Author: Serkadis

  • Venus Williams’ Disturbing Outfit at the French Open

    The first round of the French Open 2010 in Roland Garros, France was sizzling hot. Not just because of the weather and the exciting tennis matches, but also because of Venus Williams’ disturbing outfit during her game.

    Venus Williams won her first game with ease against Patty Schnyder of Switzerland with scores of 6-3, 6-3. But it was not her good performance that drew the most attention. She was wearing a lacy, lack overlay giving it the illusion of being see-through, and bright red trim on the bodice.

    After the game, her outfit generated more conversation than her play. The seven-time Grand Slam champion’s outfit was more like a lingerie than a tennis outfit.

    This is not the first time for Venus Williams to wear a weird tennis outfit. She wore a similar can-can style outfit earlier this year in Miami and a skimpy green uniform at the Australian Open in January.

    Is the tennis star’s on-court apparel too revealing? Do you think it’s appropriate for tennis matches? Let us know what you think.

    Related posts:

    1. French Open 2010: Schedule and Live Stream
    2. Henin, Nadal Back To Regain Lost Glory
    3. The Champions League 2010 final will bring to Madrid 50 million Euro

  • Fiat faz concurso para escolher o logotipo do 500 americano


    A divisão norte-americana da Fiat iniciou através do Facebook uma pesquisa para que os membros escolham o novo logotipo do 500, para ser vendido nos EUA. Entre as opções, vemos logos simples como o modelo de 1991, ou a mistura de letras e números.

    A idéia surgiu devido ao fato de haver muita confusão por parte do público americano ao se pronunciar o nome do carro, pois a pronúncia correta do nome é “cinquecento“, e muitas pessoas dizem “five hundred“, ou até mesmo “Fiat quinhentos” aqui no Brasil.

    Enquanto isso, as vendas do Cinquecento continuam ocorrendo normalmente no mercado norte-americano. Quais dos logos vocês acham mais interessante para memorizar o nome correto do carro?

    Via | Autoblog.it


  • Russia’s DST Looking for Companies to Disrupt the Status Quo

    An unusual payer has been making waves buying stakes in hot Internet companies at hefty valuations, as everyone took notice of. Digital Sky Technologies is a Russian company with deep pockets and a clear drive. It bought a $200-million stake in Facebook last year, raising more than a few eyebrows, and continued the trend by investing … (read more)

  • Shrek leads the box office but does not meet expectations

    Shrek leads the box office but does not meet expectations
    The fourth installment of Shrek leads the box office but does not meet expectations. “Shrek Forever After” has grossed $ 71.3 million during its first three days on screen, while the film industry had calculated a forecast of over 100 million dollars.

    Shrek the Third” was released in 2007 with 121.6 million dollars, “Shrek 2” earned $ 108 million during its opening weekend in 2004 and the “Shrek” series began in 2001 with $ 42 million. The new movie opened in the “lower end of forecasts,” said Anne Globe, head of Worldwide Marketing and Consumer Products.
    However, Globe said that the film is the fourth biggest opening of all time in animated films, behind the previous two installments of Shrek and The Simpsons. Globe hopes the film works well in the coming weeks, before the releasing of the “Toy Story 3″ on June 18, the next big delivery of Walt Disney.



    The previous bet of DreamWorks Animation, “How to Train Your Dragon,” was deemed a disappointment after winning in March a relatively modest $ 44 million during its first weekend, so the study’s stock price fell 8 percent the following Monday. But the film has managed to stay strong, with sales to date of $ 211 million.

    The production of “Shrek Forever After,” with the voice actors of the caliber of Mike Myers, Antonio Banderas, Eddie Murphy and Cameron Diaz, cost about $ 135 million, and global marketing will involve about 165 million, said Globe. The film also earned about $ 26 million in its premiere in seven other countries, most marked in Asia like the Philippines, Malaysia and Thailand, and won $ 20 million in Russia.

    Moreover, “Iron Man 2″ fell to second place with $ 26.6 million, after leading the North American box office during the two previous weekends. The superhero saga has raised $ 251.3 million in U.S. theaters, and 268 million more abroad.

