Author: Serkadis

  • Over 100,000 People Infected By Ukrainian Black Lung In Just Two Days!

    flu europe ukraine swine

    The panic over the mutated H1N1 flu strain in the Ukraine has reached epic proportions. Over 450 people have died from the strain and nearly 2 million people have been infected:

    FTO: The new statistics and numbers show that 41 659 people got infected since the day before yesterday. That means that almost 100 000 people got infected in two days. Today’s statistics are not there yet but looking at what happened from the 2nd to the 3rd we see that 452 people have now died in the Ukraine because of this plague / H1N1 spreading there.

    The total of number of infections grew to 1 978 951. That is almost 2million people now infected in the Ukraine. Read the whole thing >>

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • More Creative Fiction In Warner Music Royalty Statements

    With Tim Quirk’s story about his fictional royalty statements from Warner Music, more people are beginning to talk about these kinds of things. Bob Lefsetz points to another report of a royalty statement of an unrecouped artist (and former major label exec), David Bach, who notes with some surprise that on his last royalty statement from Warner Music, the amount the band owed had gone up. In other words, the royalties that the band had accrued had somehow decreased:


    In May of 2007, I wrote a post about the wacky world of record company royalty recoupment.

    This week (Nov.-2009) – I received another royalty statement.

    Wow!…we’ve gone backwards!

    In May 2007, we were unrecouped to Warner Brothers to the tune of $174,073.84

    Now…our balance is up to $174,717.56!

    Talk about “pushing forward back!”.

    How is this possible?

    Good question!

    Now, to be fair, Bach still says that he was happy with his major record deal, in noting that it was effectively an “unsecured loan” in that he doesn’t lose his house if it never gets recouped. He conveniently leaves out the clear explanation that the label is still making money based on the wholesale price of the album, which is many times over what royalties are due to recoup the advance. He also leaves out the fact that while it was an “unsecured loan,” it also involved him giving up basically all rights to the music created under that deal forever (or, as the industry prefers, forever minus a day). Not sure that’s really that great a deal. With a real loan, you don’t also give up the lender something to keep forever. That’s not a loan, it’s a transaction.

    Still, the bigger issue is this idea that the amount that still needs to be recouped has gone backwards over time. It again raises serious questions about how Warner Music accounts for what it owes bands, whether they’re recouped or unrecouped. I recognize that accounting may be a boring topic, but it’s an important one that Warner has contractual obligations to keep accurate. And… plenty of other businesses with similar challenges seem to be able to keep track of what royalties are owed to whom. Why can’t Warner Music keep it straight?

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Gold ETF Approaching Record Volume, As Metal Plunges $50

    goldinvaultsspdrgld.jpg

    Gold is down today. Way down.

    Currently, it’s at $1168 an ounce, down nearly $50 and way below the mystical $1200 mark, but the big news is that the SPDR Gold Trust

    Over 65 million shares have exchanged hands, way up from the average of 17.8 million.

    Big thanks to Louis Winthorpe for the heads up.

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • Miyamoto honored with Lifetime Achievement Award

    At 57, Shigeru Miyamoto is already known as a living legend, well-known in gaming spaces the world over. With Mario, The Legend of Zelda, and Donkey Kong among the creds under his belt, the Nintendo mastermind has

  • Acer beTouch E100 Reviewed

    PhoneArena has published their review of the Acer’s low end smartphone, the Acer beTouch E100.  The Windows Mobile 6.5 smartphone has a WQVGA 3.2 inch screen and lacks smartphone basics like WIFI, but should partially make up for this by an ultra-low price.

    PhoneArena however concludes:

    The only real advantage of the Acer beTouch E100 over its rivals, the Samsung OmniLITE B7300 and HTC Touch2, is in its ability to play DivX and Xvid videos with extremely high resolution. However, it´s mediocre in every other respect – perfunctory personalization pack, low build quality and lack of attention to details are just part of everything that makes us believe its competitors are much better WM smartphones.

    and scores the device a corresponding 6.5/10.

    Read the full review here.

