Author: Serkadis

  • Party time: Semi-homemade Edamame and Sweet Pepperdew Hummus Dip

      Bookclub_hummus2

    I really enjoy traditional hummus, but sometimes you want to dress it up and take it out dancing. Well, okay, you can’t dance with a chickpea dish, but you can dress up the hummus for a party.

    On the menu for my first catering gig, a 9-person book club meeting, I made this Edamame and Sweet Pepperdew Hummus dip. What’s great about this hummus combo is that the edamame gives the dip some added texture, and combined with the sweet pepperdews produces an experience similar to a chunky cheese spread. 

     Sweetpepperdews

    One of the vegan guests at the book club thought that the hummus had cheese in it which I took as a high compliment because it’s not easy to replicate a cheese-like experience.

    To make the dip even easier to make, I started by just buying a tub of traditional hummus at the store. No need to to start from literal scratch. We’re all about fast & simple here at Noshtopia.

    Ingredients:

    • 14oz. tub of Traditional hummus (your favorite brand)
    • 1 cup frozen shelled edamame (I used organic. Frozen is cheaper, but you can use fresh. Trader Joe’s has fresh ready to eat edamame)
    • 8 Sweet Pepperdews (these are usually available in the olive bar in the deli section of a grocery store)

    Let’s get cooking:

     Edamame_soaking

    • Soak the frozen edamame in a bowl of warm water for about 15 minutes. The instructions on the bag typically say to microwave the edamame to heat it up, but I try to nuke food as little as possible to retain as much of the nutrients. The warm bath is much friendlier to the edamame (in my opinion).
    • Pour the tub of hummus into a mixing bowl.
    • Take the pepperdews and put them in 3-cup food processor and grind them up until they are as fine as you can get. I ground the pepperdews for about a minute. Pour the ground pepperdews into the mixing bowl with the hummus.

     Edamame_ground

    • When the edamame is thawed, drain the water, and place the edamame into the 3-cup food processor and grind until it’s fine chunky.
    • Pour the ground edamame into the mixing bowl with the hummus and pepperdews. Mix all ingredients together until you get a nice even blend.

    Pour the Edamame and Sweet Pepperdew Hummus dip into a pretty serving bowl, and compliment with pita bread, pita chips, vegetables, or crackers. Enjoy!


  • REPORT: GM offering special discounts to rejected franchise customers, move angers dealer group

    Filed under: , , , , ,

    Realizing that one of its keys to survival is retaining existing owners, General Motors is proactively enticing nearly one million customers – those loyal to now-closed dealerships – with significant financial incentives. According to Automotive News, GM started sending 950,000 letters out last week to customers of stores which have shut down or lost a brand franchise. Included in the correspondence are $1,000 to $2,000 discounts towards purchasing vehicles from one of GM’s four surviving U.S. brands (the incentive amount is based on the customer’s “likelihood to purchase a GM vehicle and the relative distance to the next closest dealer,” according to a letter GM sent to dealers outlining the program).

    General Motors has about 5,860 dealerships right now. A total of 1,839 have agreed to shut down by October of 2010, helping the company downsize to between 3,600 and 4,000 retailers over the long term. While this incentive is scheduled to end January 4, a second wave of incentives (including one targeting Saturn customers) is expected to begin early next year. In addition, GM has also issued a service offer which runs through May that includes free vehicle inspections and tire rotations to displaced customers.

    The retention programs – obviously meant to move customers between stores – have dealer advocate groups up in arms. Some dealers are still actively trying to get their franchises off the “kill list,” and GM has said recently that some may in fact be welcomed back into the fold. As such, Automotive News quotes Tamara Darvish, a leader of the Committee to Restore Dealer Rights as saying “This is an inappropriate time to take such an aggressive measure… If in fact dealer rights are to be restored, why would GM go in and move all those customers?”

    [Source: Automotive News, subs. req’d | Image: Mark Ralston/Getty]

    REPORT: GM offering special discounts to rejected franchise customers, move angers dealer group originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 24 Nov 2009 13:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Calling For An Independent Invention Defense In Patents

    For quite some time we’ve wondered why there’s no independent invention defense to patent infringement. It’s hard to come up with any justifiable reason for not only barring those who come up with an idea on their own from making use of such an invention, but also for potentially making them liable for millions of dollars in damages for just making use of something they came up with on their own. For years, I’ve been waiting to hear any justification for this — either economic or moral — and I’ve never heard anything that makes any sense at all. Patent attorney Stephan Kinsella has now written up a post that also calls for an independent inventor defense, noting how incredibly rare it is for a client to ever have actually been accused of copying an idea. He notes that about the only reason most are against this idea is that they realize it would put a lot of patent lawyers out of work.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Diet as Dogma