    Related posts:

    1. Shrek Forever After on the Walk of Fame in Hollywood
    2. Shrek to be Released in 3D
    3. What The Shrek Just Happened? : Now Showing “Shrek Forever After”

  • Albuquerque gives New Mexico its first solar-powered farmer’s market

    street farmers market

    Eco Factor: New farmer’s market will look at mobile solar power unit for power.

    In an attempt to power farmer’s market with clean energy and spread environmental awareness amongst the visitors, Albuquerque, New Mexico’s Downtown Action Team has given birth to what it claims will be the first solar-powered farmer’s market in the country. The non-profit dedicated to renovating the city’s downtown was struck with an idea to check if it was possible to power their farmer’s market for its entire season using solar energy.

    (more…)

  • Video: Exterior driving footage of the 2011 Ford Shelby GT500

    2011 Ford Shelby GT500

    Last week Ford released a video of its SVT team hitting up the Virginia International Raceway (VIR) with the 2011 Ford Shelby GT500. The 2011 model brought in a lap time of 2:58.48, which was over eight seconds faster than the 2010 Shelby GT500.

    While last time we only got a cockpit view of the 2011 Shelby GT500’s VIR run, today we get to see some exterior driving footage with some nice supercharged sounds. Not a bad way to kick of Monday morning.

    Click here to get prices on the 2011 Ford Shelby GT500.

    Refresher: The 2011 Ford Shelby GT500 Coupe and Convertible are powered by a 5.4L supercharged V8 making 550-hp (an increase of 10-hp) with a peak torque of 510 lb-ft. The new powertrain weighs 102 pounds lighter, resulting in a better power-to-weight ratio, improved fuel-economy, acceleration, handling and steering precision. Buyers can also opt for the SVT Performance Package to further enhance performance. For 2011, the Shelby GT500 gets an EPA-projected fuel-economy of 23/15 mpg (city/highway).

    2011 Ford Shelby GT500:

    2011 Ford Shelby GT500 Coupe (Exterior Driving Footage):

    2011 Ford Shelby GT500:

    – By: Omar Rana


  • Lost has finally came to “The End”

    Lost has finally came to The End

    Six years after its release, the popular television series “Lost” came to an ending. The curtain came down today with an emotional final chapter that satisfied  many of his fans despite the lack of answers to intriguing enigmatic plots of the program.

    The Lost finale, with the double episode “The End” resolved the outstanding issues between the central characters of the saga of castaways of Oceanic flight 815 and revealed the secret underlying the whole story but, true to his style, a lot of questions left open for speculation.

    To paraphrase the statements made in January, the series producer, Carlton Cuse, during the presentation of last season, the conclusion of “Lost” was “a cocktail of answers and mysteries”, which has not left without tears the fans as the images were displayed by U.S. television networks.

    In an attempt to shed light on the many questions that still surround a “Lost,” the presenter Jimmy Kimmel made his night program “Jimmy Kimmel Live” as a special titled “Aloha to ‘Lost‘”, which aired on ABC then the episode and which welcomed several of the actors that starred in the series.

    Kimmel and Matthew Fox, who plays Dr. Jack Shephard, agreed to assess “Lost” as a focused experience and lived through that character after the plane crash with all began in 2004.
    The end of “Lost” is final, as the producer Cuse and Damon Lindelof’s creator had commented on more than one occasion.

    Related posts:

    1. Watch Naruto Shippuden Episode 157 Live Stream Online – Latest Episode
    2. Watch Lost Finale – How did Lost End?: Lost Finale Updates
    3. Sarah Palin To Discover Alaska With TLC Network

  • Fiat wants to know which 500 badge you would like in the U.S.

    Which Fiat 500 badge do you want in the U.S.?

    Fiat USA is really excited for the arrival of the Fiat 500 to the United States, and wants to get your opinion on what logo you prefer for the hatchback on the stateside.

    The Fiat 500 will be available in North America with a 1.4L Multiair engine in the fourth quarter of 2010. It will be built in Mexico starting December 2010. Also promised for the North American market is a pure electric version of the Fiat 500 in 2012.

    You can cast your vote on which badge you like the best over at Fiat USA’s Facebook Fan Page.

    Personally, we’d like the original 500 logo.

