Author: Serkadis

  • Spoon developing parts for Honda CR-Z

    Filed under: , , , ,

    Spoon Honda CR-Z – Click above for image gallery

    With Honda‘s in-house parts department in the game and Mugen developing it’s own line of kit for the CR-Z, the tuner trifecta is almost complete with the release of Spoon’s performance parts for Honda’s hybrid hatch.

    While we thought bright blue wheels went out of vogue (even in the U.S.) in 2008, Spoon has coated its CR93 rollers in the company’s signature hue, along with upgraded calipers clamping onto 15-inch slotted discs. A ride height lowered by 50mm comes courtesy of front coilovers and a spring and shock combo in the rear, while the body has been subtly altered with the addition of a carbon fiber hood, mirrors and front lip spoiler.

    More importantly, a new N1 exhaust has been fitted and Spoon is fiddling with the ECU to churn out a few extra (and much-needed) ponies. There’s no word on what the rejiggered computer and exhaust is good for power-wise or how Spoon is manipulating the hybrid drive system to boost performance, but considering the company’s past endeavors, we’re expecting good things.

    Gallery: Spoon Honda CR-Z

    [Source: Spoon via 7Tune]

    Spoon developing parts for Honda CR-Z originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 09 Mar 2010 15:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • John Edwards Indictment Odds Start At 55%

    The National Enquirer — which submitted its coverage of the John Edwards affair for a Pulitzer and certainly owned the coverage  — has reported that the former Presidential candidate is close to being indicted.

    Only time will tell.

    But a new contract (via @politickr) has been launched on Intrade, and according to the initial trades, the odds are set at 55%.

    chart

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • US Government Working With Pharma Companies To Raise Drug Prices In Other Countries

    A series of stories from Jamie Love at KEI highlight the troubling cozy relationship between pharmaceutical companies and the US government in trying to raise drug prices in other countries — which very likely will come at the expense of the health of citizens in those countries. The first is about the USTR and its position that drugs in Taiwan are too cheap:


    The United States has also continued to engage Taiwan on concerns raised by the pharmaceutical and medical device industries that Taiwan’s procedures for medical product pricing and reimbursement fail to adequately recognize the value of innovative medical products for patients in Taiwan.

    Read that again, because that’s a pretty scary statement. Yes, Taiwan has worked hard to make sure that health care is affordable in that country, and the USTR is acting on behalf of corporate interests to tell them that’s a mistake. Wow.

    Then, over in India, it appears that the USPTO is putting on co-branded events with Pfizer about drugs, health care and patents. Along with this, Love points to growing concerns from folks in India about a project between George Washington University and various pharmaceutical companies to “train” Indian politicians and judges on the importance of patents in pharma. Except, of course, that’s very much in dispute. Many studies have shown that patents on pharma do more harm than good — especially in countries with big healthcare issues.

    There are plenty of important issues to debate over health care and patents, but it seems quite troubling when the US seems to have pretty much let the pharmaceutical companies run the entire debate.

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  • U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights targets L.A. Unified for investigation

    LAUSD Superintendent Ramon Cortines The federal government has targeted the Los Angeles Unified School District for its first major investigation under a reinvigorated Office for Civil Rights, The Times has learned.

    The probe will focus on services to students learning English, who make up a third of the enrollment in the nation’s second-largest school system.

    Federal analysts will review how English learners are identified and when they are judged fluent enough to handle regular course work. They’ll examine whether English learners have qualified, appropriately trained teachers. And they’ll look at how teachers make math and science understandable for students with limited-English skills — and how a school provides extra help for those struggling the most. Reviewers also will see if the district communicates effectively with parents in a language they understand.

    The inquiry was prompted primarily by the low academic achievement of English learners; about 3 in 100 are proficient in math and English at the high school level, federal officials said. Focusing on L.A. Unified also makes sense because it has so many English learners, they said.

    The Office for Civil Rights, an arm of the U.S. Department of Education, is charged with enforcing laws that protect students from discrimination on the basis of sex, race, national origin and disability status.

    “This is about helping kids receive a good education, the education they deserve,” said Russlynn Ali, the department’s assistant secretary for civil rights. “This is about raising the bar and closing the achievement gap.”

    L.A. schools Supt. Ramon C. Cortines said he welcomed the probe as an outside evaluation that would help the district identify and expand successful programs.

