Author: Serkadis

  • General Mills Cuts Sugar In Cereals, Ostensibly For Health Reasons, But Not Really

    Surely General Mills will cite public outcry on the unhealthiness of its cereals for the move, considering how sugary Trix and Lucky Charms are:

    AP: General Mills — the maker of Lucky Charms, Trix and Cocoa Puffs — plans to reduce the amount of sugar in its cereals marketed to children.

    General Mills said it will cut the sugar in 10 of its cereals to single-digit grams of sugar per serving. It did not provide a timeline for reaching this goal, but it builds on reductions the company rolled out two years ago.

    The health reasons are great, but here’s the real reason (via Mongabay):

    World Sugar Prices 2009

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  • Scan: Hotel Dusk’s Kyle Hyde returns in Last Window

    Famitsu has given us our first look at Last Window, Cing’s follow-up to the awesomely wonderful Hotel Dusk: Room 215. Seems nothing has changed drastically, which should be great news for those who loved the first game’s

  • Donkervoort tweaks the D8 GT for 24-hour race debut in Dubai

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    2010 Donkervoort D8 GT(4) endurance racer – Click above for high-res image gallery

    While fanatics around the world debate the supremacy of one sportscar over another based on numbers alone, here at Autoblog we postulate that such exotic machinery is only as good as its capacity to transport you to another place, if not in body then in your mind. So bear with us and imagine the following scenario: You’re based in Holland. You’ve created what could be the ultimate neo-Lotus 7, and with it you’ve already placed in a major racing series. So where do you go next? Why, to Dubai, of course!

    We’re talking about the Donkervoort D8 GT, undoubtedly one of the most futuristically phallic retro road rockets on the street or track today. We got our first glimpse three years ago, and took a closer look in Geneva back in 2007, before production began last year. The 1400-pound cab-rearward track tool packs an Audi-sourced 1.8-liter turbo four driving 270 horsepower to the rear wheels. That’s enough power to sixty in less than four seconds.

    With the D8 GT, the Dutch manufacturer has already taken second place in the FIA GT4 European Cup, and it is now heading to its first 24-hour race at the Dubai Autodrome on the shores of the Persian Gulf. To prepare for the event, Donkervoort has tweaked the fuel system, the brakes, the aerodynamics, the carbon-fiber sandwich panels and aluminum chassis to create the D8 GT(4). The results ought to be interesting as the 24 Hours of Dubai kicks off in mid-January, but you can check it out now in the gallery below and the press release after the jump.

    [Source: Donkervoort]

    Continue reading Donkervoort tweaks the D8 GT for 24-hour race debut in Dubai

    Donkervoort tweaks the D8 GT for 24-hour race debut in Dubai originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 09 Dec 2009 13:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Facebook’s New Privacy Changes: The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly

    Five months after it first announced coming privacy changes this past summer, Facebook is finally rolling out a new set of revamped privacy settings for its 350 million users. The social networking site has rightly been criticized for its confusing privacy settings, most notably in a must-read report by the Canadian Privacy Commissioner issued in July and most recently by a Norwegian consumer protection agency. We’re glad to see Facebook is attempting to respond to those privacy criticisms with these changes, which are going live this evening. Unfortunately, several of the claimed privacy “improvements” have created new and serious privacy problems for users of the popular social network service.

    The new changes are intended to simplify Facebook’s notoriously complex privacy settings and, in the words of today’s privacy announcement to all Facebook users, “give you more control of your information.” But do all of the changes really give Facebook users more control over their information? EFF took a close look at the changes to figure out which ones are for the better — and which ones are for the worse.

    Our conclusion? These new “privacy” changes are clearly intended to push Facebook users to publicly share even more information than before. Even worse, the changes will actually reduce the amount of control that users have over some of their personal data.

    Not to say that many of the changes aren’t good for privacy. But other changes are bad, while a few are just plain ugly.

    The Good: Simpler Privacy Settings and Per-Post Privacy Options

    The new changes have definitely simplified Facebook’s privacy settings, reducing the overall number of settings while making them clearer and easier for users to find and understand. The simplification of Facebook’s privacy settings includes the elimination of regional networks, which sometimes would lead people to unwittingly share their Facebook profile with an entire city, or, as Facebook’s founder Mark Zuckerberg explained in a recent open letter, an entire country.

    Perhaps most importantly, Facebook has added a feature that we and many others have long advocated for: the ability to define the privacy of your Facebook content on a per-post basis. So, for example, if you only want your close friends to see a particular photo, or only your business colleagues to see a particular status update, you can do that — using a simple drop-down menu that lets you define who will see that piece of content.

