Author: Serkadis

  • ULT 200 modular system

    In addition to the new module system 300 offers the ULT AG with ULT 200 series now also modular devices with lower performance categories.

    ULT 200 suction and filter units are especially suitable for applications in laser machining processes and in the electronics industry (for soldering smoke). But even for gases, vapors, dry chips, dust particles and welding fumes, they offer perfect solutions.

    Thus, even in applications such as in single workstations all the advantages of modularity available:

    composition of the equipment from individual components tailored to the needs of the customer
    this is no redundancy
    short delivery yet
    combination of different filtering principles possible
    long filter life
    to select several possibilities of suction
    easily to be expanded with the changing needs

  • SENNEBOGEN 818 – The New Standard Recycling Machine

    The new SENNEBOGEN 818 is a sorting and loading machine which is specially tailored to the recycling sector. With decades of experience and competence in material handling, the SENNEBOGEN 818, which has an operating weight of 19.5 t, is setting new standards in its class.

    Maximum operating flexibility is achieved by means of the extremely compact and robust design. With a rear end radius of only 2.3 m and a total width of 2.5 m, the 818 is an enormously versatile machine that is easy and light to manoeuvre and transport and impresses with its high performance potential, even in very small spaces. With a boom length of 9.2 m and extremely easy-to-move equipment in combination with powerful and precise movements, the 818 orange peel grab or sorting grab with reverse mechanism offers a wide field of application for effective sorting and loading work.

    Design solutions that make sense reinforce the consistent focus on practical requirements. For instance, two modules can be screwed onto the middle bridge each with two outriggers or two outriggers and a dozerblade. In this way, the 818 can be customised flexibly and quickly to specific requirements. The large size of the outriggers guarantees maximum stability.
    Another special feature of the new SENNEBOGEN 818 are the hydraulic cylinders.
    The boom and stick are both controlled by a single hydraulic cylinder. This technology provides convincing advantages:
    • Particularly good mechanical protection through positioning underneath the boom/jib
    • Fewer parts (cylinder, valve, hoses, threaded unions) means less maintenance and fewer spare parts required
    • Always the best load transmission in the equipment
    Additionally, the boom cylinder is reverse-assembled, so that no dirt can be deposited at the front side of the cylinder. The fully pulled down boom side panels protect the cylinder and provide the boom with maximum stability. This cylinder arrangement also results in an ideal hose routing with technology integrated in the steel design in the best possible manner.

    Another innovation is the encapsulated ventilation space in the upper carriage which directs nearly all of the air to the outside and not through the engine compartment with its powerful 97 kW diesel engine. The inclined position of the extremely large cooler means that air discharge to the side is improved and, thanks to the dirt-resistant large cooling mesh size, the high cooling performance remains constant.

  • Forget the package: At stores, size does matter

    When you open a bag of potato chips, a box of pasta or many other supermarket products, you probably notice that many companies are selling you a lot of air.  Bags of chips, for example, can be half empty.  Earlier this month, Consumer Reports caused a stir by calling out firms for selling products with "air to spare." Most responded by claiming that what's called "slack-fill" in the industry is necessary to ship, store and preserve products.

    Are you buying that? Edgar Dworsky, a longtime consumer advocate and former Massachusetts state assistant attorney general, sure isn’t.

    While it's clear some extra space is needed to cushion potato chips or to allow proper seals, Dworsky said it's impossible to separate the slack-fill issue from another topic that's near and dear to his heart — hidden product downsizing. 

    On his Web site, Mouseprint.org, Dworsky has chronicled dozens of products that have mysteriously lost volume. In recent months, he showed containers of Haagen Dazs ice cream that shrank from the 16 ounces of a pint to 14 ounces; Bounty paper towels that dropped from 138 sheets per roll to 128 sheets; Purina dog food that slipped from 20 pounds to 18 pounds; and Kleenex tissues that shrank from 8.4 inches to 8.2 inches. 

    In each case, the product container appeared, to the naked eye, to be the same size.

    It's no wonder consumers are skeptical of claims that air-filled chip bags are really for their own good, he said.

    "The problems are cousins," Dworsky said. "It's really the same problem, isn't it? Making something look like more than it is?"

    While he says slack-fill has been an issue for at least two decades, he recently renewed efforts to study it – including one recent column that he illustrated with a picture of a fat-free grated cheese bottle under intense backlighting to reveal empty space.

    “It’s like you need X-ray vision to see these things,” he said.

    Dworsky, who's best known for his continuing fight to keep price tags on supermarket products in Massachusetts, carefully tracks supermarket product sizes. He's seen companies use the same technique over and over – slowly shrinking their products,  then reintroducing the larger size with a fancy new name like "family size."

    Dworsky said he has in his collection a Lays potato chip "family size" bag dated December 2008 that weighed 16 ounces, and another from earlier this year, still emblazoned with the "family size" tag, that tipped the scale at 14 ounces.

    In each case, the products were properly labeled by weight, which is the most important criteria consumers should notice.  But his problem with product downsizing is that it's nearly impossible for consumers to grasp how much they are being shortchanged.