    Fiat 500:

    2008 Fiat 500  2008 Fiat 500  2008 Fiat 500 2008 Fiat 500

    – By: Omar Rana

    Source: Fiat USA Facebook Fan Page


  • FarmVille-Branded Slurpees Coming to a 7-Eleven Near You

    Zynga, the social-gaming powerhouse, has been going from strength to strength lately. Things weren’t looking so great for a while, but a long-term partnership with Facebook ensures that its games will continue to be available on the largest social network in the world. With that behind it, it’s time to look at growth again, so… (read more)

  • Shadowy Schemers Converge on Spain

    Via Prison Planet.com » World News

    James P. Tucker, Jr.
    American Free Press
    Monday, May 24th, 2010

    As the super-secret Trilateral Commission (TC) was meeting behind locked and guarded doors at the luxurious Four Seasons resort hotel in Dublin, Ireland May 8, participants were upset to learn that awareness of their evildoings was surging in the United States.

    The same day, the Republican Party of Maine threw out its Establishment-approved platform and adopted a manifesto that denounced “efforts to create a one-world government,” called for abolishing the Federal Reserve
    System and ridiculed global warming as a “myth.” Each of these matters is dear to the hearts of members of the Trilateral Commission and its brother group, Bilderberg. Their traditional goal is world government, and these stateless plutocrats have exploited the hysteria over “global warming” for profit.

    Maine’s Republicans also praised the tea party movement and support Rep. Ron Paul (R-Tex.) and his son Rand Paul, who won the GOP Senate primary in Kentucky May 18. Maine’s Republicans said, “Healthcare is not a right.” They say, “Eliminate Motor Voter”; “Reject the UN Treaty on the Rights of the Child”; “Eliminate the Department of Education”; “Arrest and detain . . . anyone here illegally, and then deport [him], period.”

    Shadowy Schemers Converge on Spain  150410banner1

    Similar demands are being made by a growing number of congressmen and other officials throughout the country, and this is distressing to the Trilateral-Bilderberg elite. The health control law proclaims a “right” to care and imposes an unconstitutional requirement that private citizens buy private healthcare or pay a fine. Yet the central government has no constitutional power to compel individuals to buy any product from a private party.

    “Motor Voter” was imposed by President Bill Clinton in 1996 to register illegal aliens, mostly Hispanic, so they could illegally vote for him. The illegal immigrant would apply for a drivers license and be automatically registered to vote at the same time. Many were unaware they could vote until jerked off their porches on Election Day and shoved into a voting booth with a filled-out sample ballot in their fist.

    Patriots, once educated on the issue, strongly oppose the UN’s “child’s rights” treaty. No, they don’t hate children, as the internationalists shout. This treaty would allow UN bureaucrats to enter your home and bully you if your child (or a neighbor’s child) complains. It is another attack on the family and national sovereignty by advocates of world government.

    Former President Jimmy Carter, who was recruited into the Trilateral Commission as governor of Georgia by David Rockefeller, made the Department of Education a separate Cabinet-level entity in a payoff to the teachers union. Predictably, education went south as incompetent applicants got new teaching jobs. It is a goal of the internationalists to dumb down America, so living standards throughout the world will be equalized— equalized for us peons, not the plutocratic elite.

    Federal law passed in 1952 requires that the border be sealed off and illegal immigrants thrown out. But internationalists consider themselves above the law and, of course, illegal immigrants reduce the U.S. standard of living. They also make great wage slaves to be abused by multinational corporations for the profits of top executives, many of whom are members of the TC and other globalist groups.
    ——
    NOTE: Bilderberg will meet June 4-7 at the Dolce Hotel in Sitges, Spain, 12 miles from Barcelona.

  • Why NeoCons Hate Rand Paul

    Via Prison Planet.com » Commentary

    YOUR NEW REALITY
    May 24, 2010

    From Agence Global :

    Rand Paul says, “I would have voted no on the Iraq War.” He also says, in a video posted prominently on his campaign website, that he’ll push for formal declarations, with House and Senate votes, before the launch even of wars he might favor. He says that while national defense is the top responsibility of government, conservatives who are serious about reducing waste must be wary of the excesses of the military-industrial complex. Add on criticisms of the Patriot Act and a willingness to cross partisan lines, and you can see why Rand Paul gets Cheney’s goat.