    “And if there are egregious areas of misconduct by the district I will move on it immediately,” said Cortines, who became superintendent 15 months ago.

    He added that district probably ranks “above average” compared to other school systems in programs for English learners. But that’s not nearly good enough, he added.

    “I don’t think we have done well in making sure our young people continue to develop both written and oral language,” he said.

    Both the district and the federal agency represented the review as friendly, but enforcement options are available, including the withholding of federal funds, referrals to the Justice Department and pursuing court injunctions. More likely, the department will provide technical assistance.

    The compliance review arrives at a difficult time for L.A. Unified, which is trying to close a $640-million budget gap and is struggling to make do with fewer services and employees.

    The ultimate goal of federal officials is to exert pressure on L.A. Unified and other school districts to close the achievement gap that separates white, Asian and higher-income students from low-income, black and Latino students. The federal government has the authority to examine practices that harm groups of students, even in the absence of intentional discrimination.

    U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan launched the ramped-up enforcement effort Monday at the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Ala. — the site where law enforcement officers beat and drove back 600 civil rights marchers on March 7, 1965. The Rev. Martin Luther King later led a successful and larger march to the state Capitol across the same bridge.

    At Monday’s event, officials said that 38 school districts would be subject to “compliance reviews,” but they named no districts at that time.

    Under the Obama administration, Duncan has used the promise of vitally needed federal dollars to leverage favored reforms, such as linking teacher evaluations to student achievement and increasing the number of charter schools, which are independently managed, mostly nonunion and free from some restrictions that govern traditional schools.

    English learners are just one focus of what officials described as a resurgent Office for Civil Rights. In other districts, the division also will look at equal access to college-prep classes, equal opportunity for African American students, sexual harassment, violence, and services to the disabled.

    — Howard Blume

    Photo: LAUSD Superintendent Ramon Cortines. Credit: Reed Saxon / Associated Press

    More breaking news in L.A. Now:

    Jewelry heist at Four Seasons Hotel might be
    tied to series of downtown hotel burglaries

    Burbank middle school teacher arrested for
    allegedly having unlawful sex with a student

    Convicted killer Rodney Alcala plays ‘Alice’s
    Restaurant’ before asking jury to spare his life

    Armed man shot in Bell by L.A. County
    sheriff’s deputies



  • Windows Phone 7 titbits from GDC

    Music-Hub_1579100c

    Pocketnow are at GDC, and have posted some bits of Windows Phone 7 info today.

    They note that Windows Phone 7 has been designed with OLED screens in mind, explaining the predominance of black (which is power-saving on OLED screens) in the UI and minimalist UI, for example in the calendar app.

    Talking about the PIM, they also note that Pocket Outlook will now finally load pictures automatically, and will allow pinch to zoom and scrolling and HTML rendering without any special measures, making for a much better user experience. In the hubs, content will be preloaded when possible, meaning even screens with online content, such as the photo hub, will load instantly.  This setting will be optional however for those without a data plan. Start page tiles will be either square or rectangular and can be re-arranged via press and hold.

    Lastly, they mention that Windows Phone 7 will support 2 screen sizes and resolutions but only one aspect ratio, which will make resolution-independent applications simple to support over the whole range.

    Read more at Pocketnow here.

  • “Telephone” press release

    From the moment Lady Gaga’s “Telephone” danced through the radio airwaves, her millions of monsters worldwide have been eagerly and anxiously waiting for the music video debut of the hit single. The wait is finally over Thursday, March 11 when E! News exclusively premieres the epic video, which features pop superstar Beyoncé, during the show’s 11:30 PM broadcast. “Telephone” is the second single from Lady Gaga’s platinum album The Fame Monster (Streamline/Konlive/Cherrytree/Interscope).

    The video will also make its online debut at midnight that evening on VEVO.com and LadyGaga.com so fans can view it again right away. VEVO will also offer the ability to watch the video with lyrics. After the video premieres on E! News, this enchanting artist will dissect the inspiration behind “Telephone” and explain how she has been able to out-do herself yet again exclusively to Ryan Seacrest.

    “What I like about it is it’s a real true pop event,” Lady Gaga said about the “Telephone” video in a February interview with KIIS-FM and E!’s Ryan Seacrest. “When I was younger I was always excited when there was a big giant event happening in pop music and that’s what I wanted this to be.”

