Author: Serkadis

  • Make a New Year’s resolution to look in on older neighbours

    With many older people living alone and more than 180,000 saying they have gone for a whole week without speaking to friends, family or neighbours, Care Service Minister Phil Hope is asking the public to make a New Year’s resolution to visit older neighbours more often.

    Social interaction can protect older people’s mental health, helping to do their shopping will prevent falls and injury and keeping an eye on their health will stop them developing serious health problems and ending up in hospital.

    Figures show:

    Over a million people over 65 feel trapped in their own homes.

    More than 180,000 have gone for a whole week without speaking to friends, neighbours or family.

    Nearly half of all older people (about 4.6 million) consider the television as their main form of company.

    More than 50 per cent of over 75s live on their own.

    Phil Hope said:

    “Many older people live alone. For some that’s a choice, for others it means they feel isolated. We are a very caring nation so I’m asking people to make a resolution to look in on their older neighbours more often, to help them with shopping or to simply pop in for a chat.

    “Our major aim for the New Year is to build on the care that’s embedded in our society. We’ll be creating a National Care Service which everyone will be able to rely on when they get older.”

    The Government is already driving forward measure towards making our system of care simpler, fairer and more affordable including helping people to be more independent.

    There are many ways to find out about volunteering opportunities:

    For more information about volunteering and how to get involved visit

    http://www.volunteering.org.uk/IWantToVolunteer

    You can also visit Volunteer Centres, which act as a “Job Centres” for volunteers. They can tell you what voluntary work is available locally and put you in touch with local organisations. You can also discuss with them what you want to do and get advice.

    With over 300 Volunteer Centres across England, there is a Volunteer Centre in most areas. Visit our Volunteer Centre finder on our website for details of one near you.

    You can also look up your nearest Volunteer Centre in the phone directory under ‘V’ or phone Volunteering England on 0845 305 6979.

    There is also an internet database of UK local volunteering opportunities that you can search at www.do-it.org.uk .

    Justin Davis Smith, Chief Executive of Volunteering England, the volunteer development agency, added:

    “Spending a few hours with an elderly person can make a big difference to their quality of life and getting involved with volunteering is easier than you might think.

    “You can volunteer informally by visiting an elderly friend or neighbour or if you don’t know anyone, you could choose to volunteer through a befriending project in your local area. To find out what opportunities are available in your area, get in touch with your local Volunteer Centre.”

    For further information, please contact Department of Health press office on 020 7210 5221.

  • Roger Lee Hayden Signs with Pedercini Kawasaki for 2010 Season

    Nicky Hayden’s youngest brother, Roger Lee Hayden, has been confirmed by the Italian Pedercini Kawasaki team for the 2010 World Superbike Championship season. Hayden will compete on a ZX-10R, a machine with which he has already been familiarized during his AMA racing days with Kawasaki in the United States.

    "I am really happy to be participating in the World Superbike Championship next year with the Pedercini Team, Roger Lee Hayden said. It has always been my goal to race in… (read more)

  • Inside Ireland’s Desperate Attempt To Conceal The Health Of Its Finance Minister

    brian lenihan

    The week before Christmas it was revealed that the health ministers of Japan and Ireland — two countries in precarious fiscal situations — were both dealing with potentially serious problems.

    In Japan, the story seemed clearly stress-related, as 77-year old Horiso Fujii was admitted to the hospital, saying he was in fact “warn out.” He says he’ll continue on at the job, however.

    In Ireland it was revealed that Brian Lenihan was under treatment for pancreatic cancer. Though he plans to continue at the position, an article in the Irish Independent from this weekend reveals how the government pulled out all the stops to prevent the story from getting out.

    Rumours about Mr Lenihan being seriously ill began circulating among political and media circles on Christmas Eve, with some speculation that it might be cancer.

    Senior government advisers were in contact with a number of national news organisations, asking them not to run the story of Mr Lenihan’s illness until after the Christmas break.

    On Christmas Eve, TV3 director of news Andrew Hanlon, on learning of Mr Lenihan’s condition, called in his senior political reporters and prepared to run the story.

    It has emerged that the station’s finance correspondent, Brian O’Donovan, was to report the story.