    Share/Bookmark

  • Bonds Are Priced As If Almost None Will Ever Be Distressed

    sheep

    More evidence that the bond rally may have gotten ahead of itself, especially for the more speculative grades of fixed income. Bond buyers have bid up prices so much that it’s hard to even find a distressed-looking bond, despite the fact that there were tons of these just back in November

    Distressed Debt Investor: In November of 2008, there was over $230B of corporate debt trading below 50% of par. Today there is less than $10B. As a percent of the market, 31.4% was distressed in November and now only approximately 1%. Hence the reason for the title of the post: There is no more distressed – just a lot of high yield.

    Bonds were surely oversold in November 2008, but the sentiment pendulum may have now swung too far in the other direction. It’s hard to believe that only 1% of the bond market will end up distressed over the next few years.

    What compounds this situation, which Peter correctly alluded to in his presentation, is distressed funds have had a huge year. A huge year is generally followed by capital raising – more capital to the distressed space means asset prices being bid up and IRR’s decreasing.

    Where will the distressed bond investors put their money if everything has already run up? If they buy bonds that no longer carry distressed prices, then they won’t have much upside and mostly just be exposed on the downside should these bonds return to their past distressed-level prices .

    Which means they’ll probably be forced to pick over the worst parts of the market and pile into the same few choices like sheep. 

    Of course, as mentioned in previous months, I believe this is a long drawn out cycle and distressed debt will return in force when the wall of maturities in 2012, 2013, and 2014 begin to tumble onto a weaker market where structured credit buyers are no longer forceful participants. But it could happen sooner if economic growth continues to be lukewarm at best.

    Even if the economy has a moderate rebound, a positive scenario, more than 1% of bonds are likely to run into serious trouble. This situation just speaks to the high level of expectations priced into bonds currently.

    Read more at Distressed Debt Investor here.

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • LA 2009: Toyota and Billabong craft one funky Venza

    Filed under: , , , , , ,

    Billabong Toyota Venza – Click above for high-res image gallery

    No, this isn’t a leftover post from SEMA, although to be perfectly fair, it is a leftover vehicle from SEMA. While reporting on the Hot Rod Toyota Tundra and Tacoma All-Terrain Gamer, we somehow missed this tricked-out Venza. Kitted out by the Australian surfwear mavens at Billabong, it’s called the Ultimate Venza Concept. Umm, yeah. While the vast majority of Venza crossovers are probably never going to be used off-road, this Ultimate Venza apparently wants us to know that any extreme sports fan will be happy in one.

    Toyota had Street Image do the build. They started with a 2009 Venza and added a body kit with Outback-worthy fender flares and alloy wheels. That crazy custom roof rack can accommodate surfboards, snow boards and wake boards, and can be lowered for easier loading. There’s even a hidden cargo rack that allows skis and snow boards to be mounted at the back. There are front and rear hitch receivers, a Grinch Winch to “pull wake boarders into waves or snow boarders and skaters across flat land to a jump or rail,” and a TRD big brake kit in there as well.

    Besides being identified by the massive graphics along the flanks, Billabong also chipped in wet suit material for the seats and an homage of sorts on the headliner which features a collage of Billabong athletes in action. The vehicle also incorporates certain “living” features like a heated shower system to help you rinse off after surfing and a Verizon Wireless access point router to keep you abreast of current surf and snow conditions. Look for it at upcoming Billabong surf events, read more about it in the press release after the jump, and see it in our high-res gallery below.

    Photos copyright (C)2009 Frank Filipponio/Weblogs, Inc.
    [Source: Toyota]

    Continue reading LA 2009: Toyota and Billabong craft one funky Venza

    LA 2009: Toyota and Billabong craft one funky Venza originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 04 Dec 2009 13:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • New Speakers, Sponsor, Partners, for SharpBrains Summit

    Our inaugural SharpBrains Summit continues to grow momentum – here goes a quick update.

    New Speakers:

    tom_pic.thumbnailThomas M. Warden is Assistant Vice President and Leader of Allstate’s Research and Planning Center (ARPC). He helps sets ARPC’s research agenda and manage its execution by 60-member ARPC staff, leading the development of significant innovations that contribute to Allstate’s profitable growth. He is a Chartered Financial Analyst and has an M.B.A. from Harvard University.

    lmh_face-inwhite_resizedDr. Laurence Hirshberg directs the NeuroDevelopment Center and serves on the faculty of the Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior of the Brown University Medical School as Clinical Assistant Professor. The NeuroDevelopment Center is one of the 20 research sites worldwide participating in the largest study of neurophysiological markers for depression. Dr. Hirshberg is a licensed clinical psychologist and certified in EEG biofeedback by the Biofeedback Certification Institute of America, and recently served as Guest Editor and contributor to a special issue of Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Clinics of North America devoted to emerging interventions in applied neuroscience, including neurofeedback and other brain based interventions.