    3331145 thumbnail Diet as DogmaPeople are dogmatic. We’re territorial, stubborn, obstinate, and we cling to our ideologies even as accumulating evidence invalidates them. I sometimes wonder whether there’s evolutionary precedent for this apparent character flaw – did stubborn dogmatism confer some benefit to our ancestors? Did our tendency to cling to one another, to shy away from that which opposes or clashes with our current paradigm (whether it be a new tribe with different practices encroaching on your land, or a guy you meet at a cocktail party with completely different political views) make us safer? To a point, yes. Being wary of anything new promotes better survival than a tendency to rush headlong into foolhardy pursuits. There’s certainly that human legacy of fear of the unknown, and it normally manifests as dogmatic belief and cognitive dissonance. That much is obvious to anyone who watches the news or picks up a history book.

    But there’s also that other legacy we’re irrevocably tied to: the continued expansion of our knowledge base. Grok may have been suspicious of different things and circumstances, but he also conquered that fear and discovered new horizons. By and large humans are explorers and innovators. We refute dogma and blaze new trails even as we cling to fear and ideology. We’re pretty much a walking contradiction, just a big-brained upright problematic ape with existential issues that still manages to do pretty well for him or herself. They don’t call us the most adaptive species on Earth for nothing.

    If we were more cold and logical – like the Vulcans of Star Trek – things might get a bit easier, ruled by reason and reason alone. Cognitive dissonance would disappear and ideology would mostly vanish, leaving only absolute fealty to pure data. We’d get a lot done and there’d be absolute scientific consensus, but how much fun would it really be?

    No, we’re contradictory and confused. We’ll make the emotionally difficult but realistic decision to put our aging pet to sleep, and then we’ll break down and weep all night. We’ll hear powerful evidence that refutes a deeply held belief and we’ll internally acknowledge its significance, but then we’re somehow able to dismiss it and maintain our delusion. Religious and ethnic clashes dot our history, never ending blood feuds, based on this text or that political cartoon, that continue unabated and will probably do so forever. Futile battles rage across Internet message boards – Playstation versus Xbox, Apple versus PC, vegetarian versus omnivore, Democrat versus Republican, carbohydrate versus fat – and it hardly goes anywhere. Graphs are posted and ignored, studies are quoted and brushed aside. Willful ignorance is proudly displayed. You can almost hear the fingers going in the ears (most people can’t even stand to hear evidence that contradicts their belief – the always dependable “la la la la” defense!).

    People have the tendency to cluster around ideas as if they were tangible things and hold on for dear life. When we find something we like, or something that makes sense, like religion or a political stance or a diet, roots are planted and – for most of us – they are permanent. They’re permanent mainly because it’s easier that way. It takes less work to blindly cling to dogma. It’s hard (and humbling) to reevaluate an entire belief system and start over. We prefer the path of least resistance, and we’d simply rather not think too hard. Once the roots of a dogmatic belief find purchase in the hard packed earth of the lazy mind, they’re staying put.

    We’re not all like that, though. Some of us have fertile minds, brains that aren’t burdened by an ego that refuses to believe it might be wrong about something. Others are just genuinely curious and thirsty for more knowledge (from any source); these are the same type of minds that shaped our evolutionary progress and brought us tools, mastery of fire, and exploration of new lands. They don’t brush aside graphs or ignore studies that challenge their beliefs. They can’t, because to ignore the truth is to oppose their very nature, no matter the inconvenience.

    We’ve all heard the supposedly universal protocol standards for polite company: don’t talk politics, religion, or sex. Not on a first date, and definitely not when you meet your future wife’s parents. It’s not so much that these are impossible topics to discuss calmly and rationally without insults, ad hominem, or physical violence entering the fray, because it can happen. Measured debate on controversial topics does take place, and it’s possible for two people to hold directly oppositional views, express those views, and still remain amicable. It’s just highly unlikely given our propensity to cling to dogma at all cost (and we’ve got untold wars and death and destruction to show for it) and the rarity of people with thinking, fertile, thirsty minds.

    A new forbidden topic has emerged, though: diet. I’d even say a diet, for many, is the single most entrenched aspect of a their identity, more than religion (not everyone practices, but everyone has to eat) and more than politics (who isn’t fed up with politics nowadays?). We literally are what we eat, and what we eat isn’t just an isolated characteristic. It’s intertwined with politics (veganism is as much a declarative political statement as it is a nutritional one) and religion. For some, it even becomes a religion with its own set of morals and laws. Diet as absolute dogma can be far more problematic than religious or political dogmas in many ways. See, at least there’s separation of church and state in this country; with diet, though, there’s that looming institutional triangular standard literally ordained by government to inform and (essentially) coerce unwitting citizens into a certain way of eating. Maybe if the nutritional pyramid were built on the backs of rigorous science and evolutionary biology it wouldn’t be so bad, but its blueprints were drawn up by Big Agra and Big Pharma (or worse, terrible, bumbling, bad science).