    "You have to have a memory of what the product weighed before, the last time you bought it. And that's almost impossible," he said. "People tend to have very poor visual memories … and the problem with downsized items is they kind of look the same."

    The incredible shrinking package
    Todd Marks, who ran the "air to spare" research for Consumer Reports, has his own name for this phenomenon. He calls it "the incredible shrinking package."

    "Chocolate bars that were 8 ounces became 6, then 5. And as the bar shrinks, the firms use hyperbole like 'giant size' on the product to distract consumers," he said.

    HerbboxTime after time, companies explain that shrinking the size of products helps them contain costs, and they often claim consumers would rather get 29 ounces of mayonnaise in a "quart-sized" jar than suffer a price increase.  Marks, however, said shoppers told Consumer Reports in a recent survey that just the opposite — they'd rather products stay the same size.

    And that brings us back to slack-fill and air to spare.

    There are plenty of legitimate reasons why cereal boxes and vitamin bottles aren't jammed-packed with product. Here are a few:

    *Companies use the same size containers to sell different-sized products and thereby save money on packaging costs

    *Some companies always leave room for free offers, like "25 percent more."

    *Some package sizes fit better on store shelves than others

    *Added space helps air circulate, preserving freshness. Or, with coffee beans, it helps oxygen escape and allows C02 to act as preservative.

    However, it only takes a week in a marketing class to learn that perceptions and emotions play a large part in consumer choices.  If two products on a shelf next to each other are the same price, shoppers will almost always buy the one in the larger box, assuming it's the better value.

    Meanwhile, despite all of these shrinking packages and hot air, federal regulators appear to be asleep at the wheel. The law designed to protect consumers from misleading packaging, the Fair Packaging and Labeling Act, is essentially unenforced. There hasn't been a case brought in five years.

    So it is no surprise that consumers feel they are being cheated by air-filled products. Where once product sizes were simple and obvious — a quart, a pint, a half-pound — now, 5.2 ounce boxes have become the norm.  Given this track record, the burden should fall on companies to prove that they aren't being deceptive.

    "We live in a society where everybody is very cynical and for good reason," Marks said. "We see package sizes shrinking before our eyes in very misleading fashion. … It's trickery, a shell game.  They are obfuscating, resorting to techniques that are less than candid."

    What's the solution?  Dworsky has one, though he's pretty sure no company wants to hear it.

    "Put, 'Look, new smaller size,' right there on the front of the package in one of those starbursts. How about not hiding what you're doing?" he said. "But it will never happen."

    RED TAPE WRESTLING TIPS
    Only one: Ignore the package and zoom right in on the product net weight or volume.  Compare unit prices (price per pound, per quart, etc.) provided on store shelves. That’s the only way to compare apples to apples, cereal to cereal and one bag of potato chips with another.

    Become a Red Tape Chronicles Facebook fan or follow me at http://twitter.com/RedTapeChron

  • AutoblogGreen for 12.15.09

    It’s worse than we thought: GM commissions Chevy Volt dance to go with song
    O.M.G.
    Toyota officially launches plug-in Prius program, retail sales in 2011
    600 units coming in the next six months.

    Honda decides eco-features, not hot people at the beach, should define Insight ads
    Don’t call it a relaunch.
    Other news:

    AutoblogGreen for 12.15.09 originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 15 Dec 2009 05:55:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • With XTO Acquired By Exxon, Here Are The Next Players To Get Snapped Up

    gas2The Houson Chronicle’s Tom Fowler rounds some thoughts from the analysts and commentariat in regards to yesterday’s huge acquisition of XTO (XTO) by Exxon (XOM):

    What does it mean for other E&P companies? Simmons & Co. asks:

    “This transaction will likely set a bid under the E&P group today as the best capitalized and historically most conservative company moves decisively further into unconventional NAM natural gas. The transaction can’t help but imply a vote of confidence in both the potential resource size in shale gas and in the majors outlook for North American natural gas prices (XOM holding more exposure to swing Qatari LNG of any major). Companies that will likely garner immediate attention as take out candidates are CHK, EOG, SWN, RRC, APC, DVN, etc.”

    What does it mean for services firms (drillers etc.)? they also ask:

    Negative, particularly if today’s transaction becomes a trend. Unlike JV’s, where the majors bring capital to continue development, an outright company-level acquisition of this magnitude is typically followed by slowed development in the midst of portfolio high grading; a negative for NAM drilling and service companies.”

    Simmons also observes that XTO has hedged 53 percent of its 2010 production at $9.62/mcf. Exxon generally doesn’t use such hedges, so it will be interesting to see if they stick or are liquidated.

    CreditSights notes the deal “removes one of the five largest independent North American E&Ps, leaving only four independents remaining who have the scale that would likely be attractive to the Integrateds/Super Majors – Anadarko (APC), Devon (DVN), EnCana (ECA), and Chesapeake (CHK).”

