Author: Serkadis

  • Big Pharma Rejected

    Valentine candy hearts with negative phrases

    News:

    Pfizer’s epilepsy drug Lyrica was recently rejected by the FDA as a treatment option for generalized anxiety disorder.

    The FDA claims that there is not enough data to support the unlabeled use of Lyrica.

    Pfizer isn’t happy and claims that this drug could help anxiety sufferers.

    CLICK HERE to read the full story.

    Editor’s Note:

    Now, is it just me or does something seem wrong here?  It seems like anxiety disorder always gets the short end of the stick when it comes to drugs.

    You always hear about drugs meant for depression or seizures being handed down to the anxious.  Granted, there have been drugs designed for anxiety disorder, but this second hand stuff seems to happen a lot to us.

    This isn’t always bad either because if it works, it works I guess.  But it’s a damn shame that anxiety suffers don’t have marathons, 5k’s, and other fund raisers to raise money to put this baby to bed like other health conditions do.  Is it because anxiety doesn’t make people dead?  Who knows?

    I would hope that it’s the peoples’ welfare really at the heart of their crossover efforts, but I doubt it.

    What are your thoughts?


  • Bill Miller, Still Bullish

    billmiller tbi

    Legg Mason’s Bill Miller is at it again this year (up 43%) and he is talking about what he thinks is in store for 2010.

    Once known as maybe the best mutual fund manager in the world, Miller was often referred to as the guy who beat the S&P 500 for 15 years straight, from 1991 to 2005.

    Now he’s known as the former guru that from 2006-2008, bet that people were just overreacting and continued buying up shares of AIG, Wachovia, Freddie Mac, and Bear Stearns.

    Miller’s Value Trust fund lost a devastating near 60% in 2008.

    This year, like many, he is doing a lot better. Bloomberg’s Sree Vidya Bhaktavatsalam spoke with Miller about his market forecast for 2010.

    He says better prospects for the economy and lower potential returns in the fixed-income markets will lure investors back into stock funds in 2010… The S&P 500 will increase at least 15% and economic growth of 4% is “very doable.”

    In contrast, El-Erian doesn’t think GDP will increase more than 2% for years to come.

    Read more about Miller on Bloomberg.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • AT&T to FCC: Let My Landlines Go!

    The Federal Communications Commission is delving into the future of communications with a request for comments on an all-IP telephone network. Last week, AT&T filed its comments, which shows someone at the carrier is reading GigaOM, or at least the writing on the wall when it comes to landlines. In a 32-page filing, Ma Bell asked the FCC to eliminate regulatory requirements that it support a landline network and to provide a deadline for phasing it out.

    The (almost) one in five Americans relying exclusively on a plain old telephone line should prepare to kiss that wall jack goodbye as the major wireline telephone providers back away from that dying (and expensive business). However, AT&T in its filing doesn’t offer a way to bridge the gap for that 20 percent of Americans relying only on landlines, nor does it address what an all-IP future means for the 33 percent of Americans who have access to broadband but do not subscribe (although those broadband laggards might be paying for a digital voice product from a cable provider).

    To defend the rush to VoIP, AT&T offered data that shows how the increase in voice options, from cellular phones to cable VoIP, and the rise in costs associated with running a switched access network are hurting its business while providing little benefit to the consumer. We pointed this out in an April story, later picked up in the NY Times, although the Times got the credit in the AT&T filing. But AT&T offers some other scary stats:

    • Between 2000 and 2008, total interstate and intrastate switched access minutes have fallen 42 percent.
    • For the incumbent local exchange carriers, revenue from wireline telephone service fell to $130.8 billion in 2007 from $178.6 billion in 2000 — a 27 percent decrease.
    • At least 18 million households currently use a VoIP service, and it’s estimated that by 2010, cable companies alone will be providing VoIP to more than 24 million customers; by 2011, there may be up to 45 million total VoIP subscribers.
    • Today, less than 20 percent of Americans rely exclusively on switched-access lines for voice service.

