Author: Serkadis

  • App Store: 3B Downloads Today, 10B Tomorrow?

    Even as the excitement over the tablet reaches seizure-inducing levels among personal technology enthusiasts, Apple flipped on another publicity strobe light with the announcement of 3 billion downloads from its App Store.

    Apple CEO Steve Jobs was astonished yet ebullient in a press release:

    “Three billion applications downloaded in less than 18 months — this is like nothing we’ve ever seen before…The revolutionary App Store offers iPhone and iPod touch users an experience unlike anything else available on other mobile devices, and we see no signs of the competition catching up anytime soon.”

    And he wouldn’t be Jobs without getting a jab in at the competition. With more than 100,000 applications, running on some 60 million devices, the App Store is a behemoth next to competitors Google and Palm. Google’s Android Market has somewhere between 15,000 and 20,000 applications to choose from, while the anemic App Catalog of Palm has just managed to reach 1,000 applications.

    The funny thing is, Apple may have had no idea this would happen.

    When the iPhone was first introduced, Jobs himself pushed the web app model for development.

    “Developers and users alike are going to be very surprised and pleased at how great these applications look and work on iPhone,” Jobs said. “Our innovative approach, using Web 2.0-based standards, lets developers create amazing new applications while keeping the iPhone secure and reliable.”

    That lasted about a year, and while some think it was Apple’s plan to downplay an SDK even while it was under development, the Financial Times suggests the company was surprised by the success. Referring back to October when the App Store reached 2 billion downloads, Kleiner Perkins partner Matt Murphy opined that “most people within Apple, if you had told them it would be a fifth of that by now, they would have been pretty happy.”

    That may be true, but you can bet Jobs & Co. haven’t spent their time lounging about on piles of cash in happy astonishment since then. The Apple tablet is set to launch with access to that same App Store, and that may be the secret of its success. With potentially hundreds of millions of App Store customers, and more than a 100,000 apps already in the store, the tablet has a built-in advantage unlike any competing product.

    A successful tablet, a new iPhone, perhaps on Verizon, will only further the success of the App Store, and thus the hardware that runs the software. It’s a perpetual success machines that begs the question: How long before 10 billion downloads?

  • Brief: Microsoft reveals Office 2010 retail prices

    Microsoft has revealed prices for the various Office 2010 SKUs that it announced back in July 2009. The company also confirmed the existence of the Office Professional Academic 2010 edition, which we first got word of last month after the retail box art for four SKUs leaked to the Web. Now these four have received US retail price tags, which we’ve outlined in the following chart:

    SKU Included applications Boxed Price Key Card Price
    Home and Student Word, PowerPoint, Excel, and OneNote $149 $119
    Home and Business Same as above, plus Outlook $279 $199
    Standard Same as above, plus Publisher Volume Licensing Volume Licensing
    Professional Same as above, plus Access $499 $349
    Professional Academic Same as above $99 N/A
    Professional Plus Same as above, plus SharePoint Workspace, InfoPath Volume Licensing Volume Licensing

    Microsoft also confirmed that the Office Home and Student boxed product is available in a Family Pack, which allows usage of up to three PCs. When comparing the boxed price to the key card price, keep in mind that purchase rights for Office Home and Business, Office Professional, and Office Professional Academic boxed products allow for usage on two of your PCs while the Product Key Card is valid for only a single installation of the product.

    The Product Key Card, first announced in October 2009, will only be available for purchase via major OEMs and electronic retail outlets. The Product Key Card is a single-license card with a key that lets users unlock Office 2010 software preloaded by the PC manufacturers. It doesn’t have a DVD inside, making it more environmentally friendly, since it is smaller than the full package DVD product. Some readers will notice that at least one other SKU is missing from the list: Office Starter 2010, which was announced at the same time as the Product Key Card. The reduced-functionality and ad-supported version includes only Word and Excel and is meant to be a replacement for Microsoft Works, so it’s only available on new PCs sold by OEMs.

