Author: Serkadis

  • Hints of WordPress App in the Works

    There’s nothing concrete to point to yet, but it appears that WordPress might be working on an official Android application.  What’s the clue?  A subdomain (android.wordress.org)  has been set up on the official WordPress server, indicating an Android version could be in the works

    It’s hard to say how far out the app might be released, but these next weeks will definitely be a prime time to make an announcement.  The Nexus One buzz is reaching a fevered pitch. The popular blogging tool is already available in Blackberry and iPhone iterations.


  • Google’s To-Do List for 2010

    Call it the juggernaut factor. Every year, dazzled by Google’s massive presence on the web, someone offers a wildly bullish prediction for its stock in the coming year. Wired pluckily predicted Google at $1,000 in 2007. (It peaked at $747.) A year later, Credit Suisse saw shares reaching $900. (It fell to $307.) Last year, Motley Fool thought Google the “best stock for 2009” – not really true: AMD, for example, is up 359 percent vs. Google’s 102 percent gain. Now, the histrionic Jim Cramer sees Google hitting a record high in 2010.

    To which I say: We’ll see. Predictions are like Christmas toys — they come tumbling out in late December, only to be cast aside and forgotten a few weeks later. It’s much more useful to ask: What would it take for Google to have a blowout year? What would the company need to do to meet these bullish targets? So rather than another set of stock predictions, here’s a to-do list for Google in 2010.

    1. Make me click on display ads.

    And not just me. Many longtime web users can’t remember the last time we clicked on a display ad. (It’s been a few years in my case.) The more we see, the better our minds learn to instinctively tune them out. It’s no wonder display-ad revenue has been falling while search ads have been rising.

    Making display ads as targeted and unobtrusive as search ads may be an uphill battle, but that was a reason for Google buying DoubleClick. It’s coming up on three years since that $3.1 billion deal was announced. Since then, there’s been Ad Exchange 2.0 and lots of talk about a “display ecosystem.” 2010 is the time to deliver on that promise. But it’s not just about wooing new advertisers online — it’s about getting online shoppers to notice display ads again.

    Google’s Jonathan Rosenberg recently noted that display ads “seem to work very well” on some mobile devices because “there’s much more of a dynamic of forced engagement with display.” “Forced engagement” sounds like a shotgun marriage, but if people are less blind to mobile display ads, this area is that much more of a priority.

    2. Forget hardware. Focus on Android Market.

    There are some businesses Google doesn’t need to be in, and selling smartphones is one of them. Yes, it’s a wonderful way to upend an industry that needs shaking up, but subsidizing the costs necessary to make the phones price-competitive could hurt Google’s profit margins for years. Google management may not care about that, but investors will.

    A more immediate need for Android phones is an app store that can rival what Apple has created. Apple’s control-freak tendencies in running its App Store is a weakness to be exploited, but Android Market has been slow to move. Android Market is still a fraction of the App Store’s size (16,000 apps on Android Market vs. 100,000-plus for the App Store), and the lack of unified standards for myriad Android phones discourages developers. As AppleInsider noted, Android Market is “more like a free rummage sale compared to an actual retail store.”

    For most smartphone consumers, the features on Android phones and the iPhone are similar enough, so the battle for a competitive edge will be fought over the number and quality of apps. That makes Android Market a bigger priority for 2010.

    3. Make enterprises pay.

    Ask Eric Schmidt what second act Google has planned to supplement search and he’s likely to mention Google Apps. He calls the enterprise market the next “billion-dollar opportunity,” with Apps leading the way. More than 2 million businesses are using Google Apps globally; and although those with fewer than 50 employees use it for free, Apps bring in hundreds of millions of dollars a year.

    Selling enterprise wares is one thing, and supporting them another — especially when you toss in concerns companies have about moving their data to the cloud. As we’ve seen, when a company’s servers go down, employees gripe privately. When Gmail suffers an outage, it makes headlines. And as Sebastian has pointed out, Google will be upping the ante with Chrome OS.

    Google faces other issues it needs to address longer-term, such as improving its position in popular areas like real-time content and social networks. For 2010, the immediate question is where new revenue will come from. That means effective display ads, an improved storefront for apps, and more enterprise sales to big companies.

    Hitting all those marks is a tall order. Together, they just might help Google achieve the bullish performance some are expecting. But given that each of these tasks face challenges, Google is more likely to see a year of strong, but not spectacular, growth.