    Most important, however, is the simple fact that as part of this transition, Facebook is forcing all of its users to actually pay attention to the specifics of their privacy settings. Considering that many if not most users have previously simply adopted the defaults offered by Facebook rather than customizing their privacy settings, this is an especially good thing.

    No question, these are positive developments that hopefully will lead more people to carefully review and customize their level of privacy on Facebook. Unfortunately, the new flexibility offered by per-post privacy settings, a definite “good,” is being used to justify the “bad”…

    The Bad: EFF Doesn’t Recommend Facebook’s “Recommended” Privacy Settings

    Although sold as a “privacy” revamp, Facebook’s new changes are obviously intended to get people to open up even more of their Facebook data to the public. The privacy “transition tool” that guides users through the configuration will “recommend” — preselect by default — the setting to share the content they post to Facebook, such as status messages and wall posts, with everyone on the Internet, even though the default privacy level that those users had accepted previously was limited to “Your Networks and Friends” on Facebook (for more details, we highly recommend the Facebook privacy resource page and blog post from our friends at the ACLU, carefully comparing the old settings to the new settings). As the folks at TechCrunch explained last week before the changes debuted:

    The way Facebook makes its recommendations will have a huge impact on the site’s future. Right now, most people don’t share their content using the ‘everyone’ option that Facebook introduced last summer. If Facebook pushes users to start using that, it could have a better stream of content to go against Twitter in the real-time search race. But Facebook has something to lose by promoting ‘everyone’ updates: given the long-standing private nature of Facebook, they could lead to a massive privacy fiasco as users inadvertently share more than they mean to.

    At this point there’s no “if” about it: the Facebook privacy transition tool is clearly designed to push users to share much more of their Facebook info with everyone, a worrisome development that will likely cause a major shift in privacy level for most of Facebook’s users, whether intentionally or inadvertently. As Valleywag rightly warns in its story “Facebook’s New ‘Privacy’ Scheme Smells Like an Anti-Privacy Plot”:

    [S]miley-face posturing aside, users should never forget that Facebook remains, at heart, not a community but a Silicon Valley startup, always hungry for exponential growth and new revenue streams. So be sure to review those new privacy “options,” and take Facebook’s recommendations with a huge grain of salt.

    Being a free speech organization, EFF is supportive of internet users who consciously choose to share more on Facebook after weighing the privacy risks; more online speech is a good thing. But to ensure that users don’t accidentally share more than they intend to, we do not recommend Facebook’s “recommended” settings. Facebook will justify the new push for more sharing with everyone by pointing to the new per-post privacy options — if you don’t want to share a particular piece of content with everyone, Facebook will argue, then just set the privacy level for that piece of content to something else. But we think the much safer option is to do the reverse: set your general privacy default to a more restrictive level, like “Only Friends,” and then set the per-post privacy to “Everyone” for those particular things that you’re sure you want to share with the world.

    The Ugly: Information That You Used to Control Is Now Treated as “Publicly Available,” and You Can’t Opt Out of The “Sharing” of Your Information with Facebook Apps

    Looking even closer at the new Facebook privacy changes, things get downright ugly when it comes to controlling who gets to see personal information such as your list of friends. Under the new regime, Facebook treats that information — along with your name, profile picture, current city, gender, networks, and the pages that you are a “fan” of — as “publicly available information” or “PAI.” Before, users were allowed to restrict access to much of that information. Now, however, those privacy options have been eliminated. For example, although you used to have the ability to prevent everyone but your friends from seeing your friends list, that old privacy setting — shown below — has now been removed completely from the privacy settings page.

    Facebook counters that some of this “publicly available information” was previously available to the public to some degree (while admitting that some of it definitely was not, such as your gender and your current city, which you used to be able to hide). For example, Facebook points to the fact that although you could restrict who could see what pages you are a fan of when they look at your profile, your fan status was still reflected on the page that you were a fan of. But that’s no justification for eliminating your control over what people see on your profile. For example, you might want to join the fan page of a controversial issue (like a page that supports or condemns the legalization of gay marriage), and let all your personal friends see this on your profile, but hide it from your officemates, relatives or the public at large. While it’s true that someone could potentially look through all the thousands upon thousands of possible fan pages to find out which ones you’ve joined, few people would actually do this.