    Microsoft also took the time today to note that in just seven weeks, more than two million people around the world have downloaded and are using the Office 2010 beta and that “9 out of 10 beta users feel that the Office 2010 beta is an improvement over their current productivity suite.” Microsoft unleashed the beta in November 2009, emphasizing that it is set to expire on October 31, 2010. That should give users plenty of time to move to the final version, which is slated for a June 2010 release.

    What is a “Brief” post?”


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  • just heard baby’s heartbeat

    😀

    I just heard the baby’s heartbeat for the first time! I’m 15 weeks along and haven’t really had any pre-natal care yet (well other than my endo) because my idiot GP messed up and didn’t send the forms to my OB in time for a 12-week appointment.

    Anyway, everything looks great, and baby’s heart is beating at a strong 160 beats per minute.

    I love that…hearing the heartbeat for the first time. It feels very REAL now that #2 is on the way!!

    Now if I can only hold out another 3 weeks for my ultrasound … grrr!!

  • Sony Won’t Support Its Own Movie For An Oscar Over Misplaced Piracy Fears

    One of Jack Valenti’s final battles while still in charge of the MPAA was his silly, misguided war on DVD screeners. Screeners are copies of the movie (on DVD, obviously) that are sent out to people to view (to “screen”) for awards shows and the like. Valenti freaked out that since these screeners went out before the official DVDs were out, they would lead to people uploading them online, creating a piracy problem. Of course, that assumed two incorrect things: that those movies weren’t already online and that adding one more copy would create any sort of “problem.” Valenti lost his initial battle to forbid studios from sending out DVD screeners, but what came next were a series of convoluted attempts to stop “piracy” via the screeners — including sending DVDs that could only play in special players. Two years ago, studios finally realized how ridiculous and cumbersome this process was, so it dropped the special DVD player requirement, and instead went with a watermarking option. But that’s crazy expensive. Each DVD screener now needs to be individually watermarked and tracked.

    Given that, it seems that some studios are simply deciding not to support certain movies for the Academy Awards. johnjac points us to the news that folks involved with the movie Moon are pissed off that Sony won’t send out DVD screeners for the movie, as they were hoping that actor Sam Rockwell might get an Oscar nod for his part in the movie. Sony claims that it’s just too expensive to do the watermarking.

    It’s really no surprise that this comes from Sony Pictures, whose CEO, Michael Lynton, is on record as saying that nothing good has come from the internet, and then when questioned on that statement, stands by it. So I guess that Lynton doesn’t use the internet, or he would know, as pointed out in the Slashfilm link above, that perfectly good copies of the movie — sans watermark — are already widely available for download. In other words, there’s no reason whatsoever to waste money watermarking the DVDs. It won’t make a difference. Yet, because of Lynton and his crew’s misguided fears, Sony Pictures won’t support this particular movie.

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  • Redmond O’Neal Arrested


    Well we know where Redmond’s inheritance is going — straight the nearest dope pusher…..

    Redmond O’Neal has been arrested on drug charges for the millionth time.

    The only son of Farrah Fawcett and Ryan O’Neal was taken into custody Dec. 29 on a felony charge for allegedly scoring heroin while on a 24-hour pass from rehab, RadarOnline revealed on Tuesday.

    O’Neal began rehab at the Impact Drug and Alcohol Treatment Center in Pasadena in September. He was ordered to undergo treatment at the facility for one year after a January 2008 drug arrest and a probation violation in September 2009.

    Redmond is being held without bail at the Los Angeles Men’s Central Jail and is scheduled to appear in court this afternoon. He faces up to six years behind bars.

  • Google Nexus One headed to Verizon Wireless and Vodafone in Spring 2010

    vzw-nexus-one

    Google’s Nexus One announcement went smoothly as planned — Nexus One confirmed, Android 2.1 detailed and T-Mobile as the launch partner confirmed. All done, all good, except for the little bombshell that was presented at the end. The Nexus One will be hitting both Verizon Wireless and Vodafone this Spring! All you folks who eschewed the Eris and waited on the DROID will get you just reward in a few months. Any DROID or Eris owners out there just throw their handset through the window in disgust?