    Gritty, erotic and wildly fierce, this nine-minute, visually stunning, cinematic masterpiece features the inimitable Beyoncé and is helmed by famed music video director Jonas Akerlund. Rich with Gaga’s unique dance stylings, iconic costume design and unworldly hair and make-up, this is far from your typical music video.

    Since breaking out onto the music scene in 2008 with her Grammy Award-winning debut album, The Fame, Lady Gaga has consistently shocked and inspired. The Fame spawned four No. 1 singles “Just Dance,” “Poker Face,” “LoveGame,” and “Paparazzi,” making her the first artist in Billboard history to accomplish that feat on a debut album.

    Released on November 23, 2009, The Fame Monster is the follow-up to The Fame, and already has produced a fifth No. 1 single for Gaga with “Bad Romance.” Combined, The Fame and The Fame Monster have sold 10 million albums worldwide, while Lady Gaga’s five singles have sold more than 17 million copies total. The video for “Bad Romance” has racked up more than 140 million online views.

    Lady Gaga has said that the video for “Telephone” picks up where “Paparazzi” left off but will surpass its predecessor. In the new video, Gaga’s on-screen chemistry with Beyoncé transforms the song from a popular dance floor gem to a raw and explosive piece of art to be reckoned with. It is the second time the two entertainers have collaborated for a visual adventure, first on Beyonce’’s “Video Phone” and now on Lady Gaga’s “Telephone.”

    Beyoncé, who enjoyed a string of #1 hits on the dance charts in 2009, including “Diva,” “Halo,” “Sweet Dreams,” which became her eleventh #1 single and the Song of the Year at the 2010 Grammys, “Single Ladies (Put A Ring On It),” was thrilled to re-team up with Lady Gaga. “It was fun to work with Gaga again. This video was a unique opportunity to do something we think will surprise our fans in a creative, edgy way not always seen.”

    E!’s rich history of providing its audience with the latest breaking news in entertainment and pop culture makes it the perfect forum for this incredible, jaw-dropping premiere.

  • Mazda reportedly adding brake override systems to all future models

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    2010 Mazda6 – Click above for high-res image gallery

    According to a recent report, Mazda will be installing brake override systems on all of its models in the near future. Whenever that happens, the brake will automatically get priority over the accelerator in a situation where both of them are simultaneously depressed. Nissan already has such a system installed on most of its cars, and Toyota has already pledged to do so. As far as Japan goes that leaves companies like Honda, Mitsubishi, Subaru and Suzuki in the “Undecided” column.

    A Mazda spokesman said the company wasn’t aware of any unintended acceleration issues with its vehicles anywhere in the world that would necessitate such a system. This really looks to be a proactive move, since the estimated $50-per-car cost of the brake override will be much less hurtful than having to recall an untold numbers of cars… and you’ll be paying for it, anyway. The company doesn’t have details yet on the specifics of implementation, but it will eventually apply to every car the company sells.

    [Source: Automotive News – Sub. Req.]

    Mazda reportedly adding brake override systems to all future models originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 09 Mar 2010 15:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Harper Faculty Ranked Among Best in Nation on Popular Student-Fueled Website

    Professors ranked 7th among faculties at two-year colleges

    (PALATINE, IL)  Helen Burroughs and Charles Brown love their students – and their students love them. The associate professors boast two of Harper College’s highest scores on RateMyProfessors.com, a popular student-fueled website that now lists Harper’s entire faculty as one of the top-rated cumulatively among two-year programs nationwide.

    The site, which features student ratings and comments regarding more than 1 million professors at 6,500 colleges across the United States, puts Harper’s faculty at No. 7 on its community college list for 2009. The annual rankings analysis was released this month.

    “Each year, the RateMyProfessors.com rankings shine a light on the incredible work taking place at institutions across the country,” says Carlo DiMarco, Vice President of University Relations for mtvU, the MTV college network that owns and operates the site. “These lists directly reflect the voices of the students who are on campus, in these classrooms and listening to and learning from these professors.”

    Burroughs, a Harper alumna who has taught psychology fulltime at the College for 12 years, has nearly 90 RateMyProfessors.com reviews and an overall quality score of 4.9 on a 5-point scale. In their online comments, students say she’s a dedicated professor who ensures everyone learns the material and has a great time doing it.

    “I feel really honored,” says Burroughs, a former pediatric nurse who came to Harper in her 30s looking for a career change and was so inspired by her own Harper professors that she became one herself.  “I love my job; I love these students; I love this campus. This makes me feel really good.”