    Facebook also counters that users can still control whether non-friends can see your Friends List by going into the hard-to-find profile editing settings on your profile page and changing the number of friends displayed on the public version of your profile to “0” unchecking the new check-box in your Friends setting that says “show my friends on my profile”. However, if the goal with these changes was to clarify the privacy settings and make them easier to find and use, then Facebook has completely failed when it comes to controlling who sees who you are friends with. And even if you do have some control over whether non-friends can see your friends list — if you hunt around and can find the right setting, which is no longer under “Privacy Settings” — Facebook has made the privacy situation even worse when it comes to information sharing with the developers of Facebook apps.

    The issue of privacy when it comes to Facebook apps such as those innocent-seeming quizzes has been well-publicized by our friends at the ACLU and was a major concern for the Canadian Privacy Commissioner, which concluded that app developers had far too much freedom to suck up users’ personal data, including the data of Facebook users who don’t use apps at all. Facebook previously offered a solution to users who didn’t want their info being shared with app developers over the Facebook Platform every time a one of their friends added an app: users could select a privacy option telling Facebook to “not share any information about me through the Facebook API.”

    That option has disappeared, and now apps can get all of your “publicly available information” whenever a friend of yours adds an app.

    Facebook defends this change by arguing that very few users actually ever selected that option — in the same breath that they talk about how complicated and hard to find the previous privacy settings were. Rather than eliminating the option, Facebook should have made it more prominent and done a better job of publicizing it. Instead, the company has sent a clear message: if you don’t want to share your personal data with hundreds or even thousands of nameless, faceless Facebook app developers — some of whom are obviously far from honest — then you shouldn’t use Facebook.

    These changes are especially worrisome because even something as seemingly innocuous as your list of friends can reveal a great deal about you. In September, for example, an MIT study nicknamed “Gaydar” demonstrated that researchers could accurately predict a Facebook user’s sexual orientation simply by examining the user’s friends-list. This kind of data mining of social networks is a science still in its infancy; the amount of data that can be extrapolated from “publicly available information” will only increase with time. In addition to potentially revealing intimate facts about your sexuality — or your politics, or your religion — this change also greatly reduces Facebook’s utility as a tool for political dissent. In the Iranian protests earlier this year, Facebook played a critical role in allowing dissidents to communicate and organize with relative privacy in the face of a severe government crackdown. Much of that utility and privacy has now been lost.

    The creation of this new category of “publicly available information” is made all the more ugly by Facebook’s failure to properly disclose it until today — the very day it is forcing the new change on users — when it added a new bullet point at the top of its privacy policy specifying this new category of public information that will not have any privacy settings. The previous versions of the policy, however, either didn’t disclose this fact at all, or buried it deep in the text surrounded by broad assurances of privacy.

    For example, in its previous privacy policy before it was revised in November, Facebook didn’t specify any of your data as “publicly available information,” and instead offered broad privacy assurances like this one:

    We understand you may not want everyone in the world to have the information you share on Facebook; that is why we give you control of your information. … You choose what information you put in your profile, including contact and personal information, pictures, interests and groups you join. And you control the users with whom you share that information through the privacy settings on the Privacy page.

    Meanwhile, the privacy policy as updated in November did specifically call out certain information as “publicly available” and without privacy settings nearly half-way down the page, surrounded by privacy promises such as these:

    • “You decide how much information you feel comfortable sharing on Facebook and you control how it is distributed through your privacy settings.”
    • “Facebook is about sharing information with others — friends and people in your networks — while providing you with privacy settings that you can use to restrict other users from accessing your information.”
    • “you can control who has access to [certain information you have posted to your profile], as well as who can find you in searches, through your privacy settings.”
    • “You can use your privacy settings to limit which of your information is available to ‘everyone.’”

    These statements are at best confusing and at worst simply untrue, and didn’t give sufficient notice to users of the changes that were announced today.

    In conclusion, we at EFF are worried that today’s changes will lead to Facebook users publishing to the world much more information about themselves than they ever intended. Back in 2008, Facebook told Canada’s Privacy Commissioner that “users are given extensive and precise controls that allow them to choose who sees what among their networks and friends, as well as tools that give them the choice to make a limited set of information available to search engines and other outside entities.” In its report from July, The Privacy Commissioner relied on such statements to conclude that Facebook’s default settings fell within “reasonable expectations,” specifically noting that the “privacy settings — and notably all those relating to profile fields — indicate information sharing with ‘My Networks and Friends.’”