    New Silver Sponsor:

    AGE_Matters_logo_v2A.G.E. Matters is a multidisciplinary Adult and Geriatric Evaluation Clinic in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, with a mission to provide swift and continually upgraded access to community-based, comprehensive assessment of cognition, function and behavior; personalized programs of prevention, counseling, education and treatment; and nutritional and lifestyle recommendations, cognitive training programs, and medications of proven benefit.

    New Partners:

    ADDF-Tight-LogoThe Alzheimer’s Drug Discovery Foundation was established in 2004 as a public charity to support the advancement of drugs to prevent, treat, and cure Alzheimer’s disease, related dementias, and cognitive aging. Our strategy of venture philanthropy is based on the idea that our research grant recipients are engaged in projects that are potentially viable in the marketplace with a possible return on investment.

    pg_icaa_main_enThe International Council on Active Aging® (ICAA) was founded in the belief that unifying the efforts of the organizations focused on older adults benefits both the people they reach and the organizations themselves. Today, the vision is shared by over 8,000 organizations connected to the ICAA network.

    kmdi_logo_vertThe Knowledge Media Design Institute (KMDI) is a leader in interdisciplinary research and teaching at the University of Toronto. Our work spans the scientific study of the ways in which media and media technologies shape, and are shaped by, human activity, and the practical work of founding an interdisciplinary nexus for the design of such media. Adopting a human-centred and participatory approach to design, our goal is to enhance human skill rather than diminish it, and to encourage creativity and innovation.

    LDS-logoThe USC Davis School of Gerontology has consistently pioneered innovative educational programs including the world’s first Ph.D. in Gerontology, the first joint Master’s degree in Gerontology and Business Administration, and the first undergraduate Health Science Track in Gerontology. Research in molecular biology, neuroscience, demography, psychology, sociology and public policy is conducted under the auspices of the Ethel Percy Andrus Gerontology Center, founded in 1964.

    Still much much more work ahead…but we are excited to see how this is shaping up!

    For more information, and to Register a early-bird rates, click on SharpBrains Summit.

  • How To Respond To Criticism

    Chris Anderson points us to a great example of ways to respond to criticism. It involves the company Microchip, which received a scathing video review of its PICKit 3 offering that the reviewer felt was worse in pretty much every way than the product it was replacing. As the video goes on and the reviewer, Dave, gets angrier, he posits that some “dickhead MBA” took over the management of this offering, and decided to kill off good features and save money by skimping on other things:




    Now, there are lots of ways to respond to such criticism, but none might be as clever as what Microchip actually did. Which was create its own video, showing the product planning meeting with the new product manager, one D. Head, discussing how to save money and squeeze more money out of customers… leading to his eventual firing and the engineers adding back in some of the missing features and explaining why it actually made a lot more sense to change some of the other features:



    It’s funny, self-deprecating, clearly acknowledges the criticisms and either explains how the company is going to fix them or why those decisions were made in the process. Even if you don’t know anything about the company or these products, there are a lot of things that anyone in any business can learn about the way Microchip handled this.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Dynasty Warriors Online PS3: 24-player battles, guilds, and customization

    Dynasty Warriors fun. Online fun. Dynasty Warriors Online fun. All that in PlayStation 3 awesome. Koei is really set on porting Dynasty Warriors Online into the PS3, and lucky for us, a retailer

  • LA 2009: Allard J2X MkII drops our jaw

    Filed under: , , , ,

    Allard J2X MkII – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Tucked away into the nookiest cranny of the LA Auto Show and literally parked behind a Morgan sits the Allard J2X MkII, perhaps the most breathtaking car in the joint. You nerds out there might be saying, “They dragged an admittedly concours-condition J2X out to Los Angeles? Big deal.” Which is precisely what we thought as we strolled right past the spiffy, spankin’ Allard for nearly two days. But then we took a closer look. Why would someone fit humongous Wilwood brakes to a vintage car?