    After speaking with Mr Lenihan’s spokesman Eoin Dorgan, Hanlon decided to postpone running the story until St Stephen’s Day, giving the minister 48 hours to tell his family, including his two children Tom and Clare.

    The morning of St Stephen’s Day marked the turning point for the story. The minister’s spokesman, Eoin Dorgan, issued a statement shortly after 11am. In it he said: “The minister is well and enjoying the Christmas break with his family and does not propose talking to the media about anything until the new year.”

    By 1pm, it became known that TV3 was intending to break the Lenihan story on its 5.30pm bulletin.

    Read the whole story at the Irish Independent — >

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • MINI Presents New Ad Campaign

    We’ve come to appreciate MINI for their impressive advertising campaigns. And once again the British car manufacturer has managed to make our jaws drop, as during the holidays it launched a new viral marketing campaign in Amsterdam.

    The simple, yet interesting idea was to drop some MINI Cooper huge boxes around Amsterdam, as if Santa brought cars and people threw away the package, creativecriminals.com wrote. As simple as it might sound, the effect was quite powerful and the camp… (read more)

  • Black Culture Directory

    Hello! I would like to invite everyone to the [ Black Culture Directory ] flickr group. It’s an index group of other flickr groups and galleries about culture of Africa and Black people from all around the world.
  • 'Three-Strikes' Illegal File-Sharing Law Comes into Effect in France

    Last year, the Internet began to be seen as a basic human right and some countries have instituted legal means of guaranteeing that the vast majority of their citizens have access to a quality Internet connection. Other countries, though, are going the other way, hindering their citizen’s web use and in some cases moving to disconnect them altogether. In France, the heavily criticized and disputed, so-called “three strikes” law has come into effect starting January 1st. Its backers are quick to boast the laws unabridged effectiveness, but common sense points the other way.

    The way it stands, illegal file-sharers in France have chances to see the error of their ways and make amends before being sent before a judge and possibly having their Internet ‘privileges’ removed. First-time offenders will be sent an email by the newly formed Higher Authority for the Distribution of Works and the Protection of Copyright on the Internet (HADOPI) warning them to cease their illegal activities. How exactly the agency will determine users’ email addresses, or even harder, the address they are actively using remains to be seen.

    If the miscreants continue to show utter disregard for the law and the rights, and wallets, of the media industry, they will be sent an actual letter urging them to stop the… (read more)

  • Warren Beatty Tell-All Links Actor To Nearly 13,000 Women

    A lawyer for acting legend Warren Beatty has denied that that the screen star with a reputation for bedding leading ladies gave his blessing to a new tell-all that claims he’s had sex with nearly 13,000 women.

    In Star: How Warren Beatty Seduced America, longtime Hollywood writer Peter Biskind claims to have befriended the 72-year-old actor and convinced many of Beatty’s high profile former lovers to open up about their relationships with him.

    The book dishes details on Beatty’s dalliances with Jane Fonda, Natalie Wood, Joan Collins, Julie Christie, Madonna, Diane Keaton, and singer Carly Simon — who has long been suspected of writing the hit single “You’re So Vain” in honor of the cad. According to excerpts featured in The New York Post over the weekend, Biskind estimates that by “using simple arithmetic” Beatty seduced “12,775 women, give or take, a figure that does not include daytime quickies, drive-bys, casual gropings, stolen kisses and so on.”

    “I wasn’t the Warren Beatty type, but there I was,” Keaton told the author, according to The Post. “He was just so . . . overwhelming in every way. I remember looking at his face and going, ‘How am I here with this?’ The brilliance and the talent, you get caught up in it.”

    In a statement to The Huffington Post late Sunday, the star’s longtime lawyer, Bertram Fields, denied Beatty consented to Beskin’s biography:

    “Mr. Biskind’s tedious and boring book on Mr. Beatty was not authorized by Mr. Beatty and should not be published as an authorized biography. It contains many false assertions and purportedly quotes Mr. Beatty as saying things he never said. Other media should not repeat things from the book on the assumption that they are true or that the book is an authorized biography.”

    Warren Beatty has been married to actress Annette Bening since 1992.