    No longer. Major privacy settings are now set to share with everyone by default, in some cases without any user choice, and we at EFF do not think that those new defaults fall within the average Facebook user’s “reasonable expectations”. If you’re a Facebook user and you agree, we urge you to visit the Facebook Site Governance page and leave a comment telling Facebook that you want real control over all of your data. In the meantime, those users who care about control over their privacy will have to decide for themselves whether participation in the new Facebook is worth such an extreme privacy trade-off.

  • CHART OF THE DAY: This Is The Chart Warren Buffett Keeps Under His Pillow

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    This must be one of Warren Buffett’s favorite charts right now.

    The Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) is an economic indicator for the U.S. manufacturing sector, in blue below. It tends to be a leading indicator for future railroad shipments. This relationship makes sense since product orders generally lead to transportation demand via railroad and trucks.

    Due to positive signs from manufacturing, the PMI has spiked hard recently. Thus it’s a fair bet that rail carloads, in red below, should eventually spike as well. We might not be back to the good old days, but the situation is likely to be better than where we’ve just been.

    If this turns out true, it would be good news for the U.S. economy and U.S. manufacturing. It’d also make Warren Buffett look pretty smart, since he made his largest investment ever in the railroad Burlington Northern (BNI) not too long ago.

    The author owns shares in BNI.

    chart of the day, PMI vs. Next Month’s U.S. Rail Carloadings Excluding Coal and Grain*


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  • Humalog 75/25 question

    Thanks to a variety of things, including discontinuing Byetta in the middle of this year, my A1C rose to a whopping 9.2. My PCP recommended I go back on Lantus, which I’d been on briefly in 2007. My Endo had other ideas, deciding to up my Actos from 30 mg to 45, in a wait-and-see approach. I didn’t agree, and neither did the PCP… the PCP took over my diabetic care, and prescribed Humalog 75/25 instead of the Lantus/Novolog combo I’d used successfully before.

    I started the new regimen last night, 10 units 15 minutes before dinner. My fasting numbers were previously 160-170, this morning it was 149. I have also discontinued both Prandin and Metformin at the request of my PCP, so I expect that to be part of this equation.

    Since it’s been a while, and since I don’t remember, can anyone tell me how long it will be before I see results with this new insulin? You may as well throw in any anecdotes you may have about this fine product as well! Thanks for reading.

  • EXCLUSIVE: First shots of the Hennessey Performance Venom GT

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    Hennessey Venom GT – Click above for image gallery

    Hennessey Performance is on a roll. First we got a Cadillac CTS-V that accelerates so violently it sets off its OnStar system. Then we get a Chevrolet Corvette ZR1-powered pony car that handily won our Best Camaro of SEMA. Now this: The first shots of the Hennessey Venom GT, a lightweight, LS9-powered ICBM aimed directly at the world’s hypercar elite.

    Originally teased way back in November of 2007, the House That Hennessey Built has been working overtime to create this Lotus Elise-based, mid-engine masterpiece for the Geneva Motor Show this March, and judging by these first shots from the shop, things are looking downright diabolical.

    According to Hennessey, the final weight – with fuel, but no driver – should come in under 2,400 pounds, and with the “mildly tweaked” LS9 putting out between 650 and 700 horsepower, that puts the Venom in contention with the Bugatti Veyron for power-to-weight bragging rights. But naturally, Hennessey isn’t stopping there. After the bugs are worked out, the supercharger will be dispatched in favor of a duo of turbos, netting output somewhere north of 1,000 hp. 0-60 times? Less than 2.5 seconds. Top speed? An estimated 262 mph.

    Putting that grunt to the ground is a Ricardo six-speed manual gearbox – the same transmission the tuning firm used on its 1,000+ hp twin-turbocharged Ford GTs – with carbon fiber Dymag wheels fitted at all four corners, each shod in Michelin PS2 tires. Fifteen-inch carbon ceramic discs with eight piston Brembo calipers are mounted up front, while 14-inch rotors with six piston calipers reside in the rear, and although we haven’t gotten confirmation, the shot above suggests the driver sits front and center. Nope, the Venom will be available in traditional left- or right-hand drive, according to Hennessey.

    That’s all for now, but look for more details to be released in the coming weeks and get an exclusive eyeful in the gallery below.

    EXCLUSIVE: First shots of the Hennessey Performance Venom GT originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 09 Dec 2009 13:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Jon Sohn Discusses Progress on International Finance in Copenhagen on E&E TV

    As one of the most contentious issues in the international climate negotiations, climate finance is expected to be a major focus in Copenhagen.  During today’s OnPoint, Jon Sohn explains the climate finance issue and discusses US and European pledges for international aid to developing nations. 