    Image courtesy of Gigazine.net


    GridRouter by SmartSynch: The communications hub for the Smart Grid

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  • Box Art? Clever Mini promotion litters streets with giant packaging

    Filed under: , ,

    Mini box marketing – Click above to watch video after the jump

    Heineken ran commercials that showed a guy’s ultimate closet as a walk-in refrigerator filled with the Dutch beer. To support the ads they put huge cardboard boxes around Amsterdam on garbage day with “Walk-In Fridge” written on them, as if someone had actually gotten one as a gift. Well, it looks like Mini did the same thing after Christmas, casting giant, empty boxes with shreds of gift wrapping around Amsterdam. Predictably for a Mini campaign, it got people’s attention. Check it out after the jump.

    [Source: Creative Criminals]

    Continue reading Box Art? Clever Mini promotion litters streets with giant packaging

    Box Art? Clever Mini promotion litters streets with giant packaging originally appeared on Autoblog on Sat, 02 Jan 2010 12:05:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Platinum Games is counting down to something

    MadWorld and Bayonetta developer Platinum Games has put up a countdown on their Japanese website, presumably for a new game.

  • Motorola Calgary / Droid Devour Gets Shot Up In Silver, New Info [Motorola]

    Motorola making a device in more that one color? You don’t say… One of our connects sent us the above photo of the Motorola Calgary / DROID Devour / Whatever, and confirmed the specifications we posted a few months back.

    We’re told the keyboard was “nice” and the phone itself was “easier to use” compared to the Motorola DROID. Obviously that’s personal opinion, and maybe the BLUR OS simplifies things for some people, but the trackpad apparently is killer as a navigational input device. Oh? The device has Wi-Fi, GPS, a 1420mAh battery, but unfortunately no SIM card slot as it is not a global device. Whether the unit will come in multiple colors or not is not confirmed as these are still non-final units, we’re told, but we’d probably bet on it being available in black as well as silver. If only they kept that RAZR-keyboard

    BGR features the latest tech news, mobile-related content and of course, exclusive scoops.







  • The Tyranny Of Government And Our Duty Of Confidentiality As Bloggers

    Last week two bloggers, Steven Frischling and Chris Elliot, were visited by TSA agents and threatened with jail time if they did not reveal their source of the TSA Travel Directive that they each published shortly after the attempted terrorist attack on Christmas day. Frischling caved immediately and handed over his computer. Elliot did not. Since then the Department of Homeland Security has dropped the subpoenas, but there is a bigger issue here. The protection of sources is a cornerstone of our freedom of speech.

    As bloggers, we have a duty of confidentiality to our sources. And that means keeping information confidential even if threatened with the tyranny of government. And even if the legislatures and courts haven’t decided that as bloggers we have real rights protecting us from that tyranny.

    I’ll never be surprised by a tyrannical government. In a sense, it’s their job. It’s our job as bloggers to stand up to that tyranny, even if our liberty has been threatened. Journalists have gone to jail rather than disclose their sources. If bloggers want the same level of respect, and protection from government by the courts, they need to stand up for what’s right.

    And Frischling, when faced with the decision to do what’s right and go to jail, flailed badly. He willingly handed his laptop over to the government.

    Easy To Say, Hard To Do

    You could argue that it’s easy for me to make statements like this, since we blog about technology. The Department of Homeland Security doesn’t knock on my door very often demanding to know my source for the latest Google acquisition rumor. But if they did, I’d like to think I’d tell them to go to hell. Even if that meant they dragged me out of my house and put me in jail.

    We have received a number of threats of lawsuits unless we revealed our sources around various sensitive stories. In each case we’ve either ignored the threats or told them to pound sand. In each case the other side backed down.

    We’ve also had other situations where we’ve had to consider revealing sources. In March 2008 we wrote about acquisition negotiations between Digg and Google. The companie’s CEO Jay Adelson effectively called us liars, and we were sorely tempted to reveal our original source. But to do so would mean that people would know that under certain circumstances they couldn’t trust us. We want that trust to be unconditional, and so we took our lumps and never revealed the source. Later we had our vindication anyway.

    We were challenged yet again in 2009 with the Last.fm/RIAA story where we believe at least one source, including an executive at Last.fm, lied to us. We haven’t, and never will, publish that information. Even though there’s an email string that would make excellent reading.

    And there is a whole book I could write around the Twitter document fiasco from 2009. That book will never be written either.

    I think I can understand how frightened Frischling must have been when the TSA agents showed up at his house. Even though he has has worked for Life, Time, Newsweek, New York Times, and was embedded with troops in Iraq, he “didn’t know what to do.” He caved, and he gave the agents his computer. From Wired:

    “They were indicating there would be significant ramifications if I didn’t cooperate,” said Frischling, who was home alone with his three children when the agents arrived. “It’s not hard to intimidate someone when they’re holding a 3-year-old [child] in their hands. My wife works at night. I go to jail, and my kids are here with nobody.”