  • Button in McLaren Uniform, Sets Aims for 2010 Pre-Season

    Jenson Button is more determined than ever to shut out the critics throughout the upcoming season of Formula One, and insisted that the base for securing another title-winning campaign in 2010 is a good preparation before the actual start of the season.

    Meaning he’ll have to work very hard to maintain his physical state ahead of the new season, but also create a strong relationship with his new mechanics and race engineers in order to be able to challenge Lewis Hamilton’s No 1 sta… (read more)

  • The Rally Is An Extreme Outlier, But That Doesn’t Mean It Can’t Go On

    (This guest post originally appeared at the author’s blog)

    Back in early November we ran a story titled “from one outlier to another”.   The market had declined and recovered from a very deep trough so rapidly that we experienced two incredible outlier events in less than a year – an almost unheard occurrence of such magnitude.  This excellent chart summarized the extreme nature of the event:

    bell curve

    In the midst of our research we ran across an equally interesting chart from Goldman Sachs.  While the market may now be at an extreme and in the process of undergoing a remarkably rare event there is nothing that says this incredibly rare event can’t become even more rare.  In other words, this phenomenal bull market just might get even more phenomenal.

    If you study the previous 18 deepest bear marketsand pattern their recovery you’ll confirm what the chart above shows.  We are in an almost unheard of top percentile in terms of performance.   If you chart these 18 deepest bears and the subsequent recoveries you get the following:

    rebound

    What’s interesting to note here is that we are perfectly tracking the sharpest of rebounds.  While Goldman views this as a bullish signal going forward it’s also important to note that the majority of these deep bear markets sputtered out from these levels (a thesis I believe is much more likely).

    Read more market commentary at The Pragmatic Capitalist — >

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Toyota Etios to Be Revealed at New Delhi Show

    Toyota will unveil at the upcoming Delhi Auto Expo the company’s latest contraption for the emerging markets, the so-called Etios. Initially aimed at the Indian market, Toyota’s Etios will also be launched in some other markets around he world, including Russia and South America.

    Likely to go on sale at the end of this year, the Etios will be offered in both hatchback and notchback body styles, with both versions to be on display at the show. Still, autocar.co.uk writes that the h… (read more)

  • What Bulgarian cities do you know by name?

    That would me interesting to me…
  • PIMCO Slams The Brakes On US, UK, And Corporate Bond Buying, Amid Massive Debt Binge

    In a new 2010 outlook, via Bloomberg, PIMCO’s Paul A. McCulley reveals his firm’s uber-cautious stance towards bonds, amid the massive borrowing underway in the UK and the US.

    —–

    PIMCO Managing Director Paul McCulley leads the firm’s quarterly Cyclical Economic Forums, in which investment professionals from around the world gather to discuss the outlook for the global economy and financial markets over the next six to 12 months. In the following interview, Mr. McCulley discusses the results of the December Forum and its implications for PIMCO’s investment strategy in 2010.

    Q: PIMCO recently developed its outlook for 2010. What are the general conclusions?
    McCulley
    : The global economic recovery underway will likely be very much de-synchronized, borne of heterogeneous initial conditions on display prior to the recession, with a full range of possible outcomes. In the developed world, we had double bubbles in property and credit creation. Much of the developing world, in contrast, had already gone through its “baptism by fire” a decade ago and actually had incredibly sound balance sheets in the public and private sector as a starting point.

    In addition to these differing initial conditions, there is still uncertainty over three major issues, which in turn creates a range of possible outcomes in our forecast. Depending on how these issues progress, we’re looking at multiple potential resolutions of the inherent tension in the overall system. There will likely be some bipolar market outcomes. 

    Q: Can you talk more about those three major issues?
    McCulley
    : The first issue is the peg between the Chinese yuan and the U.S. dollar, which essentially gives us a one-size-fits-all monetary policy in a very differentiated world. Progress, or lack of progress, on this issue could lead to several outcomes. If China were to let its currency appreciate, it could regain a degree of monetary policy autonomy and a better ability to manage the risk of overheating and asset price inflation. Another outcome, however, is that China refuses to let the yuan appreciate, essentially maintaining too easy of a monetary policy for itself and the developing countries that shadow Chinese policies. This would create bubble risk, particularly for assets such as emerging market (EM) equities and commodities.