    To watch the interview, please visit: http://www.eenews.net/tv/2009/12/09/.

  • Southwestern College Green Team receives grant to participate in Kansas Day

    Southwestern College has announced that students in the Green Team program will be coordinating service activities as part of Kansas Day 2010. These activities are part of the inaugural Kansas Campus Compact’s Commemorate Kansas/Serve Kansas program.

    …“These creative projects are an indication that students and faculty at Kansas colleges and universities are aware of the importance of connecting their education with a civic purpose that serves all of Kansas’ citizens,” said Matthew Lindsey, executive director for Kansas Campus Compact.

    »Read the entire article at The Winfield Daily Courier.

  • Study Being Promoted As ‘Redbox Kills Jobs’ Actually Shows That Hollywood Jobs Will Grow

    We’ve already been covering Redbox’s legal fight with a few movie studios who so hate the idea that Redbox is actually giving people something they want (legally) at a reasonable price (legally), that they want to kill it. The whole thing is so ridiculous that it’s difficult to believe there’s anyone out there defending the anti-Redbox studios’ position (and, in fact, a couple of the other studios, with Paramount in the lead, have realized that it’s smarter to partner with Redbox than to try to kill it). Yet, the Los Angeles Economic Development Corporation (a non-profit with LA government connections) has put out a report claiming that Redbox kills jobs and harms the economy throughout Los Angeles (thanks to reader Valkor for sending this in). If you want, you can read the full report (pdf) — but prepare to be amazed as what the report actually says is quite different than the press release headline.

    Hidden within the report are claims that the industry will continue to grow nicely for the next decade and that alternative business models will develop that more than compensate for any loss of revenue from reduced rental prices. But that’s not what the headline of the press release says. No, it reads:


    Study says low-cost DVD rentals could lead to $1 billion, 9,280 jobs lost

    But, deep in the actual report? Why, it says the following:


    The shift to digital delivery will provide new revenue streams for the industry and new opportunities… Increased availability of all types of digital content and media have changed lifestyles and will continue to contribute to demand for video products. Indeed, SNL Kagan forecasts continuing growth in overall industry revenues as alternative streams compensate for this loss of revenue. In total, SNL Kagan projects an increase in distributor revenues from all sources worldwide from $51.3 billion in 2008 to $67.6 billion in 2017. While the composition of these revenues will clearly change, distributors will continue to experience revenue growth into the next decade.

    So how does it get from that to the headline? Well, it assumes that Redbox is decreasing revenue from traditional rental, and seems to assume that these other alternative revenue streams are not influenced by Redbox or other forms of distribution that are more convenient and cheaper and attract a new or different audience — which seems like a dubious assumption. Another way of looking at this: it’s as if the horse and buggy industry put out a report just as automobiles were coming to market that said, yes, the auto industry will be huge and will create millions of new jobs, but because a much smaller number of jobs are lost due to downsizing the carriage market, we can release a report saying that the auto industry is “killing jobs.” Logically, that’s ridiculous.

    On top of that, it makes some odd assumptions throughout the report, continually throwing out the idea that Redbox itself might increase the revenue for the industry, repeatedly suggesting that the industry is mature and if there were a way to get more revenue out of it, it would have already been discovered. Of course, considering that the market has long been dominated by a single player, not prone to innovating, and with close ties to studios that have limited some of how it could act — that assumption is highly suspect. In fact, the very reason that Redbox has been so popular (and which also explains the rise of Netflix) has been consumer dissatisfaction with the old Blockbuster model, which was designed to squeeze consumers.

    To the authors’ credit, they do try to be fair on other numbers and assumptions, recognizing that effects go in multiple directions and that there are other issues at play, but the press release headline claiming that Redbox costs the industry a billion dollars and nearly 10,000 jobs, when the actual report claims that revenue is increasing and will continue to do so, just seems hard to swallow. Unfortunately, every single press report covering this study seems to only take the PR headline from the report and repeat it, without anyone appearing to have read the part of the report that says the exact opposite of what the headline claims.