    His argument is that he received the email from an anonymous source via Gmail, so he wasn’t really handing over confidential information. But the TSA, seeing the email, can then easily get Google to hand over information around that Gmail account, and can likely track down the source. Any anyway, it doesn’t matter. At the end of the day, he lacked the courage to stand up for what’s right.

    Anyone working with Frischling now knows that he’ll respect your confidentiality, just so long as it’s not inconvenient to his liberty. And that’s not respect at all. He let all bloggers down the other day when he willingly handed over his computer to the government. It was his duty to stand up to those agents, and even spend time in jail. Perhaps if he fought the whole situation in court it would lead to stronger laws protecting all bloggers. But Frischling didn’t do that, and the tyranny of our government went unchecked once more.

    If I’m ever in the same situation as Steven Frischling I hope I have the courage to do what’s right. Not just what’s right for me right then.

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


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  • EC Roundup: A look at what’s to come in 2010

    Here’s the latest from VentureBeat’s Entrepreneur Corner:entrepreneur-corner

    Venture Capital 2010: Hot (and cold) sectors to watch – Grotech Ventures Steve Fredrick and Don Rainey general partners give their take on the VC outlook for this year – as well as their predictions on the areas that are likely to show the most significant growth (and consolidation).

    Eight trends to look for in 2010 – This year may not be as tumultuous as 2009, but it could still hold its share of surprises. Dave Kellogg, CEO of Mark Logic, looks at what 2010 holds for social networks, cloud computing and Google, among others.

    Should you sell your business in 2010? – While selling a company is never easy, doing so in 2010 should be slightly easier than it was in 2009, says John Ovrom. The founder and CEO of Exit and Answers gives his thoughts on M&A activity, the financing situation and why the franchise business could be red hot.

    The start-up chronicles: Reflecting on reflecting – It’s easy to feel productive when you’re working hard – but spending a lot of time on a project doesn’t mean it’s beneficial to your business. Bruce Judson looks at the importance to stopping to evaluate what you’re doing and learning the discipline of strategic thinking.

    Startup therapy: Six questions to ask yourself regularly – You read plenty of stories telling you what to do – but how do you identify what you need to do now to grow your business? Angel investor Jason Cohen puts you on the couch to give you six questions you should be asking yourself.


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  • CENREA.com cho thuê văn phòng quận Phú Nhuận 18USD/m2 có VAT | gọi 0908442698

    CENREA.com cho thuê văn phòng quận Phú Nhuận 18USD/m2 có VAT | gọi 0908442698

    – Địa chỉ: đường Phan Xích Long, quận Phú Nhuận
    – Diện tích thuê: Từ 95m2 -> 200m2
    – Giá thuê: 18USD/m2 ( bao gồm thuế VAT + phí dịch vụ )
    – Hợp đồng thuê: ít nhất 02 năm
    – Phí đặt cọc: 03 tháng

    HÌNH ẢNH CAO ỐC: ( để xem nhiều ảnh hơn, vui lòng truy cập vào web http://cenrea.com )
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    + Khắc phục sửa chữa hoặc bom mực cho máy in " nhanh chóng – mọi lúc mọi nơi "
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  • imeüble


    oh how i love optical illusion!
    the imeüble shelf designed by bjørn jørund blikstad.

  • Weekend Crunch Crumbs: Mike Tyson Cleared In LAX Scuffle; 2010 U.S. Postage Stamps Revealed; Diddy Starts Wedding Rumor On Twitter

    Mother Teresa Stamp

    Mornin’ PopCrunchers! Hope you’re having a great new year thus far. Let’s check out what’s happening around the blogosphere…..

    -Nobel Prize-winning humantarian Mother Teresa, The Negro Leagues, and screen legend Katharine Hepburn are among the dignitaries being honored with U.S. postage stamps this year…..

    -I actually went out for New Year’s Eve this year — if you can believe that! But if you’re one of the millions of folks who rang in 2010 with Dick Clark and Ryan Seacrest, you may have seen entertainment icon Dick fumble the countdown during ABC’s annual New Year’s Rockin’ Eve Special. Shame on the simpletons who find this funny. For pity’s sake, the poor guy is a stroke victim. You’ll be lucky to be alive at his age and I sincerely hope that you hecklers will suffer some sort of traumatic closed head injury yourselves; perhaps that’ll teach you some compassion…..

    -R&B star Mario goes topless for PETA — and his abs aren’t half bad….