    The second major uncertainty is what will happen when the Fed completes its mortgage-backed securities (MBS) buying programs. We know that it will have an unfriendly effect on the interest rate markets, but we don’t know the magnitude, because it’s too hard to isolate the supply and demand dynamics between fundamentals and the stimulus programs. The key variables are the “stock” effect, or the lingering price impact of the amount of duration taken out of the marketplace, and the “flow” effect, which is the price impact when the Fed stops buying. They’ll keep the stock, but they’re just not going to be part of the flow any more. 

    The third uncertainty is any change in the Fed’s pre-commitment language, which is currently committed to keeping the fed funds rate exceptionally low for an “extended period.” We don’t think the Fed is going to tighten any time in 2010, but long before the FOMC (Federal Open Market Committee) actually does the deed, it will have to change its language. That could very well happen in 2010, and there is genuine uncertainty over how quickly and strongly the market will anticipate a tightening process. Our gut feeling is that the moment the Fed changes any one of its words, it’s going to be a very unpleasant experience, because the marketplace has very little patience and a very big imagination. The most important book at the Fed right now is a thesaurus, and it’s probably sitting on top of Paul Samuelson’s Foundations of Economic Analysis.

    Q: Will U.S. fiscal policy play a role in determining the economic and financial outcomes? 
    McCulley
    : We don’t think the U.S. is going to get a new stimulus package, but there will be a hodgepodge of things that fit the description. In fact, that’s one of the reasons that the Treasury has been pushing so hard for the banks to pay back Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) money, because the president plans to ask to Congress to move TARP money into Cash for Caulkers and other job stimulus measures. So we will get fiscal stimulus, but it will not be as big or explicit as what we’ve had so far. 

    The big unknown gets back to what we’ve already discussed: We’re probably going to have a $1.4 trillion deficit this year without the Fed on the buy side of the market for duration. There is major uncertainty about how the supply/demand equation for duration will resolve itself when the Fed is out of the picture.

    Q: With all these uncertainties, what is PIMCO’s global economic outlook for 2010? 
    McCulley
    : Cyclical turning points in the context of secular turning points are devilishly difficult to handicap. It was actually easier to make economic forecasts nine to 12 months ago than it is now. Back then, when the global financial system and economy were caught in the throes of the moral equivalent of a life-threatening cardiac arrest, key questions were simple: Would policymakers go “all-in” with their balance sheets, and would those efforts restore private sector risk appetite? The answers have been yes and yes.

    But with the yes-yes answers now in, forecasting is much more difficult as markets navigate improved cyclical conditions within the framework of a New Normal secular outlook. Bottom line is that we have a very real possibility of a wide range of economic outcomes in the new year, and it’s a dangerous game to maintain a religious devotion to any one in particular. We need to weigh potential outcomes not only from a fundamental economic perspective, but from a behavioral economic perspective that evokes Keynes’s beauty contest.

    That said, we do have forecast numbers that generally capture the spirit of our discussions: sturdy growth in the emerging markets space, even if less than the Old Normal, and slower growth in the developed countries. Inflation, meanwhile, will probably be too low in the developed world because of still-huge output gaps. What the forecasts can’t tell, however, is that asset price inflation – including commodities – is becoming a more important dimension in our forecast because it’s becoming a more influential component of central banks’ reactions around the world.

    pimco

    Q: How do we reconcile this stronger growth trend we’ve seen in late 2009 with the lower New Normal growth trend in the forecast?
    McCulley
    : It’s true that the fourth-quarter 2009 gross domestic product (GDP) is likely going to be 4%-plus. The inventory cycle is a turbo charger right now. But when we talk about the New Normal growth rate, we’re talking in trends as opposed to single quarters.

    The real story here will be told not in the GDP numbers, which are being driven by the inventory cycle, but by real final sales, which will continue to face the headwind of balance sheet deleveraging in the household sector. This is a critical tenet of the New Normal. Consumers can’t and/or won’t augment personal income by borrowing, so consumption must grow in line with personal income. Consumption isn’t likely to get a boost from the increase in stock market wealth because home values – a larger part of individual wealth – are still depressed. Thus, savings rates may stabilize at 4% or 5%, but may go as high as 8%. Additionally, unemployment hurts personal income, as those without jobs have no income and the huge unemployment gap means that even if you have a job, you do not have the leverage to ask for a big raise. 