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  • T-Mobile completes 3G network upgrade to HSPA 7.2 Mbps

    t-mobile-logoPotentially some good news for those T-Mobile fans out there. T-Mobile has completed a scheduled 3G upgrade to its entire network, an upgrade which boosts HSPA speeds from 3.6 Mbps to 7.2 Mbps. T-Mobile had initially promised the speed bump by the end of 2009, but hey, better late than never when it comes to bandwidth. T-Mobile is also promising another upgrade is in 2010 to HSPA+ with peak speeds of 21 Mbps; a trial is already underway in Philadelphia. In our own, very rudimentary, tests here in Boston, we aren’t seeing the 7.2 Mbps type speeds we were hoping, 1990 Kbps down and 200 Kbps up, but we’re keeping our hopes up. Any T-Mo users out there that can report faster 3G speeds?

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  • December Top Ten Players in Green Energy: Nos 5-1

    Green Energy Reporter’s ranking of the top ten players in green energy for the month of December is out! Not surprisingly this month’s ranking focuses on Copenhagen and the disappointing outcome of the much-anticipated UN Climate Change Conference.

    New inductees include the dead-on-arrival French carbon tax and the promising but challenging quest to develop utility-scale geothermal power. Not returning this month, after two showings, each justified by his company’s substantial green investments and his controversial pro-carbon tax position, is Exxon Mobil CEO Rex Tillerson– (number five in the November ranking and number four in October).

    As you know this GER ranking is based on the players’ influence over green energy policy and their ability to move the debate. Other factors that we take into account in making our monthly selection include industry and popular support for their positions, access to capital to fund innovation and the success of their ventures.

    5: EnvironmentGuardian.com, the Guardian newspaper

    Picture 9

    From the start, the Guardian’s environment beat reporters, led by editors John Vidal and James Randerson, got the pulse of the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Copenhagen, providing readers coverage that went way beyond the bureaucratic UN press releases. A case in point was the paper’s scoop during the first week of the conference, when it got its hand on a controversial draft binding agreement whose content angered developing nations because it walked away from key Kyoto principles, including the notion that rich nations bear the primary responsibility for cutting emissions. At a time when the newspaper industry is going through a deep existential crisis, the Guardian’s environmental pages and its combination of opinionated features and traditional, hard-boiled reporting from Copenhagen demonstrated that good [environmental] journalism remains a necessity.


    4: U.S. Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.)

    inhofe-150x150The Oklahoma Republican has never once, in his whole entire life, said anything correct about climate change. His opposition to science, reason and the country’s best interest when it comes to green energy is infuriating. But…

    His views represent a large number (though by no means a majority) of Americans, who are distrustful of government-created carbon markets and, well, science. If nothing else, his obstructionist tactics, such as going to Copenhagen with a “truth squad” to protest the U.N. climate summit, provide an excellent foil for the more reasonable voices out there. And as long as he’s out there making noise and getting on Fox News, he’s a player.

    3: General Electric

    Large cap companies are scrambling to get ready for the green energy future, whether by making sure they don’t take a hit from a cap and trade program or trying to get a piece of the green pie. General Electric, on the other hand, is already firmly ensconced in the green energy business and is doing quite well.

    The prototypical industrial giant flexed its muscles in December with the $2 billion megadeal at the Shepherd’s Flat wind farm, for which it will provide 338, 2.5-megawatt wind turbines. The company’s presence in China is also growing by the day.

    But GE’s isn’t just a story of industrial might. The company’s Energy Financial Services division is also investing in the wind farm and stands to have a staggering $6 billion invested in the sector by the end of 2010. No wonder Chief Executive Officer Jeff Immelt is pushing for a climate change law.