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  • John Woo would like to make another game, Stranglehold movie in the works

    Celebrated action film director John Woo has expressed his desire to make another video game following 2007’s Stranglehold, the video game sequel to one of Woo’s most famous films, Hard Boiled. Fans might not have to wait

  • VIDEO: Presenting the coolest Honda Civic Wagon film ever

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    Wagon Attack II- Click above to watch the (epic) video

    More than a few Autobloggers regularly pine for the days when Honda (among other automakers) built simpler, smaller, lighter cars that were still packed with functionality. A sterling example of this philosophy is Honda’s mid-Eighties Civic Wagon, the pioneering pent-roof with the brand’s then-new RealTime 4WD system. Arguably one of the earliest crossovers, the Civic Wagon was incredibly robust, and more than a few enterprising shadetree mechanics have subsequently realized that they have similar tuning potential to their far more popular sedan and hatchback cousins. Enter the Attack Wagon.

    Not only is the subject of Wagon Attack II a thoroughly bitchin’ example of what can be done with forced induction and a few bulletproofing sessions, the folks that made the above video clearly went beyond the call of duty to chronicle its awesomeness in high-definition. Click through to the jump to watch the most entertaining – and arguably best quality – car video you’ll see today. When you’re done watching the 1989 Honda earn its Civic Shuttle namesake (as it was known in other markets) vaulting off Michigan’s Silver Lake Sand Dunes and tearing around broken-down airport runways, be sure to check out the making-of video as well.

    And yes, we want one now too. Thanks for the tip, Luke!

    [Source: WagonAttack.com]

    Continue reading VIDEO: Presenting the coolest Honda Civic Wagon film ever

    VIDEO: Presenting the coolest Honda Civic Wagon film ever originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 09 Dec 2009 12:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Facebook Rolls Out New Privacy Controls

    Facebook is now rolling out the revamped privacy controls and options it’s been telling us about for a few months. Last week, Facebook cofounder Mark Zuckerberg announced that the site was close to launching the new features in an open letter spread to all of its 350 million users. In short, the new options will allow users to customize the visibility of every status update or item they post and upload but the overall emphasis will be on more public content.

    “Facebook is transforming the world’s ability to control its information online by empowering more than 350 million people to personalize the audience for each piece of content they share,” Elliot Schrage, VP of Communications, Public Policy and Marketing at Facebook, said.

    “We’ve always designed Facebook to enable people to control what information they share with whom – it’s the reason our service continues to attract such a broad and diverse group of users from around the world. We’re proud of the latest evolution we’re announcing today and we will continue to innovate to serve users’ changing needs,” he added.

    The biggest and most visible changes are the new privacy options now available to all users every time they update their status or upload a photo. The options allow users to sel… (read more)

  • Lehman Died Because There Weren’t Enough Women In The Boardroom

    n1Welcome to Naissance Capital, a socially-responsible Swiss hedge fund that invests in companies which have a high representation of women in the boardroom.

    Why?

    Well sure it helps promote women as business leaders, but it’s also because having more women in a company leads to better investment performance!

    For example, women help prevent the ‘The Julius Caesar Problem’ whereby an ‘Alpha Male CEO’ ‘bends the rules, cheats if necessary’ and ‘eventually causes the company’s destruction.’ They even claim that gender diversity ‘can guard against six sigma events, ie. AIG, Lehman.’

    Despite the noble cause, this fund seems to be leaning a bit on women as a marketing gimmick. Sure it can help to promote women as executives, but at the same time they’re using our good-intentions towards gender rights as a marketing tactic to stand out from the competition. They also charge a 1.5% management fee, and 10-20% performance fee, so it’s not like they are doing this work out of the good of their hearts.

    Now see why women generate better investment returns than men >>>

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Benefits of Benevolence

    giving Benefits of BenevolenceIt’s a message fitting for the season and one that gives a whole new meaning to the adage, to give is to receive. Acts of generosity, research shows, don’t just lead to emotional satisfaction; they actually promote physical health and healing. It’s more than good karma of course.

    There’s evolutionary rationale to the warm fuzzies we get when we exercise our altruistic muscle. It behooved our ancestors to get along well and exhibit cooperation within their tribal groups. Even as the scale of social community expanded over time, a confluence of cultural motivation and genetic incentive appear to have still favored “pro-social” behaviors. We’re designed to be socially conscious and collaborative creatures. Not surprisingly, physiological incentives to support this orientation have been selected for over time.

    As a recent New York Times article highlighted, volunteering and other generous acts won’t cure a disease, but they can help people with serious conditions cope with physical pain and ease their symptoms. Other research associates volunteering with “noteworthy decreases in levels of blood pressure, stomach acid and cholesterol counts” as well as higher levels  of immunity-boosting immunoglobin A. Studies have even linked volunteerism with a lower risk of mortality in the elderly – even after adjusting for “health habits, physical functioning, religious attendance, and social support.” Researchers have long observed the emotional advantages conferred by a generous disposition. The so-called “helper’s high” is rooted in the release of endorphins. In keeping with this effect, those who volunteer report fewer stress symptoms and lower rates of insomnia.