    Q: What are the investment implications of the cyclical outlook? 
    McCulley
    : As we translate all of this into investment strategy, we have to be incredibly cognizant of lingering uncertainties and the full range of potential outcomes. Because that range is so wide right now, our risk-taking is more tame than it would be if we had a normal distribution of expected outcomes. For now, we are limiting overall risk exposures, but we have to be ready and willing to recognize alternatives to the baseline forecast if and when they unfold, and to act opportunistically. 

    This all leaves us with portfolios that appear, more than at other times, to be hugging the benchmarks with no bold positioning. Some might suggest we’ve become closet indexers, but, on the contrary, we’re making a very active decision to run light on risk. At this point, we know this is not going to be a particularly high-yielding portfolio. You can only eat what’s in the cafeteria, and right now the cafeteria doesn’t have anything particularly appetizing in it.

    Q: How is the outlook being reflected in portfolio positioning?
    McCulley
    : For interest rate exposure, or duration, we are currently cutting back in the U.S. and U.K. because, as mentioned before, supply and demand dynamics are likely to be negatively affected as borrowing rises and central bank buying declines. On the other hand, we remain modestly bullish on duration in the Eurozone, which has been congenitally disinclined to be aggressively Keynesian and won’t face the same degree of reduction in central bank duration buying in 2010. Regarding curve duration, we continue to remain modestly overweight.

    With corporate bonds, we are becoming a bit more cautious than we have been. In the third and fourth quarters of 2009, we believed the massive narrowing of spreads we saw in the second quarter wouldn’t go much further. We weren’t necessarily selling credit on any scale, but we’d reduced buying. Now, we’re generally neutral versus the benchmark, but we believe that corporate spreads are still at levels where we see value in carefully selected high-quality credits, particularly in bank and non-bank financials and non-cyclical sectors, such as utilities and healthcare. In high yield corporate, we are adding very select names in telecoms and energy pipelines that we view as “money good.”

    In agency MBS, we are underweight, having reduced our exposure as the Fed’s buying programs have dramatically tightened spreads.

    Our overall currency target is to be about 3% long a basket of emerging market currencies, generally against the benchmark portfolio currency. Similarly, we’re favoring emerging market sovereign credits, and the Dubai panic gave us additional legroom to enter into these trades. We are also adding to positions in EM corporate bonds.

    Though we view Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS) as a strategic long-term allocation, on a tactical basis we are underweight TIPS versus the benchmark, reflecting our view that risks are currently weighted toward a disinflationary environment.

    We do like Build America Bonds, but are fairly neutral on plain old municipal bonds. The technical supply/demand picture for munis is actually quite favorable, especially since Build America Bonds have accounted for supply that would have otherwise been muni supply. The only thing that keeps us from being all-in on munis is the fact that the New Normal environment will not likely be especially kind to states and localities, requiring extremely careful credit selection.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Straight From The Mayonnaise Jar, Forecasts For 2010 [Voices]

    By Eric Savitz, Blogger and Columnist, Barron’s, Tech Trader Daily

    In my Tech Trader column in the print edition of Barron’s over the weekend, I opened up my hermetically sealed mayonnaise jar, which had been sitting on Funk & Wagnalls doorstep for only Karnak knows how long, and provided some prognostications. I reprise them here:

    • IT spending booms. Driven by a pickup in the economy, highly improved server processors, the spread of virtualization technology and cloud computing, and the PC refresh cycle, 2010 will be a big year for enterprise-computing companies. Oracle (ORCL), HP (HPQ), IBM (IBM) and the like should thrive.

    Read the rest of this post on the original site

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  • Wago-I/O-System 750 – One system for all applications

    The “optimum” fieldbus system.
    With a fieldbus-independent design that features finely modular components, with its decentral fieldbus system, the WAGO-I/O-SYSTEM is approved for extremely diverse applications.