    2: Ed Miliband, UK Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change

    Photograph: Anja Niedringhaus/APHe called the Copenhagen climate change conference “a farce” and blamed the G77 developing nations, in particular China, Brazil and India, of “hijacking the conference.” Throughout the UN climate change summit, which concluded last month, the young British minister called a spade a spade, providing reporters spin-free commentary, all in an effort to get developing nations to back a binding agreement to fight climate change. On the Guardian Website, Miliband noted that despite the disappointment, Copenhangen was a first step that could lead to an eventual binding and effective global climate change agreement. He wrote: “Today many people will be feeling gloomy about the results of their efforts. But no campaign ever wholly succeeds at the first time of asking. We should take heart from the achievements and step up our efforts.” In Miliband, the climate change movement has found a young, fiery, articulate spokesman who’ll hopefully continue to push for a comprehensive climate change agreement well after his tenure at the energy and environment ministry ends.

    1: China’s climate change negotiators

    President Barack Obama meets with Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao in Copenhagen.

    President Barack Obama meets with Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao in Copenhagen.

    The Copenhagen climate change summit became China’s coming-out party as one of the world’s new power brokers. In Copenhagen, China and its team of negotiators became the defacto voices of the world’s developing nations. The fact that its economy is many times larger than some of the countries it spoke for was a fact overlooked by most. If there is a winner left standing after the disappointment that was Copenhagen, it’s China. It came to Denmark not wanting a global binding agreement and left with exactly that. In reaching that goal, it even played hard ball with U.S. President Obama as it met behind his back with South Africa and India to craft their own agreement. Moving forward, China has anchored itself as THE unavoidable hurdle — ahead of other BRIC countries like India and Brazil — standing in the way of a comprehensive climate change agreement.

    Photo Credit: The White House via Wikimedia

  • ESPN launching 3D network in June

    ESPN

    ESPN has long been the leader in live HDTV and the network is about to stay ahead of the curve yet again by launching its own 3D network early this summer. But this network is just a test and ESPN is only committing to it through June 2011. So if you really want your kids growing up watching live 3D events, you better support ESPN’s effort.

    The initial broadcast will be a World Cup soccer match, followed later on by the Summer X Games, NBA games, and collegic football and basketball. It seems like ESPN really doesn’t know how this is going to pan out. There are apparently a lot of questions about how subscribers will get the stations, if they will have to pay a premium, and if anyone besides sport’s nerds will really watch it.

    But props to ESPN and Disney for at least trying something new instead of taking a backseat while some other network potentially loses a crapton of money in 3D.


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  • And It’s Official – Nexus One is First SuperPhone

    The Nexus One event is in the books and it’s time for everyone to chime in with their impressions.  What did we learn today?  Anything new or that wasn’t already predicted/leaked?    Let’s hear your thoughts in the comments below!


  • Boise State University Offers X-Rated “Cummunication” Major

    Boise State X-Rated Major Cummunication

    Looking for a reason to register at Boise State? Just take a look at the major they’re offering safety Jeron Johnson!


  • Yantouch Jellyfish LED Lamp Stings Your Senses With 16 Million Colors [Lighting]

    Remember that awesome Philips LivingColors lamp? Well, the Yantouch might be even better—and it looks like a UFO with a disco inside it.

    What makes it even more unique is the touch panel interface that you can use to cycle between colors and brightness levels. You can also set the lamp to automatically cycle through colors or illuminate only the undercarriage—resulting in a cool backlighting effect. We are not sure if the Yantouch will ever make it to the States, but it is available now in Japan for the equivalent of $160. [Yantouch via Impress via Technabob]







  • App warms your hands by overheating your iPhone

    Filed under: , , ,

    Here’s an app from among the App Store’s stranger selections. Much like the Zippo Hand Warmer, PocketHeat [iTunes link] is meant to keep your hands warm.

    it works by making the iPhone max out 100% of its power processing capacity. A slider lets you adjust the temperature and illuminate the “heating elements.” According to several App Store reviews, it doesn’t work so well.