    Amazingly, even witnessing acts of charity have been shown to influence immune response – a phenomenon labeled the “Mother Teresa effect.” Study participants who watched scenes of Mother Teresa helping others showed an increase in salivary immunoglobulin A, the front line of immune defense. (Gives a whole new meaning to the concept of “feel-good” programming.) The practice of generosity appears to benefit the giver, recipient and the surrounding social community. Not a bad thought for the holiday season – that we’re drawn to peace, love and cooperation? The idea maybe explains why they broadcast A Christmas Carol no less than three hundred and twelve times between Thanksgiving and New Year’s. Of course, we don’t recommend simply living vicariously through the exhibitions of T.V or the transformations of crusty Victorian misers. Nonetheless, perhaps those reruns of holiday classics aren’t such a guilty pleasure after all.

    Finally, it should be said during this season of commercial overload that giving shouldn’t be about obligation or necessarily about material exchange. Sulky obligation doesn’t exactly inspire health and happiness in the giver – or gratitude and well-being of the recipient. It’s the grating irony of the holidays these days that the hoopla too often drains the spirit instead of feeds it. We certainly don’t want to give the impression that anyone should drop what they’re doing and run to the next advertised 24-hour super sale or community soup kitchen to don an apron, but if it’s what you feel personally and joyfully called to do, then a big thumbs up! Although studies in altruism have focused on volunteerism, generous acts can also be as small and personal as making your partner’s favorite meal, holding the door for a stranger or offering encouraging words to someone going through difficult times.

    The idea here, we sense, is less about any particular action than it is about mindset. When it comes to benevolence benefit, it’s truly the thought that counts. Adopting a magnanimous attitude can lift us out of the limited and ultimately lonely individualism that can feel like and truly be a burden. As one study cited by the NYT explains, common “themes” in volunteers’ feedback include the satisfaction of “’making a connection’” and living with “’a sense of purpose.’” Fostering genuine health involves more than pampering ourselves or marking off suggested acts for personal well-being. Giving of ourselves places our potential for happiness outside of the restricted confines of our own lives. It extends our potential for fulfillment and joy beyond the daily details of our lives to the good we can see and do in all that’s around us.

    Have you felt the “helper’s high”? What role do you think generosity plays in personal wellness? Let us know your thoughts.

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    Related posts:

    1. Going Grubby: The Primal Benefits of Dirt, Dust and Dishevelment
    2. Compassion Meditation
    3. Yoga Therapy?

  • Best Seller in books on diabetes

    “The First Year: Type 2 Diabetes: An Essential Guide for the Newly Diagnosed” by Gretchen Becker.

    This book is rated #1 in its category by Amazon and has nearly a five star rating out of 92 reviews.

    Product Description
    After Gretchen Becker was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes in 1996, she educated herself on every aspect of this chronic condition by reading medical and scientific books and journals, talking with doctors and listening to her own body. In 2001, she marshaled everything she had learned as a "patient-expert" into the first edition of this book, which she has now completely updated and revised. The First Year®—Type 2 Diabetes uniquely guides you step-by-step through your first year with diabetes, walking you through everything you need to learn and do each day of your first week after diagnosis, each subsequent week of the first month, and each subsequent month of the crucial first year. In clear, concise, accessible language, Becker covers a wide range of practical, medical, and lifestyle issues, beginning with coming to terms with your diagnosis and then moving on to subjects including: Choosing the diet that is best for you The role of exercise Daily blood-glucose testing routines and understanding lab tests Medications and supplements Networking with others, Insurance issues, Traveling and socializing.

    My comment:

    The author lives on a farm in Vermont raising goats and sheep. Maybe this envirionment contributes her folksy manner of presention. She goes into a lot of interesting detail. It is very comprehensive as well as very enjoyable.

    She tends to downplay Dr. Bernsteins strict 6, 12, 12 daily carb diet and encourages the diabetic to keep testing and settle on what works.

    Allan

  • Brutal Legend getting more brutal DLC next week

    Ready your axes, folks, there’s more content to shred through this month on Brütal Legend. EA and Double FIne have announced Hammer of Infinite Fate, the second DLC pack for the heavy metal action game.