    The system is optimized for process-oriented communication and is a scalable-performance solution for high integration density with an unbeatable price / performance ratio.

    – The diversity of possible applications are almost infinite.
    – The hardware and system costs have been reduced to a minimum in doing so.
    – For simple use that ensures maximum efficiency.

  • V4.1 HexSight Software Release For High Accuracy Recognition and Metrology

    November 2009, Delta, British Columbia, Canada – LMI Technologies Inc. (LMI) announces the release of version 4.1 of their HexSight software. Further support for color image processing and hardware acceleration was added and now supports Sony Intelligent Cameras.

    “HexSight 4.1 is a first class recognition and metrology library suitable for deployment on PCs and now embedded platforms like the Sony Intelligent camera product line”, says Terry Arden, CEO of LMI Technologies.

    HexSight geometric pattern recognition technology offers flexible and reliable contour-based identification of objects unaffected by scale, orientation, lighting, occlusion, clutter, contrast reversal, or even subtle color variation. After finding objects, HexSight delivers a flexible set of metrology tools to measure and confirm parts meet key tolerances.

    To maximize the capabilities of the software, HexSight 4.1 incorporates a wide range of third party camera and frame grabber support. The latest release adds support for fully compliant GigE Vision cameras, adding to the current capability to work with any IEEE 1394(Firewire) and USB camera that uses a DirectShow driver.

    HexSight 4.1 is ideal for a vast array of machine vision challenges including road sign detection, solar wafer inspection, shirt tag location and analysis, optical character recognition, brake pad inspection, part sorting and sizing, to name just a few. But don’t just take our word for it; instead, download your free trial of the HexSight software at http://www.lmitechnologies.com/hexsight to test your ideas today.

    About Us:

    LMI Technologies Inc. (LMI) is a global manufacturer of 2D & 3D vision sensor technology for in-house engineering teams, original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) and system integrators (SIs). With more than 100 patents to our name, and more than 30 years of sensor expertise through our in-house research and development team, we rapidly design custom sensors for industrial applications. Our strong relationships with end users, OEMs and SIs allows our LMI Engineering Team and Market Experts to solve numerous industrial system requirements, developing customized vision sensors for their application needs, and successfully selling over 50,000 sensors and licensed products to industrial markets, such as molten metal’s, welding, tire manufacturing, wood processing, livestock, automotive, transportation, and many others.

  • Heightmatic – SERIES 574 – High Precision Height Gage

    • Provides resolution of 0.001mm on the large LCD readout for accurate measurements.
    • Excellent functionality and easy operation.
    • The standard two-directional touch-signal probe provides improved efficiency and reliability of measurement for the Heightmatic.
    • Optional carbide-tipped scribers are available.
    • With SPC data output.

  • Users Easily Identify Vacuum Leakage with Thyracont’s VD85

    Innovation in New Data Logging Vacuum Instruments

    Manufacturers and users of vacuum pumps, components and systems have reason to celebrate the arrival of the new series of compact vacuum instruments from Thyracont. The latest generation of these useful digital meters now includes a data logging capability that truly sets them apart from all other vacuum measurement instrument. The VD85 instrument; in combination with Thyracont’s VacuGraphTM 8.0 software puts a highly practical and functional tool into the hands of quality assurance, equipment maintenance and field service engineers.

    The VD85 instrument can be operated from either its internal battery or from an external power supply. The instrument is attached to the test article with a standard KF vacuum flange. Integrated precision sensors provide a seamless measurement range from 1200 mbar to 5×10-4 mbar (900 Torr to 5×10-4 Torr). The measured pressure is displayed and can be downloaded to the internal data logger, where up to 2000 continuous data points can be stored.

    A new (patent pending) firmware feature “Store only at pressure change”, allows the user to have the instrument log data points only if the pressure has changed since the last measurement. This capability conserves data storage space within the VD85. In use, the instrument will record rapid pressure changes (as in the case of a pump down from atmospheric pressure). When the pressure reaches equilibrium, the instrument responds by not taking duplicate measurements.