    We don’t know just how hot it gets, but we imagine there are safeguards to prevent serious overheating. According to the Apple Knowledge Base, the iPhone should be operated “…in a place where the temperature is between 0º and 35º C (32º to 95º F).” Prolonged exposure to extreme heat will produce the temperature warning screen. The app got approved (somehow), so we assume it’s safe. But I’m not installing it.

    We don’t know why you’d want to run your undoubtedly-still-on-contract iPhone at 100% capacity — buried inside a confined pocket — for any length of time, but that’s up to you. At the very least your battery would drain in no time. At worst, well … let’s not find out. You can get PocketHeat now for $0.99US.

    Or just buy gloves.

    TUAWApp warms your hands by overheating your iPhone originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 05 Jan 2010 13:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Google’s Nexus One Is Bold New Face in Super-Smartphones [Personal Technology]

    Google this week is taking two dramatic steps to try to catapult devices using its Android mobile operating system into stronger competition with Apple’s iPhone and Research in Motion’s BlackBerry in the battle for supremacy in the super-smartphone category.

    First, the search giant is bringing out a beautiful, sleek new Android phone, the Nexus One, built to its specifications. Second, it has decided to offer the new phone—and future models—to consumers directly, unlocked, via the Web, and then invite multiple carriers to compete to sell service plans and subsidized versions of the hardware.

    [ See post to watch video ]

    One carrier is ready to support the Nexus One on day one: the U.S. arm of T-Mobile, a longstanding Google partner. The new Google Phone, built by HTC of Taiwan, will cost $529 unlocked direct from Google, at google.com/phone. It will cost $179 from T-Mobile online with a two-year contract that will set you back $79.99 a month.

    Verizon Wireless in the U.S. and Vodafone in Europe will sell the Nexus One eventually at subsidized prices that haven’t yet been announced. All of this will take place on a Google-hosted Web site, a much easier way to buy a phone and service than is typical today, and one that promises to further weaken the power of the carriers.

    The company also plans to sell the costlier, unsubsidized version to consumers in the U.K., Hong Kong and Singapore immediately. Like Americans who buy this unlocked version, these customers will have to purchase carrier service separately, something they should be able to obtain right away by just buying and inserting a SIM card from a carrier with compatible technology. (This initial unlocked phone won’t work with Verizon or Sprint in the U.S., nor on AT&T’s 3G network, only the latter’s slower network.)

    PTECH_front

    The Nexus One has a larger screen than Apple’s phone, and is a bit thinner, narrower and lighter—if a tad longer. And it boasts a better camera and longer talk time between battery charges.

    I’ve been testing the Nexus One for a couple of weeks and I like it a lot. It’s the best Android phone so far, in my view, and the first I could consider carrying as my everyday hand-held computer. It is a svelte gray device with a 3.7-inch, high-resolution screen; a thin strip of buttons underneath for home, back, menu and search; and a trackball.

    The Nexus One finally has the right combination of hardware and software to give Android a champion that might attract more people away from their iconic iPhones and BlackBerrys. It has a larger screen than Apple’s phone, and is a bit thinner, narrower and lighter—if a tad longer. And it boasts a better camera and longer talk time between battery charges.

    Also, because it will be available on the large, well-regarded Verizon 3G network, the Nexus One could tempt American iPhone users, tired of problems with AT&T, to switch.

    The iPhone still retains some strong advantages. It boasts well over 100,000 third-party apps—around 125,000 by some unofficial estimates—versus around 18,000 for the Android platform. And it has vastly more memory for storing apps, so you can keep many more of them on your phone at any one time. On the Nexus One, only 190 megabytes of its total 4.5 gigabytes of memory is allowed for storing apps. On the $199 iPhone, nearly all of the 16 gigabytes of memory can be used for apps.

    In fact, the $199 iPhone 3GS has roughly four times as much user-accessible memory out of the box, though the memory on the Nexus One can be expanded via memory cards. Apple also has a more-fluid user interface, with multitouch gestures for handling photos and Web pages.