    What really troubles Cheney and his circle, according to the Cato Institute’s David Boaz, is the prospect that a Paul win would begin to crack the false facade of party unity on military intervention. “That’s an issue the GOP establishment doesn’t want an open debate on,” says Boaz, who suggests the neocons “desperately fear that [electing] a conservative anti-interventionist leader on foreign policy just might reveal that a lot of Republicans and conservatives…don’t buy the world-policeman foreign policy the Bush/Cheney administration imposed on the GOP.”

    The NeoCon-controlled Republicans are terrified now of The Tea Party, and they’re decidedly nervous that Ron Paul could become the movement’s leader. Sarah Palin as a leader of the Tea Party, they could handle her, and through her, most of the movement. But Rand Paul is something else altogether, and much closer to the roots of the Tea Party.

    Why NeoCons Hate Rand Paul 150410banner1

  • Obama and Attention Deficit Democracy

    Via Prison Planet.com » Commentary

    James Bovard
    Campaign For Liberty
    May 24, 2010

    In his commencement address at the University of Michigan on May 1, President Obama warned that public ignorance subverts self-government. Obama declared: “When we don’t pay close attention to the decisions made by our leaders, when we fail to educate ourselves about the major issues of the day… that’s when democracy breaks down. That’s when power is abused.”

    Unfortunately, most Americans have little or no idea how government works or who is holding the reins on their lives. Most American voters do not know the name of their congressman, the length of terms of House or Senate members, or what the Bill of Rights guarantees. Most Americans cannot name a single Supreme Court justice or a single cabinet department in the federal government. But the ignorance goes far beyond Civics 101.

    In his commencement speech, Obama declared that “we need an educated citizenry that values hard evidence and not just assertion.” Except, of course, when government officials assert that “there is nothing to see here — just move along.” While Obama loudly urges Americans to get better informed, Republicans and Democrats are quietly covering up some of the government’s worst abuses.

    Obama heavily pressured Congress last year to enact a law prohibiting the release of thousands of photos showing horrendous abuse of detainees in Iraq and Afghanistan by U.S. troops. From 2004 onwards, the U.S. government deceived Americans — first claiming the torture scandal involved only “a few bad apples” from West Virginia, and then insisting that it was merely a few bad units, and then asserting that there was no national policy. By 2008, it was clear that the torture was mandated at high levels of the White House and Pentagon. Suppressing the photos makes it easier for former Vice President Dick Cheney and others who crafted the policies to continue denying that any crimes ever occurred.

    Obama and Attention Deficit Democracy 150410banner1

    Obama is also squelching the vast majority of facts regarding the National Security Agency’s 2002+ warrantless wiretapping of Americans. (Federal Judge Vaughn Walker recently ruled that the wiretaps were illegal.) No individual American has been permitted to know whether NSA copied his email or recorded his calls. The Obama administration even refuses to release the Bush-era Justice Department memos that “proved” why government is now entitled to spy on citizens without a warrant. While Congress granted retroactive immunity to the federal officials and phone companies that betrayed Americans’ privacy, Obama’s Justice Department is prosecuting a NSA official for notifying the media of the abuse.

    Obama’s vision of democracy also does not include permitting Americans to learn which banks and other financial institutions received trillions of dollars of subsidies and guarantees from the Federal Reserve. Sen. Bernie Sanders (Ind.—Vt.) and Rep. Ron Paul (R—Tx.) pushed an “Audit the Federal Reserve” amendment to the financial regulation bill. But the Obama White House acted as if disclosing the names of the lucky companies that received windfall benefits would violate the rights of the biggest welfare recipients in American history.

    How are citizens supposed to stop abuses when politicians refuse to let them know what government is doing? The government claims that evidence of its torture and wiretapping must be suppressed in the name of national security. But this greatly reduces the likelihood that Americans will learn from their rulers’ folly.

    The recent cover-ups illustrate how our republic is becoming an Attention Deficit Democracy. The government remains nominally democratic — elections continue to be boisterous events with mass rallies and tidal waves of dubious ads. But after the polling booths close, most citizens remain clueless about what their rulers do in their name.

    Attention Deficit Democracy begets Leviathan because rulers exploit people’s ignorance to seize more power over them. The contract between rulers and ruled is replaced by a blank check. And regardless of how many secrets the government keeps, the rulers still act like the people are liable for all the government’s abuses.

    Obama urged graduating students to “pay attention” and “stay informed.” Citizens should be especially curious about what lurks behind the curtains that politicians close. The more crimes politicians are permitted to hide, the fewer liberties citizens will retain.