    In addition to a firm deadline for dumping the old network, AT&T calls for the FCC to seek input on additional regulatory changes to enable a transition away from copper phone lines. Those include putting broadband regulatory jurisdiction at the federal rather than local or state level, reforming inter-carrier compensation, changing the aims and structure of the Universal Service Fund, and eliminating state regulations that dictate that a carrier serve all people in a geographic area. It also told the FCC that it needs to figure out how to handle public safety and folks with disabilities in this VoIP world.

    The filing shows that it’s easy to declare VoIP as the future of telecommunications, hard to figure out regulatory policies that will make that a reality, and even more difficult to make sure everyone can make that leap.

    Thumbnail image from Old Telephones via Flickr Photo of AT&T building by Mr. Bill via Flickr


  • Hyundai extends and expands Assurance program for 2010

    Filed under: ,

    Hyundai won several awards for its 2009 marketing efforts, in large part on the basis of its Hyundai Assurance program. The program began as a way to get reluctant customers back into showrooms to at least consider buying a new car in spite of the fact that many people were justifiably terrified of losing their jobs. By promising to take back a car if a customer lost their income, they managed to keep sales going while other companies were tanking.

    That program has been extended to at least the end of 2010 and Hyundai is now adding free roadside assistance to the mix. The Korean automaker has already been offering a fully transferable five year full vehicle warranty and will now offer help to customers who can’t make it back to the dealership. The program offers the usual suite of assistance that you would get from AAA including lockout aid, flat tire replacement, towing, jump starts and bringing you some gas if you run out. The roadside assistance is free for five years.

    [Source: Hyundai]

    Continue reading Hyundai extends and expands Assurance program for 2010

    Hyundai extends and expands Assurance program for 2010 originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 30 Dec 2009 09:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Naruto photo editing app coming to DSiWare

    No, that’s not red-eye reduction fail that’s a Sharingan. Thanks to the handiwork of Nai Chara Naruto Shippuden (Character Style Naruto Shippuden), a Naruto photo editing app coming to DSiWare, you can have the eyes that

  • HTC confirms official Windows Mobile 7 upgrade to HTC HD2 via twitter

    htcwm7twitter

    Great news for current and future HTC HD2 owners!  HTC has confirmed, via their official Russian twitter channel, that the HTC HD2 will be getting an official Windows Mobile 7 upgrade.

    While in some ways this is not surprising, considering the specs of the device, the way HTC Touch HD owners were treated recently with an upgrade to Windows Mobile 6.5 suggested quite the opposite.

    Hopefully the company plan to stick to this promise (even if only made over twitter), giving Windows Mobile fans yet another reason to buy the device.

    Via Pocketnow.com

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  • The 60-Second Guide To Everything You Need To Know About Oil, Gold, Bonds, China, And Stocks In 2010

    marcfaber wondering tbi

    We've all been hit with tons of 2010 forecasts over the last few months.

    While some forecasters aim to continue their winning streaks, others hope to salvage their reputations in 2010.

    Yet from Goldman's giant interest rate call to Marc Faber's ultimate contrarian bet, competitive market forecasting is really just a giant game of chicken.

    Key prognosticators are paid to take their stand, then defend it incessantly without blinking. So here they are.

    The 60-second guide to 2010 predictions -- >

    (Note links are provided to each source in the pages)

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • French Government Scrambles to Rescue Carbon Tax [UPDATE]

    Its back to square one for President Sarkozy's carbon tax

    It's back to square one for President Sarkozy's carbon tax

    UPDATE | 10:10 AM: The tax was set at 17 euros ($24.38) per ton of carbon-dioxide emissions. However, to ensure passage the legislation ended exempting almost 93 percent of all industrial carbon emissions in France.

    Back in September President Nicolas Sarkozy, when he initially rolled out the law, partially or fully exempted power plants, public transport, airlines, farming and fishing, as well as 1,018 older cement, steel and glass factories.

    The dead on arrival law, however, underscore the hurdles faced by industrial economies as they attempt to cleanup their energy consumption by pricing carbon.