    You’re here, on this site, because you recognize that the official dietary dogma is misguided at best and murderous at worst. You realize that, whatever your religious (non)belief, humans are “designed” to eat a certain way – and that the evolutionary diet is totally incompatible with the reigning dogma. I’m here every day because I see a real chance to make a difference. I see people making positive changes, extending their lives and improving their health. Every day, there’s a different success story in my inbox, but I never get sick of them. We have assumed the mantle of our innovating forebears, those Groks and Grokettes that dared to crack an auroch’s tibia and extract the strange delicious stuff inside, or follow the animals to new lands and new opportunities. We could have died out with the Neanderthal, but we were far too curious and capable to let that happen. Ours is a legacy of pursuing knowledge. It’s all we know.

    But you know what? I’m starting to notice that old dogmatic view creep in to the Primal community. Those immovable roots are taking hold. On one hand, it’s understandable. When you’ve got the weight of the evidence in your favor, it’s easy to get cocky and dismissive of other views. I mean, don’t get me wrong; I believe the Primal Blueprint to be the path to health, strength, and energy (I wouldn’t have written a book called The Primal Blueprint if I didn’t think that!). I just want to stress that the foundation of the PB and MDA is science – ignored, brushed aside, inconvenient-to-CW science, but science all the same. And, like all good science, it’s constantly being challenged and refined. It needs to be challenged. When I started putting together the PB all those years ago, I was challenging the dietary wisdom I held near and dear to my heart for decades. Decades! And I didn’t stop there. Early readers might recall my prescribing “limited grains” way back when. I realized my error, took a closer look at the science on grains, and changed my stance accordingly. Now I’m just about as big an opponent of grains as one can be.

    That’s how you’ve got to do it. You have to welcome challenges and reevaluate your dietary dogmas as needed. I’m certainly of the opinion that we’ve got things pretty well covered with the PB, but it never hurts to refine your argument or gather new evidence. If someone questions the Primal stance on grains, don’t casually dismiss them – convince them! (Of course, if hard data doesn’t convince, don’t wear yourself out.) Even if you’re upset or frustrated and he or she is being clearly obstructionist, think of the debate as rust removal, as a way to bone up on the latest studies and clinical data in support of the high fat Primal diet. There’s a whole wide world of people who will actively challenge your evolutionary dietary views, usually with half-truths and CW nonsense, but there are formidable opponents who won’t be so easily swayed or dismissed. You’ve got to be on your game.

    I honestly think we have the opportunity to reach more people. The Primal/paleo communities are growing and improving and spreading like wildfire. We have the chance to be at the forefront of a revolution of how we approach food in this country (and this world), but we run the risk of becoming what we rail against: dietary dogma. We should never let stagnation set in, and dogmas and ideologies stagnate as a rule, by definition. You don’t want to force people into accepting the Primal life. You just want to give them the tools to change their life and reevaluate everything they’ve ever been taught about nutrition and fitness.

    The forum is one such tool, and it’s a fantastic one for the most part. What we don’t want, though, is name calling or one-upping. No know-it-alls that patronize beginners. That’s beside the point. It’s supposed to be a community of like-minded individuals (sprinkled with a few skeptics and contrarians to keep us honest!) supporting one another in our effort to find truth and change our lives for the better. Support, of course, means challenging each other’s beliefs, but it should be done with real facts.

    Don’t get me wrong. I love the heated debates that take place every day, as long as they remain actual debates with actual arguments. I love the fact that support systems and impromptu experts on various topics have sprung up. I like how forum members have a sort of Batcall for Tarlach when it’s a carnivore question or for Griff when it’s about lipid panels. I love almost everything about the forum, but I don’t like the creeping sense of dogma.

    So, how about we watch out for that and nip it in the bud? I’ve been submerged in dietary and fitness dogma, and it ain’t pretty. Believe me: avoiding it will only make us stronger. Question your beliefs and challenge the Primal diet. Even if the PB doesn’t catch on and go mainstream, at least we’ll know we’re being honest with ourselves and consistent in our application of science to our diet.

    I’d love to hear your thoughts on this so hit me up with a comment. Thanks, everyone.