  • Ferrari president misses Michael Schumacher

    Michael Schumacher

    Luca di Montezemolo, Ferrari’s president, says he misses working with F1 legend Michael Schumacher. The race-car driver, who won five world championships for the automaker, stayed with the team on as a consultant basis after retiring from Formula 1.

    “We had beautiful years together and I gave him back his desire to race,” di Montezemolo said. “At times I miss Schumacher, he gave so much to Ferrari, but he also received a lot.”

    Schumacher left Ferrari and joined Mercedes-Benz this year to make his comeback in F1. di Montezemolo admits that his relationship with Schumacher has changed since he signed with Mercedes. It was bound to happen sooner or later.

    – By: Kap Shah

    Source: AutoCar


  • Cause for alarm?

    Via Prison Planet.com » Sci Tech

    Watts Up With That?
    May 24, 2010

    Guest post By Paul Driessen, Willie Soon, and David R. Legates

    We’re often asked, What really causes all these alarms about global warming disasters?

    As scientists and policy analysts who’ve studied our ever-changing climate for a combined 65 years and attribute the changes primarily to natural forces, we’ve wondered that ourselves and also asked: Why is warming always framed as bad news? Why does so much “research” claim a warmer planet “may” lead to more diarrhea, acne and childhood insomnia, more juvenile delinquency, war, violent crime and prostitution, death of the Loch Ness Monster – and even more Mongolian cows dying from cold weather?

    We’re not making this up. In fact, this is just the tip of the proverbial melting iceberg of climate scare stories chronicled at http://www.numberwatch.co.uk/warmlist.htm.

    Clearly, too much money is being spent on one-sided global warming advocacy cloaked as “research,” not enough on natural causes and adaptation. Despite the best of intentions, too much money can corrupt, or at least skew the science.

    As they say, follow the money. Remember Indiana Jones’ immortal words: “Fortune and glory.”

    Too many people in government, wealthy foundations and activist groups have decided they know what’s best for us, what kind of energy and economic future we should have, and who should be in charge. They intend to implement those policies – and global warming scare stories are key to achieving that objective. They’re pouring tens of billions of dollars into the effort.

    A good example of how research money politicizes science is this May 4 headline: “Carbon dioxide effects on plants increase global warming.” The story enthusiastically reported the results of a science journal paper by Long Cao and Ken Caldeira from the Carnegie Institution. Carbon dioxide is not just making the atmosphere trap more heat, they say. It also enables plants to absorb CO2 more efficiently, so they don’t have to open stomata (pores) in their leaves as much, and they evaporate less water.

    That should be good news, as it enables plants to survive better under dry conditions, even in desert areas where they couldn’t before. Any botanist or visitor to CO2science.org knows this. Indeed, hundreds of experiments show how growth, water efficiency and drought resistance of crop and wild plants are enhanced by higher levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide. So more CO2 and better plant growth should be celebrated – not serve as another “climate crisis” to further the political goal of ending hydrocarbon use and controlling our factories, jobs, cars, lives and living standards.

    Cause for alarm? 260310banner2

    But the Carnegie folks turned this good news into bad, ominously saying the reduced evapotranspiration means plants don’t cool down as much, and that supposedly raises global temperatures slightly.

    Equally interesting, the researchers based their findings not on actual experiments, but on yet another computer model that allegedly predicts future temperatures. When they tweaked various assumptions about the physiological effects of CO2, global air temperature over land increased 0.7 degrees F (0.4 deg C) above what supposedly would occur just from doubled CO2 levels directly increasing the greenhouse effect. But just six months earlier, the same authors tweaked the same model differently – and got only 0.2F (0.1 deg C) of additional warming. The authors now say this earlier result is “unrealistic.”

    However, what guarantee do we have that the new assumptions are “realistic”? Maybe they are but, face it, there’s far less “fortune and glory,” far less headline grabbing, in a mere 0.2 degrees. It’s also far less “realistic” to expect another research grant, if the first one could only come up with 0.2 degrees of crisis. That’s not even 9:00 versus 9:30 on an average summer morning.

    Besides fortune and glory, and more research grants and publications in prestigious journals, there’s also the matter of reputation. Dr. Caldeira, besides being a reputable scientist, is also an advisor to billionaire Bill Gates on renewable energy, and in charge of the $4.5 million in geo-engineering research funding that the Gates Foundation has provided over the past 3 years.