    In the U.S. the American Clean Energy and Security act or ACES, approved by the House in June, has a cap-and-trade provision that was also heavily diluted to make it more palpable to oil and gas and agriculture industries. The legislation barely passed the House floor vote.

    On the Senate side energy and climate change legislation is also in limbo with currently three separate proposals under consideration. There is the Kerry – Lieberman – Graham framework; Senator Jeff Bingaman’s (D-N.M.) proposal and now the Cantwell – Collins legislation.

    The hurdle preventing a full debate on the Senate floor is the pricing of carbon. In a bid to unblock the legislative process, earlier this month Senators Maria Cantwell, (D-Wash.) and Susan Collins, (R-Maine) released the Carbon Limits and Energy for America’s Renewal (CLEAR) Act. That proposal stands out because it proposes what seems to be a “cap-and-trade light”. CO2 would still be priced but only power utilities and energy producers would be able to buy and sell (in a secondary market) these emission permits.

    So far key industry groups, including the all-powerful oil and gas lobby, the American Petroleum Institute has, for the most part, come out in favor of CLEAR.

    Yet, chances of climate change law with a carbon-pricing provision being enacted into law this year still remain slim. Earlier this week Senators Mary Landrieu, (D-La.), and Evan Bayh, (D-Ind.), said that a climate change bill will not pass next year. Democratic senators already have too much on their plates with health care and the economy and they’re desperate not to further alienate voters.

    ———————————————–

    France’s Constitutional Court has ruled against a carbon tax, just days before it was set to come into effect aimed at curbing carbon-heavy energy consumption.

    In a ruling released today the Paris-based court said the law’s web of loopholes, benefiting energy companies, as well as energy-dependent sectors like farming and fishing, rendered it ineffective in cutting down carbon and green house gases emissions.

    The new carbon tax was expected to raise 1.5 billion euros ($2.15 billion) next year, reports Reuters. The government said it would make a new proposition on January 20th.

    Photo Credit: Francois Lafite via Flickr

  • By The Numbers: Ben Nelson’s Stunning Political Suicide

    Ben Nelson

    This is what it looks like to commit political suicide in all its gory details.

    Some of you may want to close your laptops now.

    For the rest of you, here is the latest Rasmussen Poll on Ben Nelson, the Nebraska Democrat who delivered Democrats the crucial 60th vote on healthcare.

    If Governor Dave Heineman challenges Nelson for the Senate job, a new Rasmussen Reports telephone survey shows the Republican would get 61% of the vote while Nelson would get just 30%. Nelson was reelected to a second Senate term in 2006 with 64% of the vote.

    Nelson’s health care vote is clearly dragging his numbers down. Just 17% of Nebraska voters approve of the deal their senator made on Medicaid in exchange for his vote in support of the plan. Overall, 64% oppose the health care legislation, including 53% who are Strongly Opposed. In Nebraska, opposition is even stronger than it is nationally.

    Fifty-six percent (56%) of voters in the state believe that passage of the legislation will hurt the quality of care, and 62% say it will raise costs.

    Now, watch what happens if Nelson tries to stab his party in the back at the last minute by thwarting reform. His constituents will love him for it!

    When survey respondents were asked how they would vote if Nelson blocks health care reform, 47% still pick Heneman while 37% would vote to keep the incumbent in office. Twenty percent (20%) of those who initially said they’d vote for Heineman say they’d switch to supporting Nelson. Another six percent (6%) of Heineman supporters say they’re not sure what they’d do if Nelson stops the health care plan from becoming law.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • OnLive shows off UI and iPhone use in marathon tech demo (video)

    Sure, OnLive has already done live demos of its “cloud gaming” service, but it never hurts to get another comprehensive 48-minute video on the subject. In a presentation at Columbia University, CEO Steve Perlman goes over the nitty gritty of how game streaming works, the OnLive user interface (11:53), an inevitable Crysis Wars demo (16:35), Brag Clips (17:49), and of course the iPhone app (19:31). Though cellphone integration is still limited to primarily spectating and social networking functions, PCs and Macs can get gaming via a 1MB browser plugin, or you can grab the microconsole streaming box for your TV, which Steve suggests might be given away for free with OnLive subscriptions. If you have any more unaswered questions, check out the audience Q&A at 33:14, and the full vid awaits after the break.