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

    Related posts:

    1. Unrestricted Low-Carb Diet Wins Hands Down
    2. What’s Wrong With The Zone Diet?
    3. Fox News and Low-Carb Diet Talk

  • Black Friday 2009: Amazon sale ad

    Amazon Black Friday

    Yup, is in three days, and the Black Friday sale leaks are happening fast and furiously at this point. The latest ad that we have for you gives you a look at everything that Amazon will have available at a nice discount for their Black Friday sale. Since Amazon sells pretty much everything under the sun, we’ve pared the offerings down to cover just the things we’re interested in, no clothing deals here, but we’ve got all the tech and gadgets that’ll be on sale at Amazon come Black Friday for you, after the break. Be sure and take notice of all the disc sales, which should go nicely with the $78 Blu-ray player in the Walmart Black Friday 2009 ad!


    Continue reading Black Friday 2009: Amazon sale ad

    Tags:
    ,
    ,
    ,
    ,
    ,
    ,
    ,
    ,
    ,
    ,
    ,
    ,
    ,

    Black Friday 2009: Amazon sale ad originally appeared on Gear Live on Tue, November 24, 2009 – 10:18:29


  • Harada: Strong possibility for free Tekken 6 DLC

    The PS3 and Xbox 360 versions of Tekken 6 have only been in store shelves for barely a month, and the PSP version is still on its way – Namco Bandai …

  • AcaiFit Review

    acaifitAcaiFit is a diet pill that claims to do the following:
    “-Flush Out Excess Pounds
    -Boost Metabolism & Energy Levels
    -Lose Weight & Purify Your System
    -Eliminate Harmful Waste and Toxins” (website)

    This AcaiFit review will reveal the truth behind the ingredient acai as well as the free trial associated with AcaiFit diet pills. It will also reveal the inconsistencies of the marketing of AcaiFit to show you that AcaiFit is not the answer to your weight loss problems.

    AcaiFit Ingredients

    Like most acai diet pill websites, the AcaiFit website fails to list the ingredients contained in AcaiFit diet pills. The only ingredient they mention is acai. Although it has been hyped up by influential television and Hollywood personalities, there is NO evidence showing acai actually contributes to weight loss.

    AcaiFit Free Trial

    AcaiFit boasts a 14 day risk free trial; you pay only $1.99 for shipping (but only if you buy it today). The free trial begins the day you place your order. If you decide AcaiFit is not right for you, you must cancel the trial within the 14 days and return the product within 21 days. Otherwise you are enrolled in autoship (they automatically send you more product each month and charge your credit card for it). The AcaiFit website claims you will get a “discounted price of $79.95″ as well as a free membership in the VIP program.

    This AcaiFit review finds $79.95 is WAY too much to pay for this product. There is no reason to believe it will actually cause weight loss; there is simply no science to back it up. Don’t waste your money on AcaiFit diet pills. Instead, go with a diet pill that actually contains proven ingredients in the appropriate amounts.

    AcaiFit Marketing

    The AcaiFit website is nearly identical to dozens of other acai diet products out there. It is packed with typical testimonials, photos, and sensationalized information. There are claims about how Hollywood personalities are losing amazing amounts of weight while taking acai and about various television programs which promote acai products. Don’t be fooled by these seemingly impressive claims. There is NO scientific evidence to show that AcaiFit diet pills actually contribute to weight loss.

    In addition, the website says there are only 39 trials left. As you spend time looking through the site, that number counts down. However, when you refresh the page, the number of trials resets to 39. If you try to navigate away from the site, they offer you reduced shipping of $1.49 for the free trial.

    AcaiFit Conclusion

    This AcaiFit review finds AcaiFit diet pills are overpriced and ineffective. Clinical trials have not shown that acai does anything for weight loss. Additionally, the marketing is deceptive and inconsistent. Don’t waste your time or money on AcaiFit. It will only give you a headache. If you are serious about losing weight, take a diet pill with clinically proven ingredients in the necessary amounts.

  • Bentley working on new sub-Continental shooting brake and crossover?

    Filed under: , , , ,

    Bentley Continental Supersports – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Bentley has just supplanted the Jurassic-era Arnage with the new Mulsanne, which in turn will breed replacements for the Brooklands and Azure. A new Continental range is on the way as well. But according to a new report from Automobile Magazine, the crew from Crewe isn’t content simply replacing existing models: they want to branch out. And when their heads are already scraping the sky, Bentley is reportedly looking at going downmarket with two new niche models.

    Tentatively known as the New Compact Bentley (NCB) project, the luxury automaker hopes to cover new territory in the $110-130,000 range in two forms: a three-door shooting brake and a segment-busting crossover. The latter would be more of a tall wagon than a sport-ute, as Automobile notes that Bentley chief Franz-Josef Paefgen was responsible for the original Audi Allroad but opposed the Q7.