    Because this puppy ain’t vintage. See that “MkII” suffix hanging off the end of the title there? This Allard is all new. As in a modern, hand-built continuation of the original Allard. Not only does the Allard Registry recognize the roadster and issue each one its own continuation serial number, but the president of Allard Motor Works is named Roger Allard – though he’s not a descendant of founder Sydney Allard. But even if it wasn’t a bang-on recreation of the hugely successful 1951-1954 J2X race car, this car would tickle us you know where.

    Why? So many reasons.

    Besides the usual “Just look at it!” bloviation, the frame is built from tubular steel with double roll bars covering the cowl and fuel tank. And inboard rear-brakes. Then there’s the absolutely stunning, jewelery-like hand-fitted instruments and aluminum dash. And the red leather. And the leather hood straps. And the (functional) portholes. The knock-off hubs. The twin side-pipes. And on and on and on. And on.

    Then there’s the little (or not so little) matter of what’s under the hood. In this particular car, it’s a 5.7-liter Chrysler Hemi V8 with a massive throttle body and a lot of other reworked jazz that’s good for around 500 horsepower. You want a 600-hp 6.1-liter Hemi? Not a problem. You can also opt for a Chevy 350, Caddy Northstar or Ford 351. The sprint from zero to 60 happens in about 4.5 seconds and, depending on the motor, you could pop off a quarter-mile in the low 12 seconds at 110 mph.

    Currently the Allard J2X is being built in two places (Montreal and Upstate New York), although there are plans to move to a single factory soon. Roger Allard plans on keeping the new Allard pretty exclusive, limiting its numbers to just one hundred per year. Oddly, about a quarter of that total is slated for Australia. Or maybe not so oddly, as when we shut our eyes we can totally picture ourselves blasting across the Outback in a J2X MkII, bugs in our teeth and roos bouncing off the nerf bars. Cost of entry? The new Allard starts at $138,500.

    [Source: Allard]

    LA 2009: Allard J2X MkII drops our jaw originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 04 Dec 2009 12:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Last.fm: 12 Ways to Scrobble

    “Audio Scrobbling,” as defined by Last.fm, is the act of submitting to a central database the details of what songs you’ve been listening to (what album, by who and when you listened). Scrobbling to Last.fm is the main reason I use the service these days, especially since it made the internet radio part of it a paid subscription only service for Australia. I think that being able to easily track and visualise my listening history and share that with friends is a great example of the social internet revolution.

    There are a number of ways to have your music scrobbled to Last.fm from your Mac. Which one you chose depends on which fits into your music workflow the best.

    First, a few words regarding iPod scrobbling. While many of the clients will scrobble what you’ve played on your iPod/iPhone (once you’ve synced your device), Last.fm does not accept scrobbles with a date-time in the past if more recent tracks have already been scrobbled. This means it’s generally not possible to listen to tracks on your device, listen to tracks on your computer and scrobble them, then sync your device and expect the songs previously listened to on the device to then scrobble too. ScrobblePod is the only tool I’ve tried that successfully handles this.

    So, without further ado, here are 12 ways to scrobble your music listening habits to Last.fm.

    The Official Client

    Fully featured, the official client focuses on the Internet radio part of Last.fm, but does scrobble songs played through iTunes as well as picking up what you have listened to on your iPod. If you often use Last.fm for Internet radio, this make the most sense. It will attempt to scrobble iPod tracks played. This official client is free.

    Standalone Players

    The following apps are standalone players, they do not control iTunes and iTunes does not need to be running. They can, however, access your existing iTunes library.

    SweetFM

    SweetFM is a full Last.fm client which can stream radio as well as scrobble what iTunes is playing. However, you can’t control iTunes with it. iPod scrobbling is not supported. SweetFM is an open-sourced project.

    Deck

    The Deck is a standalone full album player that lets you queue up complete albums and play them in the order you want. The tracks it plays will then be scrobbled. iPod scrobbling is not supported. Deck costs $20, with a trial version available that will randomly pause playing.

    Songbird

    Songbird is a full, open-source iTunes replacement that contains a downloadable Last.fm module (this will be downloaded for you when you first start the application). This module will scrobble as well as enable the Internet radio functionality of Last.fm. For a complete review of Songbird see TheAppleBlog’s comprehensive review. Surprisingly, iPod scrobbling is not supported.