    How many climate scientists can rub elbows with Bill Gates? Glory indeed. So 0.7 degrees it is.

    Of course, this does not mean more robust plant growth can never be harmful. But does it really take five researchers and six funding sources (including the National Environmental Trust, NSF, NASA and NOAA) to model ragweed under doubled CO2 computer scenarios and conclude, “there may be increases in exposure to allergenic pollen under the present scenarios of global warming”?

    All this makes us wonder: Why is it a bad thing that more CO2 helps plants tolerate droughts better and revegetate deserts? Should we cut down more forests, to generate even more cooling than the planet has experienced since 2005? Why do “error corrections” always seem to result in more warming than originally predicted, instead of less? And why do taxpayers have to shell out Big Bucks on this stuff?

    The United States alone has been spending some $7 billion a year on “climate change research.” That’s a lot of money. But a majority of Americans now say climate change is due to natural forces, not to human CO2 emissions. To alarmists that means more “research” and “education” on the “climate crisis” is clearly needed – but not more on better oversight of questionable research or studying natural causes.

    During a March 2009 closed-door meeting, Department of Energy senior advisor Matthew Rogers outlined his “dilemma” over how to comply with his new mandate to quickly spend $36.7 billion in grants and loan guarantees from the 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (aka, the Stimulus Act) on renewable energy and climate change. Today, with only $300 million of our taxpayer money and children’s inheritance left to spend, poor Matt says his “popularity continues to decline.”

    Nearly $2.4 million dollars of that Stimulus loot may be funding the latest research by Penn State University Professor Michael Mann, father of Mann-made global warming, the debunked hockey stick temperature graph and many infamous Climategate e-mails. In one new project where Mike is the principal instigator, over a half-million dollars in grant money generated only “0.53” jobs in Pennsylvania. We must have missed the headline “Stimulus Creates Millionaire.”

    We’re not suggesting fraud or corruption by Caldeira or anyone else. But we do find it curious that the vast bulk of the money goes to research that consistently discovers more “global warming crises.” We find several other phenomena equally curious.

    * In an era when ExxonMobil posts all its grants on its website, and we have the “most transparent government in history,” government agencies, liberal foundations and activist groups jealously guard information on who’s getting how much money from whom, to finance all this crisis-oriented research.

    * Universities are fighting attorney-general investigations, and insisting that any investigations into alleged misconduct must be conducted in-house and behind closed doors. Yet they are happy to give Greenpeace fishing-expedition access to emails and work product by climate crisis skeptics.

    * Despite insisting that their research and findings are completely honest and above-board, climate alarmists still refuse to share their data, computer codes and methodologies, or discuss and debate their tax-funded work with scientists who might “try and find something wrong with it.”

    If we didn’t know better, we’d think the operative rules were: Never seek logical or alternative answers, if you can blame a phenomenon or problem (like decreasing frog populations) on global warming. Do whatever it takes and fund whatever research is needed, to advance the goals of ending hydrocarbon use, increasing government control and “transforming” society. And always include the terms “global warming” or “climate change” in any grant application.

    It may not be corruption. But it sure skews the research, conclusions and policy recommendations.

    Paul Driessen is senior policy advisor for the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow (www.CFACT.org). Willie Soon is an independent scientist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics. David Legates is a climatologist at the University of Delaware.

  • ‘Obama’s Katrina’ One Month On: Still Spilling

    Via Prison Planet.com » World News

    Russia Today
    May 24, 2010

    A month on and the BP off-shore rig spill is still flowing into the Gulf of Mexico. Rust colored oil has washed into marshlands and the Mississippi river, endangering wildlife and nature reserves on the American coastline. Big business seems reluctant to take responsibility for the clean up and locals fear they are on the brink of a ecological disaster.

    Obamas Katrina One Month On: Still Spilling 100210banner1

  • Audi A2 will be electric-only, will compete with BMW Megacity

    2003 Audi A2

    Earlier this month, we heard reports that the next-generation Audi A2 will launch in 2012 instead of the 2014 as previously scheduled. Apparently, Audi is working hard to push forward the launch of the A1 as soon as possible so it can have a competitor to the BMW Megacity vehicle, which will go on sale in 2013.