    -Jay-Z and Alicia Keys’ married penis supplier Swizz Beatz team up for the first new music video of the new year: “On To The Next One….”
    -Miracle on the Hudson pilot Chelsy Sullenberger was the guest of honor and Grand Marshall at yesterday’s Rose Parade in California……

    -Iron Mike won’t face charges for decking an agressive pap at Los Angeles International Airport in November…..

    -Four Celebrities Caught With Their Pants Down……

    -Diddy puts the kibosh on the wedding rumor he started on Twitter New Year’s Day……

    -Here’s a nice visual: Hayden Panettiere getting a facial….

    Twenty years after the orginal, Three Men & A Baby’s Ted Danson, Tom Selleck, and Steve Guttenberg are in discussions to appear in Three Men & A Bride……

    -Nicole Richie will guest star on Lifetime’s Project Runway next week…..

    -MTV’S Made kicks off the new year with new episodes premiering this Saturday, Jan. 2 @ 3 PM ET/PT. Check out the previews here and here……

    -Maybe someone should tell Bradley Cooper that he’s showing plumber crack……


  • Y2K10 SMS date bug fix now available

    y10kbugfixed Apparently while the rest of us have been partying the happy hackers at PPCGeeks have been working through the night diagnosing and creating a fix for the Y2K10 SMS date bug.

    Ziggy471 & Scientific have posted a .cab which corrects this issue by creating this registry key:

    [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\OEM\SMS]
    "RecvTimeStamp"=dword:00000001

    Give the fix a download and report if it solved your problem.

    Via WMExperts.com

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  • Brief: Week in review: New Year edition

    Happy New Year! Let’s start January off by recapping the top stories from the past week.

    AT&T blocked customers in the New York area from ordering an iPhone online, with AT&T customer service reps saying that the network can’t “handle” the iPhone. AT&T’s PR people, for their part, aren’t doing much to help explain the issue.

    A security researcher is in the process of building a table that will enable the cracking of GSM encryption, assuming that a parallel effort to crack its frequency hopping algorithm succeeds.

    E-readers will be one of the major stories of 2010, and the party gets started next week in Vegas at CES 2010. Here’s a quick run-down of three products that will debut at CES and that could make waves in the e-reader space next year.

    Two Ars staffers recently moved to new homes. Taking their broadband connections and e-mail with them turned out to be the worst part of the relocation.

    The developers behind the XBMC project have released a new version of the popular open source media player. It comes with an impressive new user interface theme.

    What better way to celebrate the impending new year than to read about evolutionary adaptations to duck rape and coot nest parasites. Fortunately, Weird Science comes equipped with hangover advice: stick to vodka.

    The California Science Center has been slapped with a lawsuit by a group that hoped to show an anti-evolution film there.

    Google wins domain name disputes almost every time, and it suffered its second loss ever on Christmas Eve. How “Groovle.com” avoided a one-way transfer to the Googleplex.

    It may not push the genre forward in any strong directions, but Alien Breed Evolution remakes a classic top-down experience and adds online co-op. The mechanics are solid, the pace is measured, and the graphics are strong. What else do you need for $10?

    NVIDIA’s next-generation, supercomputer-oriented “Fermi” GPU may be delayed until March.

    What is a “Brief” post?”


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  • Zenica commies

    Zenica is a city in Bosnia and Herzegovina with about 100 000 inhabitants, and which has excellent commie building.

  • It’s the Start of the New Year, the Start of the New Decade, and the Start of My Sixties. Some Simple Strategies for Staying Healthy and Happy. At Least I Can Hope!

    Bluezones

    Author Dan Buettner has scoured the Earth — not for the fabled Fountain
    of Youth — but for the key to a happy old age. He spent five years
    visiting areas of the world where people tend to live longer, healthier
    lives, areas he calls "Blue Zones."

    Buettner says he has identified four things people can do that can
    potentially increase life expectancy:

    • Create an environment that
      encourages physical activity
    • Set up your kitchen in such a way that
      you're not overeating
    • Cultivate a sense of purpose 
    • Surround
      yourself with the right people.

    "These are long-term fixes that have been shown over and over to add not only more years of life, but better years of life."

    -NPR story, "Can 'Blue Zones' Help Turn Back the Biological Clock?", June 8, 2008-

    If you're reading this through via email, click here to get to the more readable web-version.

    It's the start of the New Year. 

    It's the start of a new decade.

    It's the day I turn sixty.

    Look, I'm not a big-birthday-celebration-kind-of-person.  They come and go and I don't even think about the years.  But turning 60 is different.  It's the last quarter of life, with no guarantees on what that quarter is going to look like.