    Tudor Pickering & Holt says the deal will “probably” kick off a major consolidation trend because “majors tend to be lemmings around trends like jvs/consolidation“. Their list of likely targets includes EOG, SWN, HK, ECA, DVN, CHK, APC.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Twitter Starts Rolling Out Business Features with 'Contributors'

    True to its previous statements, Twitter is starting to roll out the professional features it’s been touting for a while now. At the moment, it’s just a small feature which enables businesses to have multiple contributors to the Twitter account. These will be able to do all the things the administrator of the account can, most importantly, they will be able to tweet from the account, but their own name will be added to the byline. What’s more, this is just an appetizer and Twitter is saying more business-related features are coming soon.

    “As Twitter becomes more integral to businesses, they will need more business specific features from Twitter – both on the web and API. We have been working on some of these features and are ready to start a limited beta test of one that’s further along in development,” Twitter explained. “The feature we are beta testing is called ‘Contributors’ – it enables users to engage in more authentic conversations with businesses by allowing those organizations to manage multiple contributors to their account.”

    Contributors is in beta for now and is the first feature geared towards businesses and professional accounts to be launched. If simple enough to use, Twitter account admins will be able to invite other Twitter users to… (read more)

  • Moody’s: The Coming Sovereign Debt Crisis Of 2010

    The subject of sovereign defaults is definitely the theme of du jour.

    It’s the question everyone will be obsessed with in 2010 — that, and the related theme, the breakup of the Euro.

    Moody’s, via FT Alphaville, has created a new kind of “misery index” that merely adds a country’s fiscal deficit with its unemployment rate.

    misery

    The top of the list reads like a who’s who of the names in the news these days: Spain, Latvia, Lithuania, Ireland, Greece, the UK, Iceland and the US.

    Moody’s has also come up with another gloomy set of themes:

    Theme 1 Aaa countries will probably not have the luxury of waiting for the recovery to be secured before announcing credible fiscal consolidation plans.

    . . . A key concern is naturally an abrupt increase in real long-term interest rates after a long period of very low yields which has enhanced public debt affordability. We will address this risk in future publications and also discuss the unlikely risk of the dollar abruptly losing its predominant reserve currency status.

    However, this type of risk is not certain. After all, Japan has now lived for many years with elevated public debt, deflationary pressures and very low interest rates. Also, large economies are hoping to durably influence long-term interest rates through skilful quantitative easing (QE).

    But the risk is significant enough to focus governments’ minds. ―All this would require for the risks to materialise, is the combination of a global economy that is closer to (the new) economic potential, perhaps some ex ante change in the saving-investment balance at the world level (with China and surplus savers having to purchase fewer US bonds) and/or an inflation-led panic.

    Therefore, it is very likely that most governments will not have the luxury to wait until 2012 to start cleaning up public finances. 2010 will probably see the inflexion point in highly accommodative policies. In the meantime, tactical changes in debt management strategies will help. The US Treasury is trying to re-profile the maturity of its debt in order to lengthen it with the aim of reducing its vulnerability to such a possible shock.

    —–

    Theme 2 The “growth versus adjustment” debate is artificial: advanced economies will need as much adjustment as necessary, and as much growth as possible.

    —–

    Theme 3 For countries operating at sharply lower output levels and with reduced growth potential, the debt equation will look increasingly complicated.

    —–

    Theme 4 Most governments cannot afford another financial crisis. Attempting to ring-fence balance sheets from contingent liabilities will keep policy makers busy.

    To say that Aaa governments have lost altitude within the Aaa space simply means that their shock-absorption capacity – while still high enough to rule out any meaningful default risk – has been reduced.

    In other words, many Aaa governments, starting with the UK and the US, cannot afford another financial crisis at current rating levels. This is another reason why the reform of the financial sector has taken on such importance.

    But this is also true of lower-rated governments, and more generally reflects the explosion of the size of financial sectors over the past decade as compared to governments’ balance-sheets. The key factor in this context is support capacity.

    As a result, we believe that these governments are going to try a different tactic and make the preservation of their balance sheets – and perhaps of their rating – a primary objective. This will entail, from time to time, initiatives to share the burden with bondholders. There have been some attempts at ring-fencing government balance sheets in 2009, with varying rates of success (e.g. in Iceland, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Dubai, etc.). One could even argue that allowing Lehman Brothers to default was a way of drawing a line in the sand – although, as in many cases of ―ring-fencing, the outcome was disorderly.

    We have analyzed the Dubai World precedent as an early example of an ―exit strategy by governments, and have reconsidered the comprehensiveness of protective policies. As a result, our bank and corporate credit risk analysis is increasingly taking this into consideration.

    Read more at FT Alphaville >>

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  • Walmart Hopes It’s Found Amazon’s Acchiles’ Heel

    walmart supercenter

    Walmart (WMT) and Amazon (AMZN) have been competing fiercely for online sales for years now.

    Yet this Christmas, Walmart plans to hit Amazon especially hard in the online retailer’s achilles heel — delivery time.

    WSJ: Customers who buy some of the more than 1.5 million products on Walmart.com can have them shipped free to a local Wal-Mart, where new service desks at the front of some stores make it easier for shoppers to retrieve their stuff. On the outskirts of Chicago, it is testing a radical new concept: a drive-through window, similar to those found at pharmacies and fast-food restaurants, where shoppers can pick up their Internet orders.