    Also rating high is Brown, who – motivated by teachers in his own life – has headed up numerous Harper ethics, religion and other philosophy courses for 15 years. His overall quality score is 4.8 points out of 5 on the website, with students calling him a caring, passionate professor who makes the course fun and the material interesting. He says he’s flattered by the favorable reviews and remarks.

    “I hope that we, the Harper faculty, have indeed made some significant impact on the lives of the students who rank us so highly,” said Brown, whose two sons attended Harper before eventually graduating from the University of Illinois. “However, my confidence in the Harper faculty comes from actually working with and observing these colleagues in action. I have never had a problem recommending students to attend Harper College, because I know that this faculty is so good.”

    RateMyProfessors.com annually releases a synopsis of top-ranked faculties and individual professors, based on ratings submitted by students. The site analyzed only professors who received more than 30 reviews over the last three years; scores from the most recent years were weighted more heavily.

     

  • Six Major Film Studios Now Offering HD Movies For Playstation Network Video Store


    Sony Computer Entertainment America (SCEA) today announced that 20th Century Fox, Walt Disney Pictures, Paramount Pictures, Sony Pictures Entertainment, Universal Pictures, and Warner Bros. Digital Distribution will offer high definition (HD) movies for purchase and rental on the PlayStation Network video delivery service in the United States. PlayStation Network is the first to offer high definition movies for purchase from all of the major movie studios, further establishing PlayStation 3 (PS3) as the preeminent home entertainment platform for this year’s most popular and critically acclaimed high definition movies.

    “Securing high definition content from these studios is another significant milestone further validating PlayStation Network as a complete entertainment network in the home. PlayStation Network is the first and only service to deliver high definition home entertainment from all six major studios, directly to consumers for download,” said Peter Dille, senior vice president, marketing and PlayStation Network, SCEA. “PlayStation Network continues to offer the most comprehensive catalog of HD movies to PlayStation Network members that realize the wide-ranging entertainment power of the PS3 system.”

    The PS3 system is the most complete home entertainment solution on the market today, enabling consumers to enjoy high-definition games and movies, as well as listen to music, view photos, browse the Internet and more. Today’s announcement joins one of the industry’s strongest home entertainment brands with the major media companies that produce and distribute a substantial number of films. At launch, the content will be available in the U.S. only, with plans to launch soon in the U.K., France, Germany, and Spain.

    New titles available today on PlayStation Network include:

    • 20th Century Fox – “Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian”, “Jennifer’s Body” and “Fantastic Mr. Fox” (on March 23)
    • Walt Disney Pictures – Disney Pixar’s “Up”, Jerry Bruckheimer’s “G-Force” and Disney’s “Earth”
    • Paramount Pictures – “Star Trek”, “Paranormal Activity” and “Zoolander”
    • Sony Pictures – “This Is It”, “2012″, “District 9″ and “Zombieland”
    • Universal – “Inglourious Basterds”, “Couples Retreat” and “Public Enemies”
    • Warner Bros. Digital Distribution – “The Hangover”, “Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince” and “The Wizard of Oz”
  • Need for Speed: Shift to get more supercars via DLC

    Just in case you felt the need for speed again, EA is giving you an added incentive to play Need for Speed: Shift again for a price, that is. Coming soon to the online stores is

  • What will Bob Lutz do once he retires?

    General Motors confirmed last week that Vice Chairman Bob Lutz will retire effective May 1, 2010. What is Lutz going to do after that? According to AutoObserver Lutz will:

    • Write a book – something on corporate culture.
    • Entertain the idea of writing for an automotive media outlet.
    • Talk – will sign on with a bureau to do lecture circuits.
    • Go back to school – flight school.
    • Champion animal rights causes.
    • He’s also open to anything else that may be proposed to him.

    What Lutz won’t do is wake up everyday at 4:30 am for 6 and 7 a.m. meetings.

    – By: Omar Rana

    Source: AutoObserver


  • First Look: FileMaker Pro 11

    A year after the launch of FileMaker Pro 10, the Apple-owned database company is back to debut the latest version of its franchise product. FileMaker Pro 11 introduces long-awaited features and builds on the interface and engine improvements to create new capabilities. I have been taking the product through its paces for the last few weeks and I am left with the impression that this is what FileMaker Pro 10 should have been because the changes made to the interface and the scripting engine are really evident in 11. The update includes a variety of improvements that will benefit both users and developers.