    Judging by my parents–that last quarter of life doesn't look so promising.  Which is exactly why I've been paying attention to exercise and eating right since I turned 30. 

    That's when my dad had one of those massive debilitating strokes that left him unable to communicate, unable to read or fully understand speech, and eventually unable to walk or do anything.  He was 69 at the time–just when he was getting ready to kick back a little, work a little less, travel, and just enjoy life.  He spent 16 years living in this kind of post-stroke-limbo-state, spiraling downward.

    My mom was 62 at the time, and my dad's stroke changed her life in an instant.  One minute she was planning all the trips they'd finally have a chance to take–and enjoying their new role as grandparents–and in the next she was jockeying the world of wheelchairs and therapists.

    With the stress of full-time care-giving, and years of no exercise or attention to diet, by 72 she had developed severe coronary artery blockages, hypertension, kidney stones, and painful spinal fractures.  Then came the mini-strokes that finally added up to vascular dementia in her eighties.

    And unfortunately, this scenario is all too common.  "[M]ost elderly Americans – more than two-thirds of current 65-year-olds, according to a detailed 2005 projection by a team of health policy analysts — at some point will need assistance to cope with daily living, either paid help or unpaid, at home or in a facility."

    So, sixty seems kind of scary to me.

    Which is exactly why I'm ready for a more "Conscious Aging" plan.  We already have all the evidence we need to stay healthy.  It's not about adding more years to our lives.  It's all about adding more life to our years!

    Just a sampling of the evidence.

    • The 52 country INTERHEART study was very clear.  There are 9 easy-to-modify risk factors that are associated with 90% of heart disease.  This was a huge study–30,000 people from every inhabited country–and the results were the same for all races, all sexes, all countries.  All 9 of these risk factors are within our control–and would eliminate 90% of heart disease, regardless of one's genetics. 1. Keep lipids (cholesterol & triglycerides) down; 2. Stop smoking; 3. Prevent or control hypertension; 4. Prevent or control diabetes; 5.  Reduce belly fat; 6.  Find ways to control psychological and social stressors; 7. Increase fruit and vegetable consumption; 8.  Moderate alcohol consumption is protective; 9. Get regular physical exercise   Lancet 364:937-952, Sept. 11, 2004.
    • The Nurses' Health Study and Health Professionals Follow-up Study.  "The largest and longest study to date, done as part of the Harvard-based Nurses' Health Study and Health Professionals Follow-up Study, included almost 110,000 men and women whose dietary habits were followed for 14 years.  The higher the average daily intake of fruits and vegetables, the lower the chances of developing cardiovascular disease…[F]or every extra serving of fruits and vegetables that participants added to their diets, their risk of heart disease dropped by 4%." Harvard School of Public Health
    • The China Study.  This is Dr. T. Colin Campbell's mammoth 2006 study on the effects of a plant-based diet on health–citing over 750 studies.  The conclusion: People who ate the most-animal-based foods got the most chronic disease.  People who ate the most plant-based foods were the healthiest and tended to avoid chronic disease.  According to Campbell, "Good nutrition supported by exercise, clean water, and sunshine is greater than the sum of its parts.  It's a biological symphony.  My introduction to Dr. T. Colin Campbell
    • The Longevity Personality.  From the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, April 2009 comes this conclusion: Those who live the longest are more outgoing, more active, more easy-going, more empathetic, and more agreeable than those who live a normal life span. The Blue Zones calls it, "likeability".

    Here's My Strategy for Staying Out-of-Trouble After Sixty

    Some of these are long-time habits, and they're easy for me to follow.  Some of these I don't do as regularly as I should.  Some of these are new goals.  But this much I do know:  If I don't have a plan, if I don't do these consciously, and if I don't carve out time to make them happen–they won't.

    1.  Stick with 7-9 servings of fruits and vegetables a day.  The Green Smoothies make it easy.  I get 6 servings in a 27 ounce Klean Kanteen that I divide over breakfast and an afternoon snack.  I calculated the nutritional info on my daily 27 ounce serving that includes, 2 1/2 cups kale, 8 mini-carrots, 1/2 cup pomegranate juice, 1/2 apple, 1/2 orange, 1/2 kiwi, and 3/4 cup frozen black raspberries.  Check out the nutrient content for 27 ounces:

    Nutrition Facts
    The Healthy Librarian's
    Green Smoothie-kale,blackberries,carrots,orange,kiwi,pom juice,apple
    Serving Size: 1 serving
    Amount Per Serving
    Calories 342
    Total Fat 2.2g
          Saturated Fat 0.2g
          Trans Fat 0g
    Cholesterol 0mg
    Sodium 140mg
    Carbohydrate 82.1g
          Dietary Fiber 13.8g
          Sugars 49.1g
    Protein 8.9g
    Vitamin A 729% Vitamin C 485%
    Calcium    35% Iron 28%

    Then throw in some veggie-based soup, a salad, a veggie-based dinner entree, some fruit for dessert, and I'm good to go. 