    “There was a time when the online and offline businesses were viewed as being different,” said Walmart.com Chief Executive Raul Vazquez. “Now we are realizing that we actually have a physical advantage thanks to our thousands of stores, and we can use it to become No. 1 online.” Heading into Christmas, the company said 40% of its online orders are being delivered through stores.

    Read more here.

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  • Merrill Lynch: Ignore The Bubble In Pessimism, 2010 Will Be Awesome

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

    We are just about finished wrapping up our series on 2010 outlooks.  In this article we’ll outline Bank of America Merrill Lynch.   Bank of America Merrill Lynch is very bullish heading into 2010 (an outlook similar to RBC).  They see many of the trends of 2009 continuing into 2010 and driving equity markets around the world higher by double digits (see JP Morgan’s bullish emerging market outlook here).   Ethan Harris, head of North American economics summarized the Merrill outlook:

    “We believe the global economy will gather momentum in 2010.  We think that the unprecedented mix of near-zero interest rates and high budget deficits will engineer an economic recovery that is real and sustainable. We aren’t forecasting a swift return to robust growth. In fact, the recovery will likely lag behind those of previous recessions – but we believe that the world economy will perform far better than the economic consensus would indicate.”

    This macro outlook is underpinned by a number of variables:

    • Global growth will be 4.4%, Chinese growth will be 10.1% and U.S. growth will be 3.2% – all above 2010 consensus estimates.
    • Inflation will remain benign.
    • U.S. stocks will rise 15% led by strong growth in global cyclical sectors – tech, energy, industrials and materials.  Financials are also expected to perform well as the yield curve remains conducive to strong earnings.
    • The MSCI All-Country World Index will rise 20 percent.
    • Gold and oil will both continue to rally as strong demand from foreign investors remains the primary driver.  Gold will breach $1,500 and oil will surpass $100.
    • Government bonds will perform poorly.
    • The Dollar & Yen will rally against the Euro.

    Merrill also notes 10 key investment themes for 2010.  From PR Newswire:

    10 Investment Themes for 2010

    • Government Balance Sheet Risk: The soaring U.S. budget deficit and a Chinese currency revaluation will drive 10-year U.S. Treasury yields above 4 percent by year-end 2010. Shorter-duration Treasuries and U.S. investment-grade corporate credit are less susceptible to such risks.
    • Rising Taxation: The soaring U.S. budget deficit, looming U.S. healthcare reform and a likely second stimulus package will need to be funded through higher tax rates. Opportunities include essential purpose revenue and general obligation municipal bonds, and municipal bond exchange-traded funds.
    • Alternative Dividend Yield Strategies: Dividend taxes are likely to rise in 2011, and as the prospect of higher taxes erodes the popularity of traditional dividend yield-oriented strategies, tax-advantaged or tax-deferred strategies will benefit.
    • Financial Sector Rehabilitation: Steepening yield curves around the world, increased M&A activity and the still-underestimated normalized earnings power of financials should foster their returns surprise on the upside. Opportunities can be found in best-of-breed mega-cap global financials.
    • Corporate Cash Flow Beneficiaries: High cash balances will translate into strategic M&A, a term describing non-speculative, non-private equity mergers. In addition, companies will increase capital spending and possibly dividends. We expect the beneficiaries of capital spending to include the industrial sector and temporary staffing companies as production expands.
    • Rising Global Growth: The global policy stimulus seen in 2009 will continue to support global growth led by emerging markets, while in the U.S. an inventory restocking cycle and higher capex converge to push global growth well above 4 percent. Opportunities include best-of-breed mega-cap multinationals based in developed markets with a large presence in emerging markets.
    • The Emerging Market Consumer: The emerging market consumer is at the beginning, not the end, of the credit cycle. Opportunities include emerging market currencies versus the U.S. dollar and, in equities, U.S. energy stocks, global energy majors and mega-cap multinationals.
    • Commodity Price Inflation: Supply constraints are likely to resurface in the year ahead as commodity demand outpaces the productive capacity of current resources. Investment opportunities include long positions in gold and global energy stocks.
    • Alternative Energy: Truly economical renewables may be years away, but investment in alternative energy is an important secular theme that will continue to gain ground. Alternative energy ETFs offer exposure to the burgeoning industry while providing important diversification across multiple technologies and business models. Old technology energy equities such as utilities will be a source of, not a beneficiary of, alternative energy investment.
    • The Return of Active Management: Volatility has come down in 2009, especially since central banks began their critical quantitative easing in March. Lower volatility leads to lower correlation, resulting in greater differentiation in asset price performance. The trend favors active over passive management. Such a stock-picking environment should result in high-quality, best-of-breed stocks outperforming in 2010.

    “Poor returns from the equities markets over the past decade, particularly from large cap equities, have created a pessimism bubble among investors,” said Bianco. “We believe the S&P 500 is now undervalued, which could create many investment opportunities in the year ahead. Given our expectations for global growth led by emerging economies, a slow but steady U.S. recovery, and healthy S&P 500 EPS growth, we think that the pessimism bubble will finally burst in 2010.”