    Spotify

    Spotify is a cloud-based music service, where you make your music available to yourself anywhere you are. It requires an online account, which might not be available in your country (its not in Australia or the U.S.). iPod scrobbling is not supported.

    iTunes Controllers

    These applications serve primarily as remote controllers for iTunes, offering alternative ways to play your music, while offering scrobbling functionality as an added bonus.

    Synergy

    Synergy presents buttons in the menubar to let you always control iTunes and will scrobble them too. iPod scrobbling is not supported. Synergy costs 5 Euros, but a free trial is available.

    CoverSutra

    CoverSutra is an iTunes HUD based controller that can scrobble for you. iPod scrobbling is not supported. It costs $20 with a free trial available.

    CoverStream

    Another iTunes helper app, this gives you the ‘Cover Flow’ view as a popup HUD window while scrobbling to Last.fm. iPod scrobbling is not supported. CoverStream costs 15 Euros, and a free trial is available.

    Bowtie

    Bowtie is a slim remote that offers many visual themes and utilizes lots of keyboard shortcuts, while also scrobbling to Last.fm. iPod scrobbling is not supported. Bowtie is free.

    iTunes Scrobblers

    These applications do just one thing, they sit in the background, scrobble whats playing in iTunes and nothing else.

    iScrobbler

    A nice dedicated scrobbler thats small and fast. iPod scrobbling can be turned on and off, and you can specify a specific playlist to use too. It attempts to solve the iPod sync issue by giving an option (enabled by default) to queue submissions if an iPod is mounted, but this just doesn’t work for me. iScrobbler is free.

    Audioscrobbler

    Audioscrobbler is a fork of the official Last.fm client, released by an ex Last.fm employee. This contains just the iTunes scrobbling parts of the official client. It does not yet handle iPods at all. Audioscrobbler is free.

    ScrobblePod

    ScrobblePod is my scrobbler of choice. It has a tiny memory and CPU footprint and stays out of the way. Most importantly it only ever scrobbles after my iPhone has finished syncing with iTunes. This means it cleanly handles all combinations of listening on the device or computer in any order. ScrobblePod is free.

    Which scrobbler is your favorite?


  • MC Hammer Becomes Equity Partner In Cash4Gold

    mc hammer performing

    MC Hammer has always liked spending cash for gold. Now he’s an equity partner in the booming cash for gold business.

    Except this time it’s MC Hammer who is exploiting people profiting.

    The eighties pop star was already a spokesperson for Cash4Gold, releasing a viral ad for the company’s U.K. division in September.

    Here’s the transcript from the video:

    “U.K. What’s goin down? It’s your man MC Hammer. It’s time to take that gold — you don’t need the crown jewels! — it’s time to take that gold and get it sold! Send Cash4Gold all your unwanted, your broken jewelry and we’ll send you cash. And don’t forget to tell us who would you like to see in our next U.K. commercial. We melt gold, baby!”

    More coverage at the Telegraph.


    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • Marlboro to Introduce “Smoke Rite” 6 Cig Health Packs

    Picture10 Marlboro to Introduce Smoke Rite 6 Cig Health PacksSmokers rejoice. There is a new, healthier way to smoke, all thanks to the innovators at Altria (formerly known as Philip Morris). Marlboro has just released Smoke Rites, a new line of health conscious products for modern people with active lifestyles.

    The concept was borne over two years of intense research at Marlboro laboratories. Head researcher Dr. Dylan Pantzenfahr explains, “Curing lung cancer is one of Marlboro’s top priorities. And while we can’t change the nature of [tobacco], we can change the way people smoke it.” Pantzenfahr is referring to serving size. To date there is no standard serving size for cigarette consumption. “It’s a tricky question,” says Pantzenfahr, “A man with massive lungs may consume a much larger serving of cigarettes than, say, a tiny person.” Nevertheless, in early 2007 Pantzenfahr and his team of specialists made it their one mission to answer the serving size question.

    Early tests failed. The group ran into several technical and legal obstacles. Julie Lawson, the team’s resident psychiatrist, palms her face when discussing the initial trials. “It was the wild west. No one had a clue what a serving of cigarettes looked like. We had monkeys smoking cigarettes, men smoking catfood, women using corn cob pipes. Eight cigs, twelve cigs, we had to cut the 200-cigs-per-day experiment short because too many subjects were losing feeling in their limbs.” Julie shakes her head, “We didn’t learn what a serving was, but we learned if you smoke more than 200 cigarettes per day your urine turns black.”