    This eating plan is the same as the DASH Diet (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension)–guaranteed to stop hypertension.  The Cache
    County (Utah) Study
    on Memory shows it also prevents cognitive decline.   Dr. Amy Lanou and Michael Castleman, authors of Building Bone Vitality claim it will build and strengthen bones–because the 17 nutrients necessary to build strong bones are all found in a diet high in fruits and vegetables.

    2.  A balanced exercise plan.  It's not just about cardio–there are 4 areas that need attention: Cardio (spinning-my fave), Weight-training, Flexibility & Balance (yoga-my fave), and Core Strength.  No, you can't just walk and think you're in good shape.  I'm super regular with my cardio, and not as regular with the weight training and yoga.  Click here to see what my workout looks like. As for core strength–that's pretty much non-existent.  And when it comes to weight-training, according to Randy Raugh, the Canyon Ranch physical therapist, and author of the excellent Prime for Life–Functional Fitness for Ageless Living–to get the maximum benefits you need to do it for 3 non-consecutive days a week–2 at the minimum.  Unfortunately, I often weight train only 1 day a week.  If you want to build strong bones and prevent osteoporosis, and maintain your muscle strength as you age–weight-bearing exercise for the lower body, and weight-training for the upper body is a must-do!  Yoga, helps with balance, preventing future falls, and building strength.  As for core strength, I'm upping my game with Dr. Stuart McGill's routine, and my birthday-present to myself is the physical therapist-designed Pelvicore exercise ball.

    3.  A plant-based diet with minimal added fat.  I'm nearing the 2 year mark on eating plant-based, so this is the easy part. I've got this down pat. I still use a little olive oil for cooking and in salads, and very occasionally eat some seafood or dairy when eating with friends.  I'm convinced.  If you want to lower your cholesterol, reduce your risk for type-2 diabetes, lower your blood pressure, reduce your risk of heart disease & stroke, and reduce your belly fat–this is the way to go.  Dr. David J. Jenkins of St. Michael's Hospital in Toronto is one of the pre-eminent researchers on the benefits of a plant-based, low-glycemic diet (like beans, nuts, oats,& quinoa) for improving diabetes control, lowering cholesterol, and preventing cardiovascular disease.  Click here for Jenkins research.  And that's not all–keeping your blood sugar stable with low glycemic plant-based foods and exercise will preserve your brain.  Click here.  And as for too much fat–not only is it bad for your belly–it's bad for your brain–so just ditch it Click here.

    4. No time urgency.  This is what keeps the Okinawans calm, relaxed, and living longer.  I'm really working on this one–which goes hand-in-hand with flexibility.  Things don't always go as planned–you either go-with-the-flow or get stressed and anxious.  My favorite 2 words, "Oh well."  Life goes better when you stay in the moment, chill, and don't worry about getting there fast.  When our Christmas Day trip to New York City was aborted because of an ice storm, we checked into a hotel at noon, and enjoyed a dinner of cranberry nut mix, Larabars, Cliff Bars, and clementines.  All the restaurants were closed in this Pennsylvanian town.  Oh well.  We had a good time, and made it to New York safe and sound the next day.

    5. More Dancing, Singing, Laughing, Playing, Schmoozing, and Mahjing.  What's the point of staying healthy without having fun?  That's the reason we work at staying healthy. Cool fact: There's a little organ deep in the ear, called the sacculus–and it gives us a great sense of pleasure and well-being when it's stimulated.  But, it can only be stimulated through singing!  So, bring on the Singstar Karaoke!  Click here.

    6.  The Supplements.  I'm really bad at regularly taking supplements.  I'm good at counting them out, taking them to work, and bringing them back home with me.  Truth is, there are some supplements worth taking because there's no easy way to get enough of them through diet alone.  Here are my favorites:  Omega-3s (I use Omega-Brite), DHA, (an omega-3 for brain health), Magnesium, Citracal, Vitamin D (I'm up to 3000 IUs), Curcumin (also known as turmeric, the yellow color in curry), and Juvenon (the combo of acetyl l-carnitine & alpha lipoic acid) developed by Dr. Bruce Ames.  Click here to read more about what I take, and what some prominent physicians take.  