    Interesting outlook indeed.  A bursting in the pessimism bubble will likely mean a very real asset bubble  –  which should come as a surprise to Ben Bernanke and co.

    Read more market commentary at the Pragmatic Capitalist >>

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  • Court Says Personal Email From Work Can Still Be Protected Attorney-Client Communications

    We’ve seen plenty of cases where courts have said that an individual has no expectation of privacy on emails sent from work, and therefore cannot protect those emails. However, in an interesting new ruling (found via the EFF), a court found that personal emails sent from work computers can still be considered privileged and confidential as an attorney-client communication.

    Of course, there’s a bit more to this case that makes the facts a bit different and makes me wonder if it would apply in other circumstances. In this case, it dealt with a federal prosecutor who was fired, and is trying to claim that the firing was for his whistle-blowing. He was trying to access the emails of a US Attorney that he believes will reveal why he was fired. So it wasn’t a case of a company trying to review the email (which is normally the case in these types of lawsuits). And, as such, it makes sense. The attorney-client privilege should be seen as one that has an incredibly high barrier. Any weakening of that privilege — such as by saying that if you email your lawyer from work, it doesn’t exist — would be troubling. But what would be more interesting is what would happen in a lawsuit where it was the employer looking at the material. If a company has a regular program of recording and examining employee email (as many do), then how would the issue be resolved? It would seem that, in such circumstances, it would make a lot less sense to consider the content protected, since the employer is not asking for it, but already has access to it.

    In related news, however, the Supreme Court will be hearing a case that looks at whether or not your text messages are private, even if sent from company mobile phones.

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  • Europe Flat, US Down, And Asia Down On Same Old Fears About China Pricking Its Bubble

    china apartment building

    Europe has opened flat, US futures are in the red, and Asian shares fell meaningfully on — surprise surprise — fears that the central government would act to cool the bubble.

    Bloomberg: Asian stocks declined, led by Chinese developers, on speculation China will curb land speculation. Oil and copper rose, and the Australian dollar fell after the central bank damped expectations for higher loan rates.

    The MSCI Asia Pacific Index fell 0.6 percent to 119.75 at 5 p.m. Tokyo time. The Dow Jones Euro Stoxx 50 rose 0.2 percent to 2,891.25 at 8 a.m. in London. U.S. stock futures were little changed. Oil snapped a nine-day losing streak, the longest in eight years, as prices below $70 a barrel triggered purchases that sent crude up 0.6 percent to $69.89 a barrel. Copper for delivery in three months in London rose 0.5 percent to $6,945 a metric ton. The Aussie fell 0.4 percent versus the dollar and declined against all 16 of its counterparts.

    The Chinese government will target “excessive” property price increases in some cities, the state-owned Xinhua News Agency said. Separately, rising Chinese demand may boost metals prices next year, Roger Agnelli, the chief executive officer of Vale SA, the world’s largest iron ore producer, said yesterday.

    Look back at everytime the Chinese stock market has fallen in the last year, and this is probably the reason, or some variation of this, and yet it never happens. That’s not saying it won’t, just that it typically doesn’t.

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  • European Banks Are Hoarding Cash Too

    bank vault cash

    It’s not just American banks that are being extremely cautious with their lending these days. In Europe, they aren’t lending either despite government support.

    Bloomberg: For all the cash provided by the European Central Bank to ease the worst seizure in credit markets since World War II, financial institutions in the region are unwilling to lend, using the money instead to invest in the safest, most liquid government securities. Bond investors are offering money like never before as returns on corporate debt reach as much as 70 percent this year, according to Merrill Lynch & Co. indexes.

    Banks are also cutting back on other types of corporate loans. In Europe, a net 8 percent of lenders reported a tightening of credit in the third quarter, compared with 21 percent in the previous three-month period, the ECB said in its Euro-Area Bank Lending Survey on Oct. 28. Commercial and industrial lending fell 18 percent in the U.S. to $1.35 trillion as of Dec. 2 from a record high a year ago, Fed data show.

    After years of bad loans, and a recent financial crisis, this is good news. The goal of government support of the banks shouldn’t be for banks to simply lend. The goal is to promote stable banks, which lend intelligently once they have confidence in their own balance sheets. In Europe, as in the U.S., we haven’t reached this point yet. Which is fine.

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  • Bit.ly Counters Google and Facebook's Moves with Pro Accounts

    With both Google and Facebook taking swipes at it and invading its home territory, even if with veiled intentions, it didn’t take long for Bit.ly, the biggest name in URL shorteners at the moment and undisputed market leader, to respond. Just as Facebook was revealed to be testing Fb.me and Google introduced Goo.gl, Bit.ly is stepping up the game with pro accounts offering what amounts to a whitelabel service, built on its infrastructure but with the customer’s own domain name.

    “Today we’re pleased to announce a new service: bit.ly Pro. The Pro service provides custom short URLs powered by bit.ly. Publishers and bloggers will be able to use their own short domain names to point to pages on their sites,” Bit.ly announced. “Users and publishers benefit from the additional transparency that this private-label service provides. When you see a short URL like nyti.ms, you know the destination web site before clicking on the link. The service includes all the bit.ly features users and publishers have come to expect.”