    But the smoke team didn’t quit. 420 million dollars and 18 months later Pantzenfahr made a discovery. “The serving size was still eluding us, but we found something amazing in the data.” One of the experiments compared people who smoked as much as they wanted each day with people who only smoked six cigarettes a day. Over 30 people were tested, and the results showed a 14% lower chance of lung cancer in the people who smoked just 6 cigarettes. The message was clear, smoking 6 cigarettes reduces your risk of cancer. Pantzenfahr’s eyes light up when he remembers the day he made the connection, “I double checked the findings, I turned to my research assistant and told her we’d just stumbled upon a way to cure cancer through smoking.”

    Marlboro’s CEO, Jeff Skinling, was skeptical. “I didn’t want to throw another half billion dollars into a scientific hunch. I had them run a double blind study. Then a triple blind, then a quadruple blind study before deciding we were blind enough to move forward.”

    When Skinling moves forward, he moves fast. Within months Marlboro created the Smoke Rite brand, produced a commercial, designed the packaging, and even built a bio-green-environment-safe production facility. “Now people know they are being healthy and environmentally chic when they smoke,” says Marlboro customer sensitivity chief Nancy McKerberster.

    The Smoke Rites are scheduled to hit gas stations and grocery stores within the month. Smokers will now have the option to buy a traditional 20-cigarette pack, or a Smart Carton of Smoke Rites. Each Smart Carton contains 12 small 6-cigarette Smoke Rite packs. Additionally, some regions will have the option to buy Smart Carton Plusses which will include a bonus seventh cigarette in each 6-cigarette pack.

    “This is just the beginning,” says Josh Glott, co-vice executive head of development and strategic marketing productivity at Marlboro, “Beyond the commercials and the promo spots on morning shows, our next batch of Smoke Rites will promote even further awareness of smoking health as we plan on including heart, check mark, and jogger silhouette icons on each pack. We’re even planning future Smoke Rites to be sold in a pack shaped like a healthy lung.” Glott holds up a magazine ad and smiles. The ad shows a mom in a sports bra holding a heart-shaped bowl filled with cigarettes.

    But not everyone approves of the healthy cigarettes. Grace Null heads a privately funded interest group dedicated to speaking out against the re-packaging. “You think people are really going to smoke just 6 cigarettes a day? No sir, people will end up smoking that entire Smart Carton.” Null cites a study to back up her claim. But Pantzenfahr is quick to reply, “Her claim is true, but only for people who don’t have control over their smoking habits. For people who are in control, the Smoke Rites are the healthiest choice.”

    The company’s strategy of product miniaturization is spreading to other health conscious corporations such as Jagermeister. “Alcohol is a powerful disinfectant,” says Jagermeister corporate researchologist Joe Bellows, “Studies show males between the ages of 28 and 55 need extra disinfecting at the end of a work day. Jagermeister Disinfectaboosters are a healthy way to disinfect your liver. And because of their small size, they’re fine to drink before driving home.” Bellows is boastful of his company’s new stance, though he admits Jagermeister is not the first to do so, citing Michelob Ultra’s movement to inform the public of the important role beer plays in exercise and fitness.

    Uzi has also joined the bandwagon, taking the first groundbreaking steps toward pistols and sub-machine guns that load “Smartables” two bullet magazines instead of the more dangerous fourteen bullet magazines. A safer gun for safer crimes.

    Jeff Skinling doesn’t seem concerned with all the corporate piggybacking. “The smaller pack thing is just the tip of the iceberg in our new campaign for health. Just wait till you wrap your lips around our Vitacigs.” Skinling is referring to an upcoming project that will inject vitamins and minerals into packs of Marlboro Smoke Rites. Each Smoke Rite pack would contain up to 15% of the recommended daily allowance of niacin. “Smoke 7 packs a day, and you’re over 100%!” claims Skinling. Niacin is also known as vitamin B3. Outside of Smoke Rite Vitapacks, niacin can only be found in meat, vegetables, nuts, fruits, dairy products, and grains.