    7.  Eliminate the time-wasters from my day.  Except for watching "The Middle" or "Glee", TV watching always leaves me bored and unsatisfied.  So, why bother wasting the precious time?  The same goes for my mindless internet cruising, checking in more than necessary with email, the NYT, and other favorite sites.  Enough already!

    8.  Maximize my peak energy times of the day.  Over a year ago I blogged about getting in sync with our natural energy ebb and flow throughout the day.  It works–and I intend to start planning my day around them, when possible.  For instance, 9-11 is the peak time for brain work-creativity-and analytical work.  On days when I don't work I would usually use this time for exercise & errands.  Poor use of brain time.  Better to exercise between 3-6.  To read more, click here:  Maximize Your Energy-Match Your Tasks to Your daily Energy Levels.

    9.  Give a gift a day for 29 days a month.  When 36 year old Cami Walker of LA learned she had multiple sclerosis, her spirits flagged.  She was tired, in pain, and had the prospect of a debilitating disease ahead of her.  When a holistic health educator gave her the prescription of giving 29 gifts a day for a month she thought it sounded it crazy.  Nothing big (and that's the point)–something like making a supportive phone call or saving a piece of yummy cake for her husband.  Of course the prescription didn't cure her,  but it had a startling effect of helping her cope with her illness and gave her a more positive outlook on life.  I love this idea.  It's a planned regular way to just think about kindness.  No big acts, just something little-done everyday.  To read more, click here.

    10. Cultivate my garden of friends and family.  Regular phone calls, visits, dinners, outings, and celebrations.  At 60 there's no time to delay any of these.  It's the glue that keeps us together and makes life worth living.

    11.  Once You're Through Learning–You're Through.  This is the philosophy of John Wooden, the 97-year-old retired UCLA basketball coach.  No doubt about it, learning and sharing what I learn is my purpose in life.  I'm lucky to have a job that gives me access to learning about health and medicine, and a hobby that gives me a chance to share what I learn.

    12.  Start Eating Less.  OK, I'm ready to shed a few pounds, and I know from past experience that writing down exactly what I eat, and how much I've exercised, really works.  I use something called MyFoodDiary.com and it's set up with all my favorite recipes.  Unfortunately, I haven't used it in quite some time.  The new year is a great time to start!  To read more about this tool, click here.

    For some good reasons to eat less, read:  CALERIE: The NIH Calorie-Restriction
    Experiment. Lessons for Health, Slowing Down the Aging Process,
    Longevity, and Disease Prevention
     

    Time to end this list.  I've already maximized my 9-11 brain time and written this post.  It's now time to make my smoothie, do some core exercises, take those supplements, answer birthday phone calls, enjoy a birthday lunch, followed by an evening out with friends who all share the same wedding anniversary–if we can just make it through our foot of snow!

    I'd love to hear from anyone who is 60 or over with advice, tips, and wisdom about maximizing life in the sixties, seventies, and more.



  • New standard could pave way for higher capacity Blu-ray discs

    Already feeling the pinch of a mere 25GB per layer on a Blu-ray disc? Neither are we, but it looks like Sony and Panasonic have been busily working on ways to boost capacity nonetheless, and they’ve now devised a new method that seems to be on the fast track to becoming a standard. The best news is that it doesn’t involve a change in Blu-ray optics, but rather something called the Maximum Likelihood Sequence Estimation evaluation index (or i-MLSE — the “i’ is just for kicks, it seems), which is a new means of estimating the read error rate of discs on the fly that has apparently be made possible thanks to “recent hardware advancements.” According to Sony and Panasonic, that should now allow discs to hold up to 33.4 GB per layer, but it’s not exactly clear what that means for existing Blu-ray players (a little firmware assistance seems to at least be a conceivable option, though). There’s also no timeline for a rollout just yet, but Sony is reportedly now set to propose widespread adoption of i-MLSE to the Blu-ray Disc Association, of which it just so happens to be the leading member.

    New standard could pave way for higher capacity Blu-ray discs originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 02 Jan 2010 10:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Kombu Egg Soup

    KombuSoup Kombu Egg SoupJust when you think you’ve had every type of soup out there, something new comes along. Like this recipe for Kombu Egg Soup sent in by Aaron Blaisdell for the Primal Cookbook Challenge.

    As Aaron so rightly reminded us, “sea vegetables are often an overlooked component of our ancestral diet, even among us primal types.”

    Kombu Egg Soup is incredibly nourishing and while the flavor of sea vegetables might be an acquired taste, in this soup you’ll find it to be fairly mild. But what are sea vegetables, exactly? We’ve featured this food group (otherwise known as algae) as Smart Fuel before, but the quick version is this: sea vegetables are in most cases some version of seaweed, whether it be nori (the dried seaweed that sushi is wrapped in) or something like kombu.