    What this means is that publishers, bloggers, companies or anyone interested in having its own short URL can still get access to all the tools Bit.ly provides like detailed analytics. For now, the Pro service is in beta and is only available to a few sele… (read more)

  • What Is The Origin Of The Knocking On Wood Superstition?

    This superstition is one that seems to cause a lot of people to ‘knock on wood” or “touch wood” when they voice something good that they hope will happen in the future without really knowing why.  The general idea is to not “tempt fate”.

    One possible origin of this superstition dates back to the Pagans who believed that trees were homes of the gods.  If someone wanted help or a favour they would tell their wish to a tree and then touch the bark.  This was the first “knock” and they would knock again to say thank you.  There are also some Christian references that indicate that knocking on wood has to do with the wood representing the cross or the rosary.

    Another explanation could be British chasing games that date to the early 19th century where you would be safe from being ‘tagged’ if you touched wood.  “Tiggy-touch-wood” was a popular game and could account for the phrase “touch wood” being passed into every day language in the UK.

  • Goo.gl Launches Right on the Heels of Fb.me

    The URL shortener market just got a couple of big disruptions as possibly the two most powerful players in the web at the moment, Google and Facebook, have entered the market with their own URL shorteners. Facebook’s approach is a rather cautious one, its shortener kicks in automatically only on the mobile site and only for links to pages on Facebook. Google is also taking a smaller step at first and has introduced its URL shortening service Goo.gl for just two of its products, the Google Toolbar and FeedBurner.

    “People share a lot of links online. This is particularly true as microblogging services such as Twitter have grown in popularity. If you’re not familiar with them, URL shorteners basically squeeze a long URL into fewer characters to make it easier to share with others. With character limits in tweets, status updates and other modes of short form publishing, a shorter URL leaves more room to say what’s on your mind — and that’s why people use them,” Muthu Muthusrinivasan, Ben D’Angelo and Devin Mullins, software engineers explain.

    So, while people will be able to use Google’s URL shortener, it’s not a full-blown service and can only be accessed through the two products. However, this doesn’t discount opening it up to more products or even launching a dedicated service down the line… (read more)

  • Facebook Tests Fb.me URL Shortener

    It’s been a great year for Twitter which means it’s been a great year for services built to cater to it, but the biggest being URL shorteners which, at one point, were popping up left and right. Things have quieted down a bit, after a few public failures, and Bit.ly settled into the role of undisputed market leader. The status quo wasn’t to last though, as the market got a great big shook up with the entrance of both Facebook and Google.

    Facebook hasn’t made any official announcements, but shortened URLs coming from fb.me started showing up instead of the usual, very long Facebook links. For now, this is done automatically for all links sent through the mobile versions of the site. As Inside Facebook exemplifies, whereas a photo URL from Facebook would look something like http://m.facebook.com/photo.php?pid=35877484&id=1310743&l=a373e8038d the sale page can be accessed through http://fb.me/3Bkj7CW, obviously a huge improvement, especially useful on mobile devices with limited screen space.

    Users can’t use the URL shortener by themselves and it can’t be used to shorten any other links than those leading to a Facebook page, at least for now. It only kicks in automatically when sharing a link on the mobile version. Interestingly though, it works Facebook pages or usernames as well, so a link like fb.me/google will lead… (read more)

  • Drilling and plunge milling with a single tool

    “Milling with Quatron indexable inserts”

    With the KOMET® Quatron hi.feed milling cutters, the KOMET GROUP® is replicating the success of its proven KOMET KUB Quatron® drills in a new range of milling cutters. For roughing operations, this tool variant enables machinists to use the quad-ratic indexable inserts for both drilling and plunge milling.

    The most striking feature of these universal tools is the four-edged Quatron indexable insert. For years it has been the compelling solution for drilling operations, remarkable not only for the number of its cutting edges, but above all for its rapid removal of high chip volumes – prop-erties that are now replicated in the new KOMET® Quatron hi.feed milling cutters. In addition, the Quatron indexable inserts also have a radial cutting action, which affords a considerably higher degree of flexibility in plunge and pocket milling by comparison with two- or three-edged inserts.

    Machinists who have to cut deep grooves or large cavities in their workpieces often opt for plunge milling due to the dimensions or cut-ting capacities of the tools or the performance of the spindle inside the machine. Rather than boring with the use of multiple boring tools, it is possible to achieve various diameters and complex contours in one roughing operation by milling with an axial and a horizontal feed. An-other plus point is that, in the KOMET® Quatron hi.feed , the very same indexable inserts can be used for drilling as well as milling. The proven BK8425 coating delivers exceptional tool life. The tough sub-strate enables universal use of these screwable milling cutters for steel, cast iron and stainless materials.

    With its brands KOMET®, DIHART® and JEL®, the KOMET GROUP® is a leading global manufacturer of precision tools for bore machining, reaming and threading. The group has been at the forefront of innova-tion in the sector for over 90 years – a tradition that began with the early indexable insert borers and continues today with their mecha-tronic tool systems. The company currently employs more than 1,600 staff in its 20 subsidiaries and is represented in around 50 countries.