    While it may be years before the negative and slanderous term “cancer sticks” fades from American lexicon, Pantzenfahr is hopeful that his research along with the new repackaging and re-labeling will finally sway the public to see Marlboro cigarettes for what they really are: immunity sticks. And as for current public opinion? “I don’t need to be able to pronounce the name of every single ingredient on every label of every product I buy,” says one American consumer, “I just need to know if I am being healthy when I put it in my mouth or when I give it to my children.”

    What do you think of Marlboro’s latest escapade? Share your thoughts on corporate spin, food product marketing and “Smoke Rites” in the comment board!

    Get Free Health Tips, Recipes and Workouts Delivered to Your Inbox

    Related posts:

    1. Single Serving Packs Don’t Curb Overeating
    2. Top 10 Health Marketing Buzz Words (Ripe for Skepticism)
    3. Forging Your Own Genetic Destiny

  • LA 2009: Spyker C8 Aileron Spyder proves the devil is in the details

    Filed under: , , , , ,

    Spyker C8 Aileron Spyder – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Where to even start? Oh right – that interior! With the possible exception of a couple of British-ish cars (BMW-owned Rolls-Royce Phantom, Volkswagen-owned Bentley Mulsanne, Tata-owned Jaguar XJ), no interior even comes close. And frankly, being honest, those luxo-barges just pale in comparison to the blinged out old-world splendor of a Spyker cockpit. And the C8 Aileron Spyder ups that already pricey ante. And get this – all C8s are now built in Coventry, England, shaving about $9,000 off the asking price, which is somewhere south north of $200,000 depending on baubles options.

    Normally, photographing cars at auto shows feels like a strange, exotic form of torture, at least for us writerly types. The bright lights, the bumrush, the awkward positions (you try crawling on your hands and knees between a posing CEO’s knees to get a shot of a wheel) – it’s not fun. But when photographing this car, we were overcome with a rush of (let’s just say) endorphins. We could imagine ourselves winding up the California coast, fondling that leather-wrapped aluminum gear shifter for hundreds of breezy, dreamy miles. And get this – it’s an automatic… and we don’t care!

    For you number junkies who choose to hastily look past the incredible innards, the C8 drop top is powered by a 4.2-liter Audi V8 good for 400 hp and 354 lb-ft of torque. That medium-amount of gumption is routed to the rear-wheels via a 6-speed slushbox. Top speed is 187 mph and 0-60 happens in 4.5 seconds. Spyker claims that the car’s strength is in the frame (stouter than a Ferrari F430, so they say) and therefor chopping off the roof has limited negative structural impact. Want more tech details? See our post from Monterey.

    Let’s get back to that interior. If you’re into fancy cars (hi mom!) you’ve no doubt heard of special leather coming from “free range” cows raised without barbwire so as to ensure the leather is flawless. Well get this, the leather in the Aileron Spyder comes from a Dutch tannery that works with free range cold weather cows. Why cold weather? No mosquito bites. No, really. And you can get that interior in any of fourteen colors, most of which are (hopefully) equally eye-searing. Finally, anyone else as in love with the tonneau cover-mounted quilted leather briefcase as we are?

    LA 2009: Spyker C8 Aileron Spyder proves the devil is in the details originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 04 Dec 2009 12:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • MySpace Launches Mobile Version for Smartphone Devices

    Despite what its execs may be claiming lately, MySpace is still a social network and a large one at that. It has been bleeding users for the past year or so but the ones that are still around should be glad to hear that the social network has just launched a new mobile version of the site dedicated to iPhone, Android and Palm OS smartphones. The mobile site comes with all the usual sections you’d expect, like the profile and the friend updates stream, but also, interestingly, with a built-in IM chat client.

    “Today, we’re launching a new version of MySpace’s mobile website m.myspace.com for iPhone, Android, and Palm WebOS users. This new site is optimized to take advantage of the advanced browsers and screen sizes on these devices, allowing the user to navigate MySpace and take actions with a lot fewer clicks. The new site also includes a mobile-optimized version of MySpaceIM and notifies the user of new MySpace activity (new messages, comments, IM messages, etc.) immediately,” John Faith, VP and GM, MySpace Mobile, wrote.