    Platform underpinnings for both would reportedly be based loosely on the next-gen Audi A6/A7 flexible architecture and powered by an Audi-based 4.5-liter twin-turbo V8 driving somewhere in the neighborhood of 550 horsepower through all four wheels via an eight-speed automatic transmission. Production would reportedly be pegged around 7500 units annually, but Bentley might find it doesn’t have the market all to itself, as Rolls-Royce is said to be working on a Ghost-based crossover of its own known as the “Short High Rugged International Metropolitan Project” – or SHRIMP for short.

    [Source: Automobile Magazine]

    Bentley working on new sub-Continental shooting brake and crossover? originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 24 Nov 2009 13:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • The GAO Report (Beltway Edition): Urgent Ethical Reforms for the ASSU

    The ASSU is suffering from a credibility crisis. Trust in the Association has been severely eroded as a result of the resignation of the vice president and allegations of discretionary spending abuse by former executives. These controversies cannot go ignored. Urgent reforms must be implemented to restore confidence in the institution. The student body deserves better. You deserve better.

    In order to move forward, the ASSU needs to undertake a comprehensive examination of its conduct, implement measures to deter future wrongdoings and establish thorough disciplinary procedures. A commission on ethical reform should be created immediately. It should include representatives from all ASSU bodies. To ensure both the unrestricted evaluation of ASSU activities and officials and the legitimacy of the findings, the commission should be chaired by an independent “prosecutor.”

    The commission’s charge should encompass two folds. First, investigate the depth of deception and potential ethical violations involved in the circumstances surrounding the recent ASSU executive scandals. Second, recommend and establish longer-term institutional reforms.

    Most of the attention in the confirmation process has been focused on the qualifications of the nominees. The real unresolved issue concerns the complicity, and possible misconduct, of current office holders. Is it appropriate for the president, who learned of the Judicial Affairs sentence and the inevitable resignation in the summer, to allow his V.P. to continue serving and perhaps even receive a salary?

    As stipulated in the ASSU Constitution, the Senate and the GSC are responsible for performing rigorous oversight of the executives. The Association’s legislative bodies have the power to remove the president and/or vice president by a four-fifths vote each. But, in practice, there are inherent limitations in peer-to-peer oversight. It can be hard to question your friend’s competence and character. The Daily has also been disappointingly negligent of its duty to exercise scrutiny of student government and pursue the truth of recent controversies.

    After a comprehensive investigation of the past violations, the Commission should move on to its second charge: prescribing stronger ethical guidelines. All elected and appointed ASSU officials should adopt a code of conduct. The governing documents state that an elected officer can be dismissed as a result of “consistent failure to attend regular meetings,” “actions clearly violating the intent of this Constitution” and actions that are “unbecoming.” Coupled with the lack of political will that unfortunately tends to characterize most ASSU representatives and the vagueness of the language, this provision is basically inconsequential.

    Hence, a pledge of ethics needs to be established. It should be administered at the same time as the Oath of Office, during the swearing-in ceremony for newly elected officials. The pledge should provide an interpretation of “unbecoming” behavior and clear expectations of ASSU officials during their terms of service. The letter and the spirit of the principles governing conduct should be equally important. Student government officers need to recognize that their decisions have far-reaching impacts that extend beyond their private lives.

    This ethical code serves as a powerful symbolic way of enhancing the integrity of the institution. But, absent of enforcement mechanisms, it is merely empty rhetoric. A second recommendation should focus on improving transparency of discretionary spending, thus eliminating the potential for improper use of public funds for personal expenditures. There are numerous ASSU officials with $1,000 discretionary accounts and almost no rules regulating their spending. This is unacceptable.

    Every expense incurred by any ASSU official submitted for reimbursement should be posted publicly online and in real-time, not just at the end of the quarter as promised by the current executive. This functions as a self-checking device, reducing wasteful spending in a time of economic hardship.

    In addition to the series of steps outlined above, the commission needs to assess the effectiveness of the punitive process outlined in the joint bylaws. While the legislative bodies should maintain their right to overturn any disciplinary measures by a two-thirds vote, the Constitutional Council should be further empowered to impeach ASSU officials.

    By running for office, we forgo our lives as private citizens to enter the public arena. We need to hold ourselves to higher standards. Yes, we are humans. We make mistakes. What’s dangerous, however, is not realizing our mistakes. The challenge is to learn from the past and start professionalizing the ASSU. It is imperative that we start a broader conversation and move toward a culture of transparency and accountability.