    Kombu is sun-dried kelp, black in color and sold in strips that are about an inch wide and six or seven inches long. Packages of Kombu can be found in some grocery stores and at many Asian markets. In this soup, kombu flavors the broth and can be left in or discarded before eating. What it leaves behind are easily absorbed minerals (especially iodine) and a variety of vitamins, such as B-12. Kombu has been considered a health food and a base for broth in Asia for centuries, although for many of us in the west, it’s just catching on.

    Kombu simmered in beef broth creates a rich and complex broth, ready for anything you want to add to it. Aaron’s favorite combination is sliced carrots and hardboiled eggs, for flavor and protein. He leaves the eggs whole, but you could also slice the eggs at the very end for easier eating.

    Ingredients:

    ingredients 16 Kombu Egg Soup

    • 3-4 cups water
    • 2 cups beef stock (more for richer stock; chicken stock may be substituted)
    • 1 five-inch long piece of dried kombu, cut into thin (1/2”) strips
    • 1/2 teaspoon (or to taste) miso paste
    • 1 carrot, pre-cooked or raw, sliced into discs (carrots saved from home-made stock work perfectly)
    • 4-6 hard boiled eggs, peeled but left whole (preferably from pastured hens)
    • Sea salt to taste

    Directions:

    Bring water and kombu slices to a gentle boil.

    kombu Kombu Egg Soup

    Add miso paste and stir.

    Simmer for four minutes. Stir once more, then remove kombu pieces from broth or leave them in. Your choice.

    Add carrots and whole eggs and simmer for four more minutes. Turn off heat, add salt to taste and stir well.

    adding egg 1 Kombu Egg Soup

    Pour into large soup bowls and savor as the steam lifts your spirits! The warm, rich broth is the perfect foil for the dry yolk. If Aaron really wants a sea-weed kick, he sprinkles a little dulse on top of the finished soup (dulse is another variety of sea vegetable and can be bought ground up, to use as a seasoning.)

    KombuSoup Kombu Egg Soup

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    1. Ginger Soup with Scallops and Shrimp
    2. Early Spring Greens Soup
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  • Nintendo shuts down fan-made Zelda movie

    It took four years for The Hero of Time, a fan-made Zelda movie, to be made. Last month, it finally became available for viewing on Dailymotion. Before you drop everything and rush over there, though, be aware

  • Ward’s obtains Hyundai doc detailing plan to split off luxury cars in dealerships

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    2010 Hyundai Equus – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Before the Hyundai Genesis arrived in showrooms, there was talk of the car launching under the aegis of it own brand, much like the debut of the Lexus LS400 back in 1990. That didn’t happen, and premium Hyundais like the Genesis and the forthcoming 2010 Equus share floor space with Accents and Tucsons.

    Still, the thought of a roped-off premium car department has a pull. “Sectioning off the brand, that’s the Holy Grail,” said Hyundai Motors USA CEO John Krafcik to Ward’s Auto. What Krafcik and his HMUSA masters may have up their collective sleeve is a way to get some of the desired differentiation without the massive costs a new brand launch would entail.

    Dave Zuchowski, Hyundai’s North American sales vice president, has drawn parallels to Toyota’s co-locating efforts with its Scion sub-brand in a letter to dealers, laying out the plans for incorporating the Equus into showrooms. “This strategy will create physical and psychological separation in the Hyundai Showroom,” says Zuchowski, while dealers remain less convinced that this means anything more for them than increased costs. On the retail end, stores will be required to purchase several kits for showroom, service, and parts support of the Equus. While not as expensive as a full-blown new store would be, dealers still might have trouble mustering enthusiasm for hundreds of thousands of dollars of corporate-ordered directives that franchisees must comply with.

    Dealer unhappiness aside, Zuchowski lays out Hyundai’s strategy clearly. “We intend to use the launch of the new Equus to develop and further establish Hyundai as a legitimate force in the premium-luxury segments;” intimating there might be more to it than just the Genesis models and the luxo-liner Equus – a “Genesised-up” Santa Fe might do battle against the Lexus RX, for instance. While it will cost dealers money, Zuchowski notes that ultimately, it’s the cheapest way to go while “still providing an enhanced dealership environment…that will devliver a substantial incremental profit oportunity with very reasonable dealer investment.” In other words, pay the man now, and cash in later, if all goes well.

    [Source: Ward’s Auto]

    Ward’s obtains Hyundai doc detailing plan to split off luxury cars in dealerships originally appeared on Autoblog on Sat, 02 Jan 2010 09:55:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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