    Continue reading OnLive shows off UI and iPhone use in marathon tech demo (video)

    OnLive shows off UI and iPhone use in marathon tech demo (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 30 Dec 2009 08:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Brittany Murphy Death Certificate Omits Father

    Brittany Murphy’s estranged father has been mysteriously left off the actress’ death certificate. Officials at the Los Angeles Coroner’s office still don’t know what killed Murphy, but they released her death certificate Tuesday, with the cause of death listed as “deferred” pending toxicology results.

    The Clueless star died Dec. 20 after going into full cardiac arrest.

    The document lists Murphy’s father as “UNKNOWN’.” Following the actress’ sudden death, former Mafia capo Angelo Bertolotti came forward and revealed that he was Brittany’s dad — although he hadn’t seen the actress since 2006.

    Bertolotti, 80, was notable absent from the star’s funeral in Los Angeles on Christmas Eve.

    He told The Associated Press he would not be attending the service because he didn’t want to see the body of his daughter.

    “I was very shocked by it (her death). I can’t believe it really. It happened so fast, I’m just trying to figure it all out right now. I’m very upset by it,” he said last week. “If I wanted to go (to the funeral) I would go, but I don’t want to see her that way. She was flawless to me. She was a little bright child. I have only good memories about her. She’s a memory to me now. To me she’s off making a movie somewhere.”


  • HTC is Cooking Up Something

    Hey guys, this is my first trip to rumorland on AG (or at least it’s been so long that I can’t remember visiting to begin with). So what’s the scoop? Basically, HTC seems to have something up their sleeve in regard to a dual screen Android device. A close friend just mentioned to me that one of his ex-coworkers at HTC Taiwan has added some new info about his current activities to his LinkedIn profile. Basically the notes mentioned something along the lines of “dual screen software architecture” for Android. So what is this? Well, your guess is as good as mine, since there is no device name mentioned, nor are there any dates for the project’s timeline. Any guesses?

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  • Report (or Rumor): Lexus GS-F to carry LFA’s 4.8L V10

    Lexus GS F-Sport Accessories

    We’ve seen the Lexus IS-F and the Lexus LFA and we’re pretty impressed with what Lexus’ F department can do. So what’s next to get F’d up? A car that would compete with the likes of the BMW M5, Cadillac CTS-V, Mercedes-Benz E63 AMG and the Audi RS6.

    Sources have told BestCar, that Lexus is working on a GS-F based on the current model. Insiders say that power on the GS-F will come from a modified version of the 553-hp 4.8L V10 used in the Lexus LFA.

    Of course, take this story with a grain of salt since the GS is long overdue for a redesign. We’re speculating that Lexus will wait until it’s done re-engineering and redesigning the sedan before F’ing it up.

    – By: Kap Shah

    Source: Best Car (via CarScoop)


  • NHTSA launches distracted driving website. Check it at home, please

    Filed under: ,

    Distracted driving is becoming a very real concern in the age of texting, cell phones, touch screen navigation and fast food. So what is a government to do to stop the madness? New laws? More police enforcement? Maybe at some point, but for now the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has created a new website called distraction.gov. The site provides facts and figures that shows how distracted driving affects your ability to drive safely while also working as a news feed for new distracted driving legislation.

    You may have heard that driving while texting makes you 23 times more likely to get into an accident, but the NHTSA site gives more alarming stats. For example, the site claims that driving while talking on the phone makes you as much of a hazard as someone driving while over the legal drinking limit. The site also claims that 6,000 people died in distracted driving accidents in 2008 and that drivers using hand held devices in the car are four times as likely to seriously injure themselves in an accident. Even more disturbing is the fact that the NHTSA found distracted driving fatalities went from 8% in 2004 to 11% in 2008.

    Head over to distraction.gov for more interesting info, but try not to pull up the site on your mobile while you’re on the road. And try not to get distracted by Ray LaHood’s eyebrows when you click.

    [Source: Distraction.gov | Photo: Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images]

    NHTSA launches distracted driving website. Check it at home, please originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 30 Dec 2009 08:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Holiday Cheer Spreads For E-Commerce Giants [Voices]

    By Ben Worthen, Reporter, The Wall Street Journal

    Online sales are up from last year through most of the holiday season. But it’s the largest Internet retailers that have been the big winners. One reason: Customers are more satisfied with their experiences with big e-commerce companies than with smaller services.

    The 40 largest online-retail Web sites achieved their highest level of customer satisfaction during the 2009 holiday season, according to a survey by ForeSee Results, an e-commerce consulting firm. These companies averaged a satisfaction score of 79 on ForeSee’s index compared with a score of 74 in both 2008 and 2007.

    But a similar survey of the 110 online retailers that ForeSee works with—which range from large to small—found that overall satisfaction dropped to a 73, compared with a 75 in 2008 and a 77 in 2007. The smallest companies took the biggest hits.

    “The strong are getting stronger and the rest of the pack is getting weaker,” says Larry Freed, ForeSee’s chief executive.

    Read the rest of this post on the original site

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  • Bill Gates’s Amazing — Yet Terrible — Call On Kodak

    John Hempton is back from his summer holiday on the New South Wales South Coast, where he had the opportunity to read Alice Schroeder’s book on Warren Buffett.

    He flags an excellent little anecdote that highlights how damned difficult it can be to pick stocks well.

    Once a year, Buffett would invite people over to discuss stocks, and by 1991 Bill Gates was there:

     What about Kodak? asked Bill Ruane.  He looked back at Gates to see what he would say.

     “Kodak is toast,” said Gates.

      Nobody else in the Buffett Group knew that the internet and digital technology would make film cameras toast.  In 1991, even Kodak didn’t know it was toast.

    Gates was obviously dead on.

    And yet, here’s the stock chart since 1991 for Kodak.  Yes, it was eventually “toast.”  But if you had shorted it in 1991, you’d have lost 5X your money over the next five years.

    kodak

     

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  • H1B spat unites activists, xenophobes against common enemy




    To venture into the world of online anti-H1B activism is to enter a world of legitimate grievance mixed with outright xenophobia and racism. On the one hand, these sites do great work in bringing to light the ongoing abuses of the H1B program by American tech companies, but on the other hand, it takes a pretty twisted individual to openly gloat that the mass-fatality-causing collapse of an New Delhi bridge is evidence that Indian engineers are inferior to American engineers. Nonetheless, in the midst of all the rancor—rancor that’s made worse by high unemployment—south Asian IT contractors and their American opponents have joined forces against an alleged IT sweatshop’s attempt to silence its anonymous online critics. The unlikely allies are also united in opposing a New Jersey court’s ruling that the critics’ sites be taken offline and their identities disclosed.

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  • Is It Illegal To Commit Seppukoo On Your Facebook Account?

    Facebook is known for not looking kindly (and for going legal) on sites that attempt to do pass through logins to do something with a Facebook account. I can understand why they don’t like these other services, but it’s difficult to see what’s illegal about them. The next potential legal battle apparently may be between Facebook and Seppukoo, a fun site that offers users an amusing way to close and delete their Facebook account by having it commit a virtual suicide:


    The site, Seppukoo.com, offers ritual suicide for Facebook users’ virtual profiles by deactivating your account. And it doesn’t stop there. If you’re willing to end it all, the site will feature a RIP memorial page on its site and sends the page to all your Facebook friends.

    Fun stuff. Except, of course, Facebook doesn’t want people deleting their accounts, and so it blocked Seppukoo. Now, the battle of words is heating up and lawyers are getting involved. Facebook has issued a cease and desist, insinuating that it will take Seppukoo to court for violating Facebook’s “rights and responsibilities” if it doesn’t stop offering the service. I’m still quite confused as to what legal leg Facebook has to stand on here. I can understand why it doesn’t like what Seppukoo is doing… but that doesn’t mean it’s illegal.

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  • Everything We Know About the Nexus One – And a Few Things We Still Don’t [UPDATED]

    nexus_one_01We know there’s a lot to keep up with in regardds to the Nexus One so we’ve tasked ourselves with compiling all the known and rumored information.  Below, you’ll find all the latest gossip and leaks.  Until we hear officially, all of this is subject to change!  For what it’s worth, all the initial rumors are panning out so keep your fingers crossed!

    The latest is…

    The Back Story …

    • Around the middle of October a writer for TheStreet.com was the first to really get the Google Phone rumors rolling again.  He claimed that Google would be selling a handset directly, bypassing carriers.
    • Google had a meeting on Friday and handed handsets out to everyone.  Twitter helps break the news.
    • Some believe this is the Google Phone news we’ve been waiting for.  Other think it’s just the same thing as last year – nothing more than a gift to employees
    • Nothing has been officially announced.  The closest we have so far is a post from the Google Mobile Blog that says their employees are dogfooding a mobile lab. Said handsets are unlocked and feature new mobile features and capabilities.
    • The Wall Street Journal publishes an article that pretty much confirms the rumors.  The code name ‘Nexus One” is born.
    • A few pictures have identified the handset as “Phone 88″.  Perhaps each phone has a unique model/serial written into it to identify leaks.  Looking back at the first Dragon/Passion images, we were told that the image blacked out parts of the screen because  “…it has a number that I’m told is used to determine who this phone was loaned to.“  Coincidence?  Maybe.
    • The phone looks exactly like the HTC Dragon/Passion except for the missing HTC branding.  Specs include a Snapdragon 1GHz chip, 3.7-inch AMOLED display, and a 5 megapixel camera.
    • Gizmodo’s source from a few weeks back said that we have yet to see the ‘real’ Android.  Based on collected descriptions, the ‘real’ Android might be one designed by Google which has every screen, button, and animated background specifically designed.
    • According to a quick start that comes with the handsets, there is mention of a page for questions at google.com/phone/support. The site is inactive at this time.
    • The phone has been cleared through the FCC with AT&T and T-Mobile bands.
    • Google releases a game for Nexus One owners
    • Google applied for the trademark to Nexus One on December 10th.  Why patent an experimental handset that’s designed to stay internal?

    We’ve Also Heard…

    We Still Don’t Know

    • When launch is  expected – announcement January 5th should reveal this
    • Will this be directly sold through Google? It appears so.
    • Will “real” Android run as WiFi/VoIP?
    • Will Google Voice be integrated?
    • What do other members of the Open Handset Alliance think of this?  Did they even know about it?  What will their reaction be?

    This may have all started back in March when Google decided to open up shop in Taiwan.  Working with HTC would be considerably easier if you were in their own back yard.

    Why would a carrier like T-Mobile even want to get involved with Google over this?  It’s simple – their no contract plans are perfect for people who buy them.  T-Mobile never loses a penny in having to subsidize the handset.  And maybe more importantly, they know how big this could be for them.  Why not be the carrier that embraces the move?

    We’re going to keep this post at the top of the site for a while as answers and rumors hit the net.  If you know of any answers or have any insight, please let us know. See something incorrect or missing?  Drop us a line.

    In terms of the wireless industry, this could be a big of a game changer as any.  Buckle Up!

    http://www.androidguys.com/2009/12/29/nexus-one-to-be-530-full-price-180-on-contract/

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  • Verne Troyer Mini-Me Social Networking Website

    Verne Troyer is hoping to get better acquainted with his fans with the help of a new social networking website. The pint-sized dynamo, who rose to fame as Mini Me in the Austin Powers film franchise, has set up the interactive site Looking Up on VerneTroyer.com to keep in touch with fans. Verne’s already busy uploading personal photos and videos for his followers to check out, and encouraging them to post their own images, he tells Parade Magazine.

    “I’ve launched a new website, VerneTroyer.com. It’s linked to a social networking site called Looking Up, which is similar to Facebook. I get to chat with people that like my movies and just stay in touch with fans.”