  • Microsoft bans Apple products at Microsoft events

     

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    Apple has been getting a lot of publicity of the back of Microsoft events, with the recent Mobius event above being a good example.

    This is set to stop however, with Microsoft banning any mention of Apple products at their events.  And they mean it.  At a recent Windows Mobile 6.5 launch event this exchange occurred:

    The blow below the belt came without warning. “This is a Microsoft event” a Microsoft manager barked at a IT journalist “Apple products have no place here”. When a tentative laughter began to rise in the upscale restaurant “Maria und Josef” in Munich he pushed on: “I mean it”

    The offense: At a dinner talk the journalist dared mention that he never owned a phone that was easier to use than the iPhone. This was at the introduction event of Windows Mobile 6.5. “His emotionality surprised me”, said a PR consultant attending the event. “It shows that the nerves are on edge [at MS]“.

    All I can say is about time.  Microsoft need to stop supporting a blogosphere actively hostile to their products and remind these journalists that their Mac habit is very much in the minority and not worth ranting on about every 3 minutes.

    Handelsblatt via 9to5mac.com

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  • Citi & Appraisers; Wells & MERS; Flagstar & 2-4 unit caps; AgFirst, USB – There are big changes out there

     

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    98% of Americans say, “OH **** before going in the ditch on a slippery road. The other 2% are from Wisconsin and Minnesota, and they say, “Hold my beer and watch this!”

    That quip has nothing to do with mortgage banking or renting, but seemed right given the weather in many areas. Every renter has enough worries without concerns about their landlord bailing on the mortgage. This may help: http://www.rentalforeclosure.com/ (Thanks to First Priority Financial for sending it along.)

    Was your Lock Desk busier last week? Borrowers are taking advantage of the lower rates, as the MBAA reported that applications hit their highest level in two months (up 8.5%). Purchases were up 4% and refinancing was up over 11%, with refinancing accounting for almost 75% of apps.

    Is it my imagination, or is everyone tightening up their guidelines, changing processes and procedures, and making it tough for compliance staffs to do their jobs? And it isn’t only the Fannie 8.0 release; there are many other changes also. Of note, some firms, like GMAC, are giving deadlines to buy Fannie 7.1 loans (Bank of America is February 26th), whereas others, like Wells, are not. This is often a result of loan programs that were acceptable under 7.1 being eliminated, and some large investors were never purchasing those programs.

    more news on Flagstar, AgFirst and Fannie Minimum MI, Wells correspondent, Citimortgtage US Bank Home Mortgage wholesale, TARP, used gold balls, rates, and joke o the day … <<< CLICK HERE

  • First Drive: 2010 Lexus GX 460 sticks to its trucky roots

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    2010 Lexus GX 460 – Click above for high-res image gallery

    The 2002 Lexus GX 470 was little more than a Toyota 4Runner with a healthy dollop of Lexus luxury on top, but at the time, it didn’t have to be anything more than that. It seemed just about every automaker that had an SUV in the stable was introducing an uplevel version to capitalize on American consumers’ insatiable appetite for luxury sport-utes, so why not Toyota? Lexus had already adopted the full-size Land Cruiser, so it made sense to bring along the 4Runner for the slightly less well-heeled.

    Although it didn’t set the charts on fire, the GX won over enough people that Lexus has continued churning it out virtually unchanged until now. In fact, the company easily moved every 2009 model it made. Still, even the best vehicles need to be updated from time to time, and with an all-new 2010 4Runner hitting dealers, it was time for this Lexus to undergo a similar overhaul. But the state of the economy, environment and the changing luxury SUV market itself meant that the Japanese automaker needed to rethink a few things for its sophomore endeavor. And it has.

    We spent time on and off road in San Diego County during our stint with the new 2010 Lexus GX 460, and what we have learned was quite surprising. Despite the market’s shift toward crossovers, the GX is still body-on-frame and has a V8, full-time four-wheel drive and takes up just as much space as the previous generation model. It still looks like a truck, drives like a truck and handles like a truck. But is that such a bad thing? Is there still a place for this type of vehicle… or is it simply an anachronism from a once-thriving, but now rapidly vanishing market? Follow the jump to see what we discovered.

    Photos copyright (C)2009 Frank Filipponio / Weblogs, Inc.

    Continue reading First Drive: 2010 Lexus GX 460 sticks to its trucky roots

    First Drive: 2010 Lexus GX 460 sticks to its trucky roots originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 09 Dec 2009 11:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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