    Why does it matter? It matters because it is your money. You are being robbed of effective representation. A more reputable ASSU means a stronger student government advocating on your behalf. It means an ASSU having more sway when negotiating with University administrators regarding students’ priorities in budget cuts. If you don’t care about ethics for ethics’ sake, care because you are missing out on better parties and variety of academic opportunities. You should demand more from us.

  • Scan confirms Guy, Cody, Adon for Super Street Fighter IV

    More scan-watching: Siliconera picked up two scans off Famitsu confirming the addition of three more characters to Super Street Fighter IV for the PS3…

  • The Overtoun or “Dog Suicide” Bridge

    United Kingdom, Europe | Architectural Oddities

    Located near the village of Milton in the burgh of Dumbarton, Scotland, there exists a bridge that for some reason or another, has been attracting suicidal dogs since the early 60s. At a rate of around one a month, dogs have been regularly leaping from the bridge; an estimated 600 have been reported jumping.

    Even more strange are the circumstances behind these incidents of kamikaze canines. Not only have they been plummeting to their deaths from the bridge, but many have witnessed the dogs actually climbing the parapet wall before making the jump. Even stranger are the reports of dogs surviving their brush with death, only to return to the bridge for a second attempt.

    Many theories have arisen on why these doggy suicides occur at such a regular pace, but nothing conclusive has been found. The Scottish Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals has sent representatives to investigate, but they too were stumped by the cause of the strange behavior.

  • LA Preview: Subaru WRX STI Special Edition headed for U.S. showrooms

    Filed under: , , ,

    2010 Subaru WRX STI Special Edition – Click above for high-res image gallery

    For U.S. Subaru enthusiasts, it has long seemed like the folks at Fuji Heavy forgot that we might be interested in special-edition WRX models too. New hotted-up variants of the all-wheel-drive hero car have been released in the UK and elsewhere on what seems like a monthly basis, but here in the States, we’ve largely done without. Thankfully, at last there is just such a U.S. model in the pipeline, and it’s headed for the LA Auto Show.

    The the 2010 WRX STI Special Edition starts by utilizing the suspension package form the JDM WRX STI Spec C (1mm thicker rear antisway bar, stiffer springs and more robust rear subframe bushings), and the model also inherits the charcoal 18 x 8.5-inch 14-spoke alloys from that car as well.

    Interestingly, the Special Edition is decontented somewhat. Unlike the standard U.S. STI, the SE makes do with a downgraded stereo (single-disc CD/four speakers versus six-disc/10 speakers), manual HVAC controls, conventional halogen headlamps, and indicator-free side mirrors. It isn’t immediately clear if this change in specification helps shave any weight, but the smaller stereo alone probably helps the car drop a few pounds.

    Subaru says it plans to initially offer the Special Edition in a limited run of 125 units this Spring, all painted Aspen White. Later in 2010, the Special Edition will become a normal production model available in other colors. Pricing has not yet been released, but if you’re at all interested in one of the first 125 examples, we’d suggest getting on a list with your local dealer now. Check out the full press release after the jump and the high-res gallery below.

    [Source: Subaru]

    Continue reading LA Preview: Subaru WRX STI Special Edition headed for U.S. showrooms

    LA Preview: Subaru WRX STI Special Edition headed for U.S. showrooms originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 24 Nov 2009 12:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Get Gold Exposure For Just $940 An Ounce

    RBC has calculated that gold-related shares are currently pricing in a long-term gold price of $940, according to a chart highlighted by FTAlphaville.

    While such excel-model calculations always need to be taken with a grain of salt, by RBC’s numbers Barrick Gold (ABX) appears as relatively under-valued. It would be interesting to see by what model RBC arrives at these valuations. Barrick, for example, doesn’t only produce gold.

    gg

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • Microsoft Tries To Silence Revelation Of Bing Cashback Flaws; Leads To Revelation Of Other Problems

    I’d been meaning to write this up for about a week, but finally got it around to it, just in time to add some additional info. First up, though, comes the news that Microsoft’s legal department demanded a blogger remove a blog post about flaws in Bing’s Cashback offer (Microsoft’s attempt to bribe users to search via Bing instead of Google). One of the methods for the cashback offer involved pixel tracking, and blogger Samir Meghani noted that this was easily gamed to post fake transactions to your account. He also noted problems with the way Microsoft used sequential IDs, allowing potential scammers to “deny cashback rebates to legitimate users by using up available order ID numbers.” Instead of dealing with these flaws, Microsoft lawyers sent a cease-and-desist and forced the blog post offline. I’m actually quite surprised this hasn’t received a lot more attention.