    A New Start

    When greeted by the redesigned Start Screen, among the starter solutions offered as a template is a new Invoices solution. This solution allows you to track customers, products, and invoices in a single database. Invoices implements multiple tables and relationships on multiple keys and provides a great introduction to a moderately complex database. I recommend peaking under the hood to get a feel for how things are done if you are new to FileMaker. Beyond the starter solutions, you can also create a new database by starting with data from Bento, XML files, Excel spreadsheets and other sources.

    Once you are up and running in a database, there are a few interface changes that will jump out at you immediately. First up is the new Quick Find feature. Quick Find adds a Spotlight-like search field to your toolbar that will search through multiple fields on the current layout.

    This feature is handy if you are looking for something like a phone number, but are not sure if the number is in the home, office, mobile, or fax fields. You can set which fields are included in the Quick Find index to limit the search and the size of the indexes. Quick Find works like an “AND” search across multiple fields and matches on the start of strings only. It does not do partial string matching so a search on “maker” will not match “FileMaker” at this time.

    Layouts

    One small refinement is Text Highlighting. You can mark text with a yellow background in a field to bring attention to the highlighted section. More significant changes have been made to improve the ease of working with layouts. The new layout assistant makes setting up table-based report layouts a breeze. The assistant walks you through choosing fields, setting the sort order and adding sub-summaries. In the table view itself, you can now directly add fields and records with convenient + buttons and change the sort by clicking on column headers. Layouts themselves can now be organized into layout folders to make it simpler for both users and developers to work in a database with a large number of layouts.

    Another layout option is Portal filtering. Portal filters allow you to limit related records that are displayed in a portal by either fixed or calculated criteria.

    When designing layouts, new Inspector palettes grant immediate access to common formatting functions and settings. The Inspector has three tabs, but you can open up multiple inspectors and have each tab visible. The addition of the Inspector may seem a minor change, but it does bring the database product into better alignment with the iWork applications. Inspectors are packed with detail that might be overwhelming to some users, but they do add a bit of convenience and expose some features to discovery that may have been hidden deep in menu options.

    Charting

    The biggest visual change to Filemaker Pro 11 is the addition of the new charting feature. You can create pie charts, bar charts (vertical and horizontal), line graphs, and area charts and include those directly in your layouts. The charts provide an opportunity to not only create better reports but also design completely new interfaces for dashboard views and other ideas.

    Snapshot Links

    Another new user-focused feature that takes a bit of explaining is Snapshot Links. You can take a snapshot of the current records that you are viewing and send those to a co-worker with access to the same database. The snapshot includes the current found set, but also remembers the selected record, the current layout, the focused tab on a layout and other information. Previously, you may have printed a report to PDF or saved a search in FMP 10. The problem with those approaches is that the PDF is completely static and the results of the saved search may change between the time you look at the records and send those to someone else. The snapshot link always shows the current information in the database, and keeps the found set intact even if the underlying data changes. It took me a while to fully grasp the implications, but the more I think about it, the more uses I find to use this feature in a workgroup environment.

    Other Improvements

    Recurring import will watch an external file like an Excel spreadsheet and update the data in FileMaker as the watched spreadsheet changes. You can set script triggers on this file as well to have it update every 15 minutes or some other interval.

    You can copy and paste scripts to make it simpler to bring tricks over from other solutions. External file protection improves the security of Filemaker databases. The server version has new diagnostics to help find out which user has issued the query that is bringing the system to a crawl. Filemaker Pro 11 Server Advanced also removes user limits in this version.

    System requirements are substantially the same.

    Pricing

    All FileMaker 11 products are immediately available. FileMaker Pro 11 is $299/$179 upgrade (U.S. suggested list price) and FileMaker Pro 11 Advanced is $499/$299 upgrade. FileMaker Server 11 is $999/$599 upgrade and FileMaker Server 11 Advanced is $2,999/$1,799 upgrade.

    For a limited time, FileMaker extends upgrade pricing to licensed users of FileMaker 8 and 8.5 products. This offer expires September 23, 2010, and details are online.

    Recommendation

    There is something for everyone in this update to FileMaker Pro. Users will love the convenience of Quick Find, the visual enhancements in charting and layouts, and sharing snapshots. Developers will love the Inspector for quickly making layout changes, the scripting improvements, and the flexibility of using portal filtering and charting to create great layouts and reports without extra plugins.