  • When Do You Long To Look Your Best?

    More women are concerned about how they look for a job interview than for their wedding!

    The recent “Grapefruit Guide to Glamorous Moments Poll” by the Florida Department of Citrus revealed that 75% of women surveyed consider job interviews to be the most important moment to look good, followed by wedding day at 69%.

    grapefruit-beauty-pollOther days that women want to look their best include: weddings of friends, first dates, class reunions, holiday parties and a night out.

    The most common goal, cited by 83% of women, was having great hair at a “glamour event.” The survey participants included 1,050 women ages 25-54. The research was conducted by Richard Day Research, Inc.

    Beauty or Money?

    It seems that the women surveyed chose beauty. Are you surprised?

    Almost half of the women would rather lose $5,000 of income than gain 20 pounds, and 81% would rather lose two dress sizes than meet an admired celebrity. Plus, 38% of women would chose wrinkle-free skin over a new car.

    Short-term Dieting

    Almost all of the women surveyed considered diet and nutrition important for preparing for special events, but most of them opt for short-term fixes instead of long-term goals. While more than half of the women dieted for special events, 64% stopped the diet shortly after the big event.

    Carrie Latt Wiatt, nutrition consultant to Hollywood’s elite, recommends a different approach:

    “By maintaining a healthy lifestyle which includes physical activity and choosing the right mix of foods day-to-day, you can increase your chances for success in achieving benefits like a healthy weight, reduced risk for disease, shiny, healthy hair, and smooth skin. This lifestyle also helps you sustain results over time.”

    Wiatt recommends eating fiber-rich foods (like grapefruit) which help you feel fuller. She also praises the grapefruit’s ability to support more youthful skin through collagen production. For snack time, Wiatt suggests pairing a favorite fruit or veggie with a serving of walnuts, which add protein, omega-3 fatty acids and a nice crunch!

    You can read more diet tips from Wiatt at the Florida Grapefruit site.

    (Image via Florida Grapefruit)

    Post from: Blisstree

    When Do You Long To Look Your Best?

  • 2010 Content Technology Predictions





    With only a few weeks left in 2009, it’s time for our team of CMS Watch analysts to reveal our 2010 predictions, where we make our best guesses as to what the Content Technology industry will hold for you in the new year. This is our fourth year in a row trying to read the future, and like most predictors, our track record is mixed. If you’d like to see how we’ve done, you can view past predictions here: 2009, 2008, and 2007.

    On a whole, we think 2010 will be characterized by a movement by "back to the basics" among technology vendors. This includes a renewed focus on internal content technology applications as we describe in today’s press release. While some of these changes may seem modest, oftentimes recessionary times are the catalysts for necessary changes to be made.

    (One prediction we can guarantee is that 2010 will bring lots of new and exciting changes coming to CMS Watch, so keep watching this space!)

    Without further ado, here are our 2010 Content Technology Predictions. Read the predictions below, or my colleague Alan can lead you through a video rendition:

    1) Enterprise Content Management and Document Management will go their separate ways
    ECM as a marketing and technical concept has great validity. But the idea of having a single overarching platform to manage all sources of content management only works well in those enterprises that follow a unified and services-oriented architectural approach to IT. Instead, most firms keep their focus on specific business processes such as accounts payable, customer acquisition, case and matter management, and so on. The need for similarly specific software solutions has not abated, and document management vendors fill this requirement well. The maturation of integration approaches (e.g., REST) and standards (e.g., CMIS) will help spur the development of these business applications, since they typically need to tap other enterprise systems. Therefore, in 2010 we will see more vendors returning to core document management and workflow requirements, and becoming bolder about their lack of interest in embracing broader ECM functionality (DAM, WCM, Collaboration, and so forth) — at least not in an integrated platform.

    2) Faceted search will pervade enterprise applications
    Full-text search is of little value when trying to mine corporate document silos. Most firms continue to rely upon good electronic filing systems (information architecture). However, most don’t correctly file business documents, and become over reliant on search engines to magically sort and find chaotic information piles. In this environment, faceted search (logically chunking large search result sets) will enjoy a revival, sparked in large measure by the growing adoption of Lucene Solr by other software vendors.

    3) Digital Asset Management vendors will focus on SharePoint integration over geographic expansion
    Most if not all DAM vendors will debut a SharePoint "connector". ADAM was first, Open Text followed, more will come. We will see continued adoption / use of SharePoint as a front-end to DAM. At the same time, DAM vendors will struggle to meet the proliferating demand for DAM technology in Europe. Some DAM vendors are already declining to respond to RFPs because they know they can’t support clients on the continent.

    4) Mobile will come of age for Document Management and Enterprise Search
    Does your ECM package come with its own mobile app store? In 2010, it might. Smarter phones, more bandwidth, and an increasingly mobile workplace will push the traditionally more staid document management and search vendors to develop richer mobile interfaces. Meanwhile, major enterprises (and vendors) will need to adapt their search and information access strategies in the face of mobile application search, with a new emphasis on precision over recall, and a fresh look at faceted results (see #2, above).