    The biggest new feature, by far, is the instant messenger, which will allow users to chat with their MySpace friends from the mobile phones. The old version of the mobile site, which is still the default one for any other mobile devices except those listed… (read more)

  • CBC Social Work class holds food drive

    Press Release
    November 24,2009                                                     Contact.: Frank Murray, 542-4835

    The Columbia Basin College Introduction to Social Work class is presenting its Food for Humanity food drive December 4th and 5th. Donors are asked to bring non-perishable food items to either the West Richland Yokes on Bombing Range Road or the Pasco Yokes on Road 68 between 8 a.m. and 6 p.m.

  • Dollar Surges Ahead Of Lunch

    After the early morning rally post-today’s positive jobs report, the dollar made a second major move against the Euro ahead of lunch. Gold is now down 4% to $1,170 and stocks have just tanked, losing all of the morning gains.

    dollar

    dollar

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • Music in the Cloud: Heavenly or Pipe Dream?

    Source: Flickr user erin MC hammer

    Let’s face it, remembering to sync just stinks. With MobileMe, Apple introduced “over-the-air” syncing, allowing your contacts and emails to appear on your phone and computer automatically without intervention. Small amounts of data make it easy. However, if you want music, that’s a whole different story.

    Currently, you need to manually hook up your iPhone or iPod to your Mac in order to sync, and most music collections exceed the size of the average music player. Kevin Tofel over at GigaOm Pro proposes the idea (subscription required) of moving all your music to the “cloud” and then streaming your music to your player. This way, your entire music collection is available over an Internet connection. Kevin mentions that ZumoDrive already offers the ability to play music synced to the cloud, so why not extend that to other services? If you can purchase music via your iPhone, why not stream it? Great idea, but not the way Kevin suggests it.

    For one, we’ve already been down this road of keeping your collection in the cloud. Before clouds meant anything but rain, MP3.com came up with a similar idea. In January 2000, it introduced a service that let you stream your entire music collection via its website. You simply proved you owned a particular CD and then it unlocked the album from its digital locker and allowed you to listen to it. Unfortunately, the record industry didn’t like this service since they thought it represented unauthorized duplication and distribution. It’s been a decade and the music industry has accepted that digital music is a fact of life. The case might have gone differently today. MP3.com minimized the need to actually move the data around and was ahead of its time.

    A big problem with using the cloud to sync your music is the sheer size of data. A few songs are great, but whether you use DropBox or ZumoDrive, a large MP3 collection would be prohibitively expensive to keep in the cloud, and take forever to upload over a consumer-grade broadband connection. Additionally, while the cloud can be convenient, it can also go up in smoke at the drop of a hat. Just ask anyone with a T-Mobile Sidekick. A song collection represents hundreds of hours of ripping or thousands of dollars in online purchases. It would be risky to keep solely in the cloud. While you would still have the music on your computer, keep in mind that “syncing” is not “backing up,” because when syncing goes haywire, it has the ability to erase data from your computer. SugarSync recently did that to me, and man it stung!

    An Alternative

    Personally, I prefer to use Pandora and Last.fm to bring my music with me. With their ability to customize stations, I’m able to hear songs I already own as well as discover new artists. While it’s not identical to my music collection, it provides a majority of the same songs and same artists. If you want your exact music collection accessible anywhere, software already exists to do that. Simplify Media allows you to stream your iTunes collection to another computer or to your iPhone and it even works on slower Internet connections. This keeps the data on your computer and hopefully safely backed up.

    Backups are really the key, though. As so many of us move to online backup services such as Mozy, Carbonite, and Backblaze, why couldn’t they extend their services like Kevin suggests and allow streaming of your backed up music collection? A good online backup should be an exact duplicate of your music collection. Carbonite already provides instant remote access to your online files and I’m sure Mozy and Backblaze will be sure to follow. Bandwidth, of course, is an issue, but I’d gladly pay a few extra bucks a month to have my MP3 collection backed up and accessible to me anytime anywhere via a web browser or my iPhone. That should be a good value add for these companies and earn them a bit of extra revenue.

    Good idea Kevin, though I disagree with the implementation. Too bad that MP3.com was a decade ahead of its time. It should take the Newton team out for a beer and talk about what that’s like!


  • Square Enix trademarks "Chaos Rings" in Europe

    Trademark-spotting again, courtesy of Siliconera. This time, a new Square Enix trademark was found registered in Europe, bearing the name “Chaos Rings”. New IP or just a subtitle? Hard to say, “Chaos” happens to be one of