    As for the BlackBerry, its user interface looks older and clumsier with each passing day, but it has a beautiful physical keyboard many users love, while the Nexus One has a virtual, onscreen keyboard.

    PTECH_back

    The Nexus One is packed with its own tricks. Its version of Android is essentially the same improved edition as the one that appeared on the Motorola Droid back in November. But it has a few new features, including an experimental dictation capability. You just press a microphone icon on the keyboard and start talking, and the words appear. In my tests, this worked only adequately at best, and very poorly at worst, but Google insists it will learn and improve.

    The phone also has handsome new visual features, including “live wallpaper,” with waving grass or pulsing colored lines; and a new zooming effect when you want to view icons that aren’t on your main screens. In addition, you can now view miniatures of your five main screens to help you navigate to the one you want.

    The Nexus One also has all the key software features introduced in the Droid, including free turn-by-turn voice-prompted navigation.

    In my tests, overall, the Nexus One worked very well. The latency I had seen in earlier Android phones is gone, due to a slicker version of the operating system and faster chips. The phone feels good in the hand and the screen is magnificent, with much greater resolution than the iPhone’s.

    I like very much the way social-networking information, including status messages, is integrated into the contacts app. One tap on a person’s picture in Contacts lets you quickly choose whether to call, email or message her, or map her address—all without opening the contact card itself.

    I also liked the pictures and videos I was able to take with the five-megapixel camera and flash, which I preferred to my iPhone’s camera. You can even view a photo slideshow or listen to music when the phone is in the optional desktop dock.

    But there are some downsides to the Nexus One. Like all Android phones, it relies too much, in my view, on menus that create extra steps, including some menus that have a built-in “more” button to display a secondary menu of choices.

    I also found the four buttons etched into the phone’s bottom panel sticky and hard to press. In addition, although the Nexus One claims seven hours of talk time versus five hours for the iPhone, most of its battery-life claims for other functions are weaker than Apple’s.

    PTECH

    For instance, Google claims just 6.5 hours of Wi-Fi Web use per charge, versus nine for the iPhone, and 20 for music playback versus 30. Google claims this is because, unlike Apple, it allows the simultaneous use of third-party apps, which can drain the battery faster.

    In addition, the Nexus One, and other Android devices, still pale beside the iPhone for playing music, video and games. The apps available for these functions aren’t nearly as sophisticated as on the Apple devices.

    Finally, the iPhone is still a better apps platform. Not only are there more apps, but, in my experience, iPhone apps are generally more polished and come in more varieties.

    But, with its fresh phone and bold business model, Google is taking Android to a new level, and that should ramp up the competition in the super-smartphone space.

    Find all of Walt Mossberg’s columns and videos online, free, at the All Things Digital Web site, walt.allthingsd.com. Email him at [email protected].

    Write to Walter S. Mossberg at [email protected]

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  • Europe plans massive North Sea grid for renewable energy – Deutsche Welle

    Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift: The North Sea’s wind farms could meet 10 percent of Europe’s energy needs It’s set to be the biggest transnational power network of its kind. Europe is planning a massive electricity grid to run under …


  • Tibau do Sul e Praia da Pipa, parte do paraíso chamado Rio Grando Norte

    Tibau do Sul é um município no estado do Rio Grande do Norte (Brasil), localizado na microrregião do Litoral Sul, na Mesorregião do Leste Potiguar e no Pólo Costa das Dunas. Fica a 80 km de Natal, capital do estado. Segundo o IBGE tem uma população de 11.347 habitantes. Recebe muitos turistas devido a Praia de Pipa.

    Mais informações: http://www.pipa.com.br/

    -Fotos minhas e do panoramio

    Chegando a Tibau do Sul

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    A cidade
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    Balsa da Lagoa de guaraíras

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    Lagoa de Guaraíras

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    19- A famosa creperia

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    Praia de Malembar

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    Praia do Giz

    27- Nascer do sol

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    Ponta do Pirambu

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    Praia de Cacimbinha

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    Praia da Pipa

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    Praia do Amor

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  • The Google Phone Won’t Open Up the Wireless Industry

    I had hoped that today’s announcement of Google’s phone would be another iPhone-like bomb set to disrupt wireless carriers and bring a future of affordable, open and ubiquitous mobile connectivity to pass. Apple pried open the carrier ecosystem with the iPhone, and its decisions to open up geolocation information and create an app store hurt the business model the carriers rely on even more than the incredible data use it ushered in.

    I’d anticipated that given Google’s focus on opening up the 700 MHz auction, pushing white spaces broadband and investment in WiMAX, the Nexus One also would be a hardware-based crowbar. It isn’t, and Google so far seems to be working with the carriers even as it offers its own web store for Android devices. But if Google wants to bring about affordable and open wireless to everyone, as well as encourage more competition in the wireless industry, here are a few steps it should take to bring that about.

    Build a phone that can roam: Right now, cell phones are using different wireless technologies and are tuned to various spectrum bands, so unlike choosing say, a WiFi-enabled device, one has to know what type of cell technology you want to operate the device on, such as a CDMA or HSPA network, and you have to know which spectrum you need the signals to travel over.

    Without being able to buy a cellular phone or device with the right radios that are tuned to the correct swaths of spectrum, manufacturers still have to choose which carriers they want to build for. This means costs for components can’t drop as rapidly as possible and that some carriers might have a hard time convincing folks to build devices for them.

    A software-defined radio could be the key for such a universal handset. Google could contribute dollars or talent to making SDRs  faster, cheaper and more power-efficient so they work inside mobile phones.

    Get carriers to ditch SIM cards: The SIM card is the key to the cellular kingdom. Unlike access to a Wi-Fi network or even a corporate LAN, which requires a password and a user name to access, cellular networks only open up to devices that contain the right SIM card. Carriers say they need SIM cards because they’re more secure than a user name and password combo.

    But if a consumer wants to put his device on a different network, he has to swap out the SIM or even the gadget itself. This is a barrier to consumers switching networks. If Google can convince a carrier to let a SIM-free device (perhaps biometric access to a network would be secure enough for carriers) onto its network, then we could see the beginning of a world where it’s easy for a device to use the best, lowest-cost network available and pricing for mobile broadband comes way down.

    If Google can help build devices that can roam anywhere, across a variety of networks, including Wi-Fi, and can push carriers to find another way to authenticate people on their networks without sacrificing security, then they could release a device that could be just as disruptive as the iPhone.

    Related Research: Google’s Mobile Strategy
    Google’s mobile strategy is about more than just capturing new ad revenue — its about enabling innovation and boosting access.

    Thumbnail image courtesy of Flickr user dahlstroms.

  • Maria Mitchell Association

    Massachusetts, US | Museums and Collections

    Nantucket is usually known for it’s historic whaling voyages, the intricate craft of scrimshaw, and as a popular vacation spot. In the 19th century, however, one scientist added a curious wrinkle to the small island’s rich history. Born to a Quaker family in 1818, Maria Mitchell nurtured a love for astronomy whilst growing up on the island. She turned her interests into an illustrious career that eventually culminated in the founding of Nantucket’s first and only scientific institution, the Maria Mitchell Association.

    Under the supervision of her schoolteacher father, Mitchell developed her observing skills early in life. As a teenager, Maria assisted sailors in navigating the seas by making complicated calculations. On land, the young astronomer spent nights looking through a telescope on her rooftop. Her hobby soon became a career and in 1847 she gained recognition for her discovery of a telescopic comet (a comet that is invisible to the naked eye). This achievement even earned her a gold medal from the King of Denmark.

    In 1865, following Mitchell’s recent fame, the newly-found Vassar College hired the astronomer as its first professor. Mitchell spent the rest of her career educating and conducting research at the New York women’s college. After her death in 1889, Mitchell’s friends, family, and students founded the Maria Mitchell Association, dedicated to educating the public about science in her hometown of Nantucket. For over a century the association has grown and today it includes two observatories, an aquarium, a natural science museum, an historic house, and a research library.

    The two observatories include the main Maria Mitchell Observatory near downtown, and the Loines Observatory about one kilometer away. The Astronomy Department houses a collection of over 8,000 glass photographic plates of the sky, constituting observations made between 1913 and 1995. Researchers still use the plates today as a reference to newer images. By comparing photographs of the same patch of sky taken decades apart, astronomers may study changes in celestial objects. Realizing the plates’ usefulness, the scientists at MMO became the first to digitize their entire glass plate collection and make their data available to astronomers worldwide. The Loines location features an antique 8-inch Clarke telescope used for public education as well as a 24-inch research-grade telescope.

    The association also runs its own seasonal aquarium. Each year, a variety of local marine life is collected from the shores for a temporary stay at the aquarium before being released back into the ocean. More exotic life can be found at the aquarium too, as the Gulf Stream will occasionally carry tropical fish north into Nantucket waters. In addition to maintaining the aquarium, the staff lead Marine Ecology Walks where participants can observe the feeding habits of nocturnal sea creatures or assist in the collection, identification, sorting, and counting of specimens. In the winter, marine scientists also lead excursions to Muskeget Island where the birthing of hundreds of Gray Seal pups can be witnessed.

    Similarly, the Natural Science department operates a museum that features local flora and fauna. There you can learn about the research done on the island, including the tracking of a male Osprey through the use of a solar-powered GPS transmitter placed on the bird. Using information relayed by the device about the bird’s location, altitude, flight speed and direction, scientists monitored its progress on a flight to South America. In one month, the bird covered 4000 miles, about one eighth of the Earth’s circumference. The department also leads Nature and Bird Walks and hands-on workshops in which participants can take part in the scientific research of the association staff at various remote sites around the island.

    A historical look at the island and its culture is provided at the Mitchell House and the Mitchell Schoolhouse, both operated by the association. The former was built in 1790 and documents Nantucket life in the 19th century, featuring family artifacts including Maria’s original Dolland telescope. The schoolhouse, where Maria’s father taught, is located next door and houses the association’s Archives and Special Collections. Here visitors can peruse Maria’s manuscripts, 19th century scientific books and journals, and original documents pertaining to the family and association.

    A complete Mitchell-family experience of Nantucket must also include a visit to the Meridian Stones. These two stones, located downtown, long perplexed the island’s inhabitants. However, the MMA’s research uncovered the mysterious stones’ origin and purpose. Using astronomical calculations, Maria’s father erected the stones to represent the true geographic meridian, or north-south line. The stones were used to monitor variations of a quantity called “magnetic declination,” defined as the angle between the lines pointing to the true North pole and magnetic North pole. Since surveyors of the time used compasses (which measure direction relative to the magnetic poles), accurate determinations of the magnetic declination were necessary to create geographically correct maps.

    The so-called “Mitchell Meridian Line” was one of the first of its kind in the country, preceding the court-mandated construction of similar instruments by three decades.

  • Belo Horizonte – centro e região

    Olá, sou novo aquí no SSC e esse é meu primeiro thread. Aproveitei minhas férias escolares e fui até o centro para tirar algumas fotos.

    1- Arredores do shopping cidade
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    31- Praça 7

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    46- subindo em direção ao Lourdes

    47- Entrada do diamond Mall

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  • Kim & Khloe Kardashian Quick Trim Commercial

    Socialite sisters Kim and Khloe Kardashian slap their stamp of approval on Quick Trim for a new commercial advertisement promoting the weight loss system.

    “SEXY! U can see our QuickTrim commercial on QTdiet.com FIRST before it airs on TV!” Kim Tweeted just an hour ago.

    Kim and Khloe are showing off their svelte new figures in the super-sexy new spot. Kim, 29, and Khloe, 25, appear on screen wearing buttoned-down white collared shirts before ending up poolside in bikinis.

    “You can change the way you look…create the body you deserve,” a tantilizing Kim tells the audience.