    In the legal nastygram, Microsoft’s lawyers claimed that because Meghani had tested the flaws out himself, he was likely guilty of violating “various laws relating to computer intrusion, unauthorized access and unauthorized use of information,” while suggesting that his actions could result in criminal charges. That’s ridiculous, of course. He didn’t actually scam the company — he was just exposing a flaw. This is legal bullying to silence someone for pointing out a rather basic security flaw in Microsoft’s program.

    But, of course, even though Meghani was silenced on that issue, it doesn’t mean he has to be silent on all of the flaws in Bing’s Cashback program, so his latest (found via Slashdot) is that various retailers that offer “cashback” via Bing purchases are showing higher prices if you search via Bing. In fact, the price people can pay if they do certain searches on Bing is higher than if they’d gone direct:


    So, if I go directly to butterflyphoto.com, I pay $699 with 0% cashback. If I use Bing Cashback, I pay $758 with 2% cashback, or $742.84. Using Bing cashback has actually cost me $43.84, giving an effective cashback rate of -6.27%. Yes, negative cashback! Is this legal? False advertising? I don’t know, but it’s pretty sketchy.

    The problem doesn’t end there. Using Bing has tainted my web browser. Butterfly Photo set a three month cookie on my computer to indicate that I came from Bing. Any product I look at for the next three months may show a different price than I’d get by going there directly. Just clicking a Bing link means three months of potentially negative cashback, without me ever realizing it. I’m actually afraid to use their service even just to write this, because it may cost me money in the future. If you’ve been thinking about trying out Bing Cashback, you may want to rethink that.

    Microsoft responded and called this “an isolated instance” that it had missed with its tools that try to prevent merchants from gaming the system this way. Still, perhaps rather than sending out legal nastygrams and PR pablum to people discussing these things, Microsoft should focus on actually making sure that Bing’s Cashback bribery program actually works correctly and safely.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Buckhorn Exchange

    Denver, Colorado | Hunting and Taxidermy

    Founded in 1893, the Buckhorn Exchange displays antique weapons, hundreds of mounted animal heads and other assorted taxidermy displays upon its bright red walls.

    In addition to the old-timey stuffed animal aesthetic, the menu boasts unique meats for the adventurous: rattlesnake, alligator tail, buffalo sausage, elk, quail, game hen, pheasant, venison, and Rocky Mountain Oysters (bull testicles).

    The restaurant also claims to have been visited by Buffalo Bill himself and to be the oldest in all of Denver and displays its liquor license, labeled as Denver’s first, to prove it. Some nights have an older gentleman performing renditions of Willie Nelson songs near the bar.

  • Should the App Store Let You Demo Apps?

    Recently, here at TheAppleBlog, we made some backstage changes. Over time we realized that Socialcast was great for sharing and discussing ideas, but not ideal for handling business related tasks. As a result, we made the jump over to Basecamp. It doesn’t have the microblog feel of Socialcast, but it’s definitely easier to organize and communicate.

    When we made the switch, my first thought was “I wonder if there are any iPhone apps for Basecamp!” A quick search in the Store reveals 17 Basecamp related apps ranging in price from free to $12.99. As a potential buyer, how can I possibly decide which one is the best value?

    One of my issues with the app store is that ratings are very inconsistent. A few complaints over accidental crashes can definitely skew a score, and screenshots really don’t help me understand the app’s look and feel. I need to click around and play a little before I decide the fate of an app’s life on my iPhone.

    My question is: why won’t Apple allow me to try an app before I buy it? The availability countdown works great for content rented from the store like movies. I can play all I want for 24 hours, and then it’s deactivated. That would be ideal for apps too. I download it, see how it works, and after some time the app prompts me to purchase when launched. The prompt has a link to the app’s page in the store and I can make my decision. This is often how it’s done on the desktop. Why not the iPhone?

    As for Basecamp, I ended up sticking with the free version of Sherpa. It covers the basics and it doesn’t crash. I would prefer to try them all, but that’s impossible. For now…

    So, what do you think? Should Apple implement a trial period on all for-pay apps? What do you think are the pros and cons?


  • The Cerne Abbas Giant

    United Kingdom, Europe | Curious Places of Worship

    Just outside of the small village of Cerne Abbas, in England, lies the massive outline of a naked giant, holding a club and sporting a massive hard-on. Sculpted in chalk, the giant is carved in solid lines into the chalk bedrock and stands an impressive 180-feet, making it especially visible from up-high. In fact, during WWII, the figure was disguised to prevent Germans from using it as an aerial landmark

    The history of the giant is not so clear however. While it is often thought of as an ancient symbol of fertility, records of it cannot be traced further back than the late 17th century. Some posit that it was built by the order of one Lord Holles, who produced it as a jab to Oliver Cromwell’s puritanical rule. Other theories include the Roman hero Hercules, a Celtic warrior, and a representation of a Danish giant who, according to local folklore, was killed by villagers as he slumbered on the hill.