    According to sources, in order to compete with the BMW Megacity, the next-generation Audi A2 will be all-electric. The second-generation A2 will use a conventional steel monocoque from the new A1 and will drop its expensive spaceframe construction to keep cost down.

    While styling on the next-generation A2 is being kept a big secret, it is known that Audi will keep its one-box design like the predecessor.

    – By: Kap Shah

    Source: AutoCar


  • David Cameron exposed

    Via Prison Planet.com » Commentary

    Youtube
    Monday, May 24th, 2010

    The pudgy-faced opportunist reveals his true self. Taken from Armando Iannucci’s Time Trumpet (2006).

    There appears to be some confusion amongst commenters on youtube concerning what this video represents.

    It is a piece of British satire putting out the message that both of these politicians are puppets. Furthermore, in reality everyone knows they are the same, you don’t need to be shown the “evidence” – hence the ridiculousness of the evidence presented here. The problem is that the voting public still engage in cognitive dissonance by playing along with the phony left/right political divide.

    David Cameron exposed  260310banner2

  • Dodge vehicles will lose the legendary horns logo!

    Dodge LogoAs you may know already Dodge announced that the Ram brand will be exclusively used for its pickup range but it appears that the American manufacturer is also preparing another move.

    The Ram brand will keep the distinctive ram’s horns logo that adorned Dodge vehicles while the other cars from Dodge will adopt the twin red slashes of Chrysler Group’s SRT performance brand. “It signifies our sporty character. Most SRTs are Dodges.” said Dodge CEO Ralph Gilles. The first car which will receive the new logo will be the 2011 Dodge Charger and the seven-seat Dodge crossover which will replace the Durango.

    [via autonews – sub. required]

    Source: Car news, Car reviews, Spy shots

  • AutoblogGreen for 05.24.10

    Reuters: UAW pressuring Tesla/Toyota to hire union workers at former NUMMI plant
    Will the Model S be a union car?
    IIHS condemns use of mini trucks and low-speed vehicles on public roads
    Don’t get in crash with one of these, dummy.
    Report: Mitsubishi i-MiEV on sale in Hong Kong, priced at $50,000 U.S.
    Mitsubishi is only looking for 50 buyers, though.
    Other news:

    AutoblogGreen for 05.24.10 originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 24 May 2010 05:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Facebook’s Zuckerberg Admits “Mistakes,” Says He’ll Address Privacy Outrage This Week

    Via Prison Planet.com » Prison Planet

    Henry Blodget
    Business Insider
    May 24, 2010

    After writing a post blasting Facebook for allegedly deleting comments critical of Facebook (an allegation that Facebook says is ludicrous), Robert Scoble got an email from Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg.

    In the email, which Scoble published only after receiving permission from Mark, Mark says he is planning to address the Facebook privacy criticism directly this week–in conjunction with Facebook rolling out a fix.

    Here’s the email Mark sent to Scoble:

    Hey,

    We’ve been listening to all the feedback and have been trying to distill it down to the key things we need to improve. I’d like to show an improved product rather than just talk about things we might do.

    We’re going to be ready to start talking about some of the new things we’ve built this week. I want to make sure we get this stuff right this time.

    Facebooks Zuckerberg Admits Mistakes, Says Hell Address Privacy Outrage This Week 100210banner1

    I know we’ve made a bunch of mistakes, but my hope at the end of this is that the service ends up in a better place and that people understand that our intentions are in the right place and we respond to the feedback from the people we serve.

    I hope we’ll get a chance to catch up in person sometime this week. Let me know if you have any thoughts for me before then.

    Mark

    Mark’s making several smart moves here.

    First, he’s addressing the criticism directly himself, which lessens the perception that he’s holed up in some bunker somewhere and doesn’t give a damn what anyone thinks. Second, and more importantly, he appears to be listening to the criticism and fixing the problem. Third, he’s adopting the Steve Jobs technique of answering questions and issuing statements via private emails, which have a far more human and intimate feel than quotes to a journalist or a public press release.

    Despite this latest PR flap, we still think Facebook’s approach to innovation is the smart one (make the changes, and then roll back or change anything people are unhappy with).  We also continue to think that this latest PR storm over privacy will be forgotten as quickly as all the others have been.