    The VD85 USB port enables the user to download stored measurement data to a computer operating Thyracont’s VacuGraph 8.0 software. Amongst other features, this powerful analysis software provides a logarithmic display of pressure. A key feature of VacuGraph 8.0 is Leak Rate Calculation (patent pending). The VD85 can be used to determine the leak rate of a closed volume. When the instrument has recorded a pressure increase and the data downloaded to VacuGraph 8.0, the user simply enters the volume of the test article and identifies two points on the log display of pressure. The software will automatically calculate the leak rate.

    Thyracont Vacuum Instruments GmbH is located in Germany and manufactures precision vacuum measurement and control units for application in rough to ultra high vacuum. Its customers include equipment manufacturers, industrial users, and research laboratories.

  • Premiere: Toyota Sells Better in Asia than in Japan

    Not sure whether we should blame this on the booming Chinese market or on Toyota’s sinking in the domestic market but, for the first time ever, sales of its vehicles in Asia will exceed, for 2009, those in Japan.

    According to Japan Today, Toyota had sold around 1,354,000 vehicles in Asia until the end of November, while Japan only managed to reach the 1,256,000 mark. Out of the total units sold in Asia, except Japan, China is to be held accountable for nearly half: 622,000 units,… (read more)

  • TechCrunch, The Google Chrome Extension

    I’ve enjoyed using Google’s Chrome browser ever since it was introduced back in September 2008, albeit using other browsers alongside for different purposes. With the launch of Extensions for Chrome, the need to occasionally fire up Firefox or Opera has diminished, and I doubt I’ll be using any browser other than Chrome much in 2010. Just to drive home the point that Google Chrome Extensions, though still in beta, is a crucial feature for the fledgling desktop browser.

    And now self-proclaimed TechCrunch addict and student at Illinois Institute of Technology Viggnesh Kandasamy has hashed together a basic extension designed to let Chrome users stay on top of what gets published on here. More reason to love Chrome Extensions (and more reason to love our fans).

    The add-on for Chrome is fairly rudimentary: installing it will add a favicon in the top menu that will open up a window displaying the last four articles published on TechCrunch when clicked. Clicking the headlines shows a short description before a ‘read more’ link, and you also get to share the link instantly on Twitter and/or Facebook. In addition, you get a box that allows you to run a search for companies, people and more who’ve appeared on this site or in CrunchBase.

    What more would you like to see added to the extension?

    Let us know in comments; Kandasamy will be reading them.

    Crunch Network: CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0


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  • Google And Spotify Dance Over U.S. Launch

    Spotify. The elusive European streaming music startup that you just can’t get access to in the U.S., unless you know someone or jump through a few hoops.

    The U.S. launch has been delayed over aggressive negotiations with the labels over the price users will pay in the U.S. Spotify insists on free, the labels want to move away from that model entirely.

    We’ve heard that a compromise has been reached. Spotify will be free for users, but a “very limited” number of people will be able to use it.

    Much more interesting, though, are the conversations with Google that we’ve confirmed. The two companies sketched out a plan where Spotify’s excellent Android application would be build into the 2.1 version of Android and would launch in the U.S. with the Google Nexus One phone on January 5. The application – which is available in Europe and allows for offline syncing of songs – would give Google a much needed competitive answer to Apple’s iTunes. The Android could realistically be seen as a media consumption device, like the iPhone, with things like Spotify built into it.

    Google wanted Spotify badly enough that they were willing to cover the label costs for every user of $3 – $4 per month. Spotify would add advertising on top of it, as they do with the free version in Europe, to make additional revenue. Without Google paying those label fees there was no way Spotify could handle the costs of the user flow that 2.1 would provide. Currently, European users must pay for Spotify Premium to use the mobile versions of the service.

    We haven’t heard whether the deal was done, and there’s a chance Spotify will be part of the January 5 Google announcement. But our sources say the deal has likely gone cold, at least for now.

    When Spotify does launch in the U.S., though, look for a new version of the player that adds social elements – like social playlists – to the product. That’s a big weakness Spotify has against MOG, which uses social elements to aid discovery of new music. And Spotify will also supposedly let you play songs that you have on your hard drive (like via iTunes) that they don’t have in their library. That will help fill in the ever-decreasing gaps in their library, and make Spotify that much more compelling for users.

    Crunch Network: CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0


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