    Regardless of its actual history however, the giant is well kept by the locals, receiving regular grass trimmings and a full re-chalking, to all of his massive parts, every 25 years.

  • Review: 2009 Infiniti G37X Sport makes no excuses

    Filed under: , , , ,

    2009 Infiniti G37X Sport – Click above for high-res image gallery

    “Being close” matters with horseshoes, hand grenades and misguided arithmetic. In past years, the Infiniti G sedan has been close, but compared to the Kaiser of the Klasse, BMW’s 3 Series, the G35 was near the stake, but not a ringer. “Almost as good,” we’d all nod, “but its biggest strength is that it’s a bargain.”

    When the G37 arrived, our initial thought was it was simply an amplified G35, a car that’s delighted our socks off in the past. But same car, bigger engine isn’t the whole of the story. Just as gourmet chefs tinker with recipes, Infiniti has made adjustments. Embracing the spirit of Kaizen, Infiniti refuses to leave well enough alone, and the G37XS doesn’t need to trade as heavily on its value proposition anymore. The G line has always driven well, but there’s always been compromise, too. Cheap interiors, choppy ride – a history of “not quite.” Has the G improved to the point of full greatness? And what happens when you add all-wheel drive to the mix? We hit the road to find out.

    Photos copyright (C)2009 Dan Roth / Weblogs, Inc.

    Continue reading Review: 2009 Infiniti G37X Sport makes no excuses

    Review: 2009 Infiniti G37X Sport makes no excuses originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 24 Nov 2009 11:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • The turkey problem in trend work: is your prediction robust to Thanksgiving?

    We owe a debt to Nassim Taleb for memorably encapsulating the demerits of predicting by extrapolating trends as “The Turkey Problem,” and now seems the moment to reiterate it:

    Imagine you are a turkey. Every day someone comes to feed you. Every day you get bigger. Your portion sizes get bigger too, brought by a nice man at regular intervals. You extrapolate the trend and you confidently predict a bigger you, with more to eat. Regularly too.

    But what happens is … Thanksgiving. Or Christmas

    Taleb, N., The Fourth Quadrant: a Map of the Limits of Statistics, Edge Foundation, September 2008

    Taleb, N., The Fourth Quadrant: a Map of the Limits of Statistics, Edge Foundation, September 2008

    The hard reality for those who predict the future by extrapolating trends (and those gullible enough to believe them) is that even if our turkey had excellent data points (carefully observed and accurately recorded in, for example, a time series analysis) and, moreover, even if our turkey was a mathematically sophisticated — not merely simply projecting trends, but applying all the latest modeling techniques, from moving averages to compound regression — he is still going to be wrong about the future. Dead wrong.

    All the data analysis in the world, all the fancy computer software, all the consulting time paid for, and he is still a dead duck.

    Ouch. The lesson: there may be (or, vexingly, may not be) something outside the trend, a framing condition, which where it does exist is invisible within the trend projector’s mental model. The only way to get a view of the future that is “robust to Thanksgiving” is (a) to question assumed framing conditions, for example through properly done scenarios, and (b) to hold a view of the future which assumes fundamental ‘game-changing’ surprises can and will occur.

    If, as they say, “the trend is your friend” it is assuredly only your fair-weather friend.

    Post to Twitter Tweet This Post

  • PIMCO: Even The Mexican Peso Is Set To Wallop The Dollar

    Peso

    Pimco’s Guillermo Osses believes that currency traders are set to bid up the Mexican peso as much as 20% against the dollar during the next year, right after Mexico just had its credit rating downgraded to BBB by Fitch Ratings.

    While Mr. Osses appears to be one of the most bullish on the peso, he’s not alone. Economists’ consensus forecast predicts a 3.3% rise against the dollar, according to Bloomberg.

    Bloomberg: …investors were “awaiting the downgrade to take positions in Mexico,” Osses said in a telephone interview from Newport Beach, California. “The peso is one of the cheapest currencies in emerging markets. External accounts will improve and the government’s efforts on the fiscal side are reasonable.”

    Given the Mexican peso’s horrible performance year to date, a 20% rally wouldn’t be too wild, simply recovering some of the ground it has lost against the U.S. dollar since the middle of 2008. Any large move in the peso would have serious repercussions for manufacturers set up along the U.S./Mexican border, including the many relocated Chinese ones.

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also: