean you use Twitter to communicate with people publicly and Gmail to communicate with them privately? Have you seen how seldom people talk about Gmail on TV these days? What’s a web service to do?

    It’s really a sign of the times. People are blogging more and more these days, you might even have a public blog on Google’s Blogger.com. That’s evidence right there that it’s time to make your subscriptions and contacts public, too.

    Google Reader and Gmail are both much smaller than Facebook, half as many people use Gmail as use Facebook. Google Reader is much smaller still. Contacts and subscriptions on Facebook are public now – clearly society is moving in this direction.

    If you don’t want people to know about who you are emailing and what you are reading, maybe you shouldn’t be emailing them and reading it.

    Think this analogy is a stretch? Think that hundreds of millions of people don’t think of Facebook as a private way to communicate with the friends they’ve approved, just like you do with Gmail, and to read updates from organizations they are interested in, but don’t neccesarily want everyone to know about, like Google Reader? I don’t think it’s a stretch at all. I think these are similar tools for many people.

    As we’ve said before, Facebook’s unilateral privacy policy changes have violated the contract they have with users. Just imagine how that would go over if it happened on other services we consider private.

    We give Facebook a hard time, but we love the site, too. Come be a fan of ReadWriteWeb there. You won’t be able to hide that from anyone, but maybe it will distract people from your Comedy Tweets obsession.

    Discuss


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

    Read Original Article

  • In Acquiring Zimbra, VMware Moves Squarely Toward Apps and Collaboration

    VMware, on the heels of its acquisition of SpringSource, has announced that it will acquire email and collaboration software player Zimbra from Yahoo. With Zimbra, the virtualization giant VMware is spreading out to applications, and moving steadily up the software stack.

    Zimbra’s open-source collaboration tools are increasingly popular, and the company claims to serve more than 55 million mailboxes.  (Yahoo acquired the company for $350 million in 2007, but terms of VMware’s acquisition were not disclosed.) Meanwhile, VMware has been struggling to contend with free and open-source competitors to its virtualization offerings, including free options bundled in many operating systems. It has become essential for the company to diversify its software products away from just costly proprietary virtualization offerings. Relatively new CEO Paul Maritz, a long-time Microsoft executive, has been pursuing acquisitions in order to achieve that goal, especially focusing on the cloud. Brian Byun, VP and GM of cloud services at VMware, said in a statement that:

    “Over the coming years, we expect more organizations, especially small and medium size businesses, to increasingly buy core IT solutions that deliver cloud-like simplicity in end-user and operational experience. Zimbra is a great example of the type of scalable ‘cloud era’ solutions that can span smaller, on-premise implementations to the cloud. It will be a building block in an expanding portfolio of solutions that can be offered as a virtual appliance or by a cloud service provider. “

    Meanwhile, in an advisory, SugarCRM CEO Larry Augustin said, “VMWare is clearly moving aggressively up the stack and is not content to be limited to virtualization or even infrastructure (SpringSource).  With the Zimbra acquisition VMWare is squarely positioning itself in the applications and collaboration space.”

    To take that analysis further, cloud-based and service-oriented platforms are, in the end, only as good as the applications that companies can offer on them. Many companies and users will not subscribe to cloud-based services, or favor virtualized platforms that don’t present them with a healthy amount of usable software.

    The same story has already been played out in the arena of operating systems and applications, many times over. Operating systems that win are ones that have many applications available for them. Maritz would be acutely aware of the parallels between standard operating systems, virtualization platforms and applications, given the many years he spent at Microsoft.

    With its SpringSource acquisition VMware gained clout with developers, and the Zimbra acquisition looks to be a very direct move into cloud-based applications and collaboration options. Judging from these acquisitions, Paul Maritz has in mind a very different company from the virtualization-focused one that VMware has been in the past

    Related GigaOM Pro Research:

    What VMware’s SpringSource Acquisition Means for Microsoft

    Social Media in the Enterprise

    Email: The Reports of My Death are Greatly Exaggerated