    5) WCM vendors will give more love to Intranets
    Intranet managers have had to take on greater responsibilities in the past year, especially for internal collaboration and community services. But they frequently tell us that their Web CMS vendors have turned their attentions slavishly to the needs of public website marketers. Amid a crowded market for e-marketing-oriented WCM solutions, in 2010 some opportunistic WCM vendors will renew their focus on the specific needs of Intranet scenarios.

    6) Enterprises will lead thick client backlash
    Some content technology vendors are rolling out thick clients at a time when IT has not forgotten the headaches around user provisioning, security, and version control they experienced when Java applet technology was all the rage. In particular Adobe Flex — as a content-app development and deployment framework — will fail to reach critical acceptance. To be sure, Flex can work well for some one-dimensional applications, like Twitter clients.  Yet, the negatives around Flex are various and sundry, ranging from its unfamiliarity and the difficulty of finding Flex-capable developers who have enterprise software experience, to unresolved issues around memory management and performance. It won’t take CMS vendors long to figure out that Flex is no substitute for AJAX and especially HTML 5. Similarly, DAM vendors that continue to support a rich / desktop client (Extensis, Canto) will finally abandon it for web-based interfaces.

    7) Cloud alternatives will become pervasive
    A majority of the 200+ content technology vendors we cover will come out with optional, cloud-based storage, archiving, and processing services. Big candidates for processing services are episodic but server-intensive tasks like publishing, indexing, and transcoding. And before year’s-end we will see the first wave of backlash as well, as vendors unfamiliar with running (or brokering) such services stumble noticeably in early attempts, and customers become more savvy about security, SLAs, network performance, and other vital considerations. This will slow, but not halt, the rise of cloud-based supplemental services across nearly all the technologies we cover.

    8) Document Services will become an integrated part of ECM
    Document Services (Document Composition, Document Output Management) will attract increased attention from vendors as well as customers. Most of these technologies are not new (and indeed, some, like COLD, are quite old). But enterprises will discover huge potential of verticalized applications by integrating document services into existing ECM systems. Examples include electronic billing, statement/policy generation, and presentation. Many vendors already have some offerings here and we will start seeing better integrated solutions in 2010.

    9) Gadgets and Widgets will sweep the Portal world
    Lightweight technologies like Gadgets and Widgets have become increasingly popular on the public web. In 2010, enterprises will more intently use them to build tactical solutions ("quick wins") and then slowly migrate to more strategic options. So portal vendors will not only support these frameworks but also will start providing a roadmap for moving from Gadgets to Portlets, and vice-versa.

    10) Records Managers face renewed resistance
    There is a fight already brewing between records managers and business managers, but in 2010 the battle will join in earnest. Throughout much of the past decade, records managers succeeded in getting more executive attention in the wake of scandals and stiffer legal/regulatory requirements. Today, though, the RM profession is perceived as being behind the times and focused on paper documents; sadly there is some truth to this. At a time when enterprises have fallen behind the curve in dealing with e-mail as a primary source of records, the potential for Cloud Computing and new viral collaborative technologies raise further questions about the RM profession’s ability to adapt and deal with changing times. As a result the movement for simple retention rather than detailed RM practices will continue to gain ground.

    11) Internal and external social and collaboration technologies will diverge
    Many collaboration and social networking vendors are struggling to support internal ("behind the firewall") and external community scenarios off the same codebase. In 2010, most will give up the struggle and acknowledge that these business scenarios have fundamentally diverged. We will see more separate offerings from the same vendor, with increasingly different user experiences, security models, performance goals, and so on. At the same time, vendors will add and promote integration hooks as more customers seek to "move" discussions and collaboration across enterprise boundaries.

    12) Multi-lingual requirements will rise to the fore
    Many firms are now recognizing the need to localize applications and content across cultural and geographic boundaries. Though the technology has been around for while to enable this, a mindset shift is propelling this requirement forward. For some firms it is the perceived or actual threat of competition from countries such and India and China. For others it is the recognition that employees and partners operate more effectively in their native language rather than using English as a second language. For others it is the potential to sell outside of saturated English-language market. Many collaboration and social computing vendors in particular will get caught flat-footed in their assumption that application interfaces need only support English.

    For more information about CMS Watch’s research in these technology areas, please contact us at [email protected] or download free samples of our research here.


  • BioWare hires an All-Star cast for Mass Effect 2

    Mass Effect 2Casting is a very important part of film production, used to attract movie goers into theaters.  Similarly, BioWare is hoping to achieve this same kind of effect by casting big names into their upcoming title, Mass Effect 2. Sure, they are also hired to bless the game’s characters with talent, grace and—in some cases—even mannerisms. Names such as comedic actor Seth Green, Chuck stars Yvonne Strahovski and Adam Baldwin, Star Trek’s Michel Dom, Battlestar Galactica’s Tricia Helfer, Carrie-Anne Mos, and even Martin Sheen are part of this all-star game cast.  If the Mass Effect series never tickled your fancy, these names will surely spike your interest, even if it’s just curiosity.


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    BioWare hires an All-Star cast for Mass Effect 2 originally appeared on Playfeed on Mon, December 14, 2009 – 11:31:14