    I see great possibilities to use these new features to create solutions with FileMaker Pro and I am probably more excited about the future of the product now than I have been over the last few years. It feels like the investment in previous versions has paid off and everything is firing on all cylinders to move ahead.

  • Jimi Hendrix Lives On With New “Valleys Of Neptune” Album


    Experience Hendrix and Sony Music Entertainment’s Legacy Recordings have released the monumental Valleys of Neptune, a newly curated album of 12 fully realized Jimi Hendrix studio recordings. Neptune features more than 60 minutes of music never commercially available on a Jimi Hendrix album, from the artist Rolling Stone magazine called the greatest guitarist of all time. Centered around tracks recorded during a pivotal and turbulent four-month period in 1969, Valleys of Neptune unveils the original Jimi Hendrix Experience’s final studio recordings, as the group lays down the foundation for its follow-up to Electric Ladyland, alongside the guitar superhero’s first sessions with bassist Billy Cox, an old army buddy he’d recruited into his new ensemble.

    Valleys of Neptune provides an essential, compelling, and up-til-now largely unseen view of what Jimi Hendrix was up to musically in the critical period between the release of Electric Ladyland in October 1968 and the 1970 opening of his own Electric Lady Studios in Greenwich Village, the state of the art facility where he would begin his final project, the ambitious double album First Rays of the New Rising Sun.

    Janie Hendrix, CEO of Experience Hendrix LLC, the Hendrix family-owned company entrusted with preserving and protecting the legacy of Jimi Hendrix, noted, “My brother Jimi was at home in the studio. Valleys of Neptune offers deep insight into his mastery of the recording process and demonstrates the fact that he was as unparalleled a recording innovator as he was a guitarist. His brilliance shines through on every one of these precious tracks.”

    Valleys of Neptune is originality electrified, offering more than 60 minutes of previously unreleased Jimi Hendrix music, originally recorded, and newly mixed for this historic release, by Hendrix’s longtime engineer Eddie Kramer, who first worked with the guitarist on Are You Experienced? in 1967. Valleys of Neptune is produced by Janie Hendrix, John McDermott (who contributes detailed liner notes to the album) and Eddie Kramer.

    “Valleys of Neptune” has long been one of the most sought after of any commercially unavailable Jimi Hendrix recording. The song was released as a single globally on February 2, 2010, nearly forty years after Jimi finished recording the track at New York’s Record Plant in May of 1970.

    Other highlights on Valleys of Neptune include blazing studio covers of Elmore James’ classic “Bleeding Heart” and Cream’s “Sunshine of Your Love” as well as premier performances of original Hendrix compositions like “Ships Passing Through The Night,” “Lullaby For The Summer” and the original un-dubbed Jimi Hendrix Experience rendition of “Hear My Train A Comin’.” Also included in Valleys of Neptune is “Mr. Bad Luck,” a Jimi Hendrix Experience track, produced by Chas Chandler during the 1967 Axis: Bold as Love sessions.

    Here is the full tracklisting and information for Valleys of Neptune:

    Stone Free
    Recorded: Record Plant, New York, April 7, 9, 14, May 17,1969
    Producer: Jimi Hendrix
    Vocal, Guitar: Jimi Hendrix
    Bass: Billy Cox
    Drums: Mitch Mitchell
    Backing Vocals: Roger Chapman, Andy Fairweather Low

    Valleys Of Neptune
    Recorded: Record Plant, New York, September 23, 1969, May 15, 1970
    Producer: Jimi Hendrix
    Vocal, Guitar: Jimi Hendrix
    Drums: Mitch Mitchell
    Bass: Billy Cox
    Percussion: Juma Sultan

    Bleeding Heart
    Recorded: Record Plant, New York, April 24, 1969
    Producer: Jimi Hendrix
    Vocal, Guitar: Jimi Hendrix
    Bass: Billy Cox
    Drums: Rocky Isaac
    Tambourine: Chris Grimes
    Maracas: Al Marks

    Hear My Train A Comin’
    Recorded: Record Plant, New York, April 7, 1969
    Producer: Jimi Hendrix
    Vocal, Guitar: Jimi Hendrix
    Bass: Noel Redding
    Drums: Mitch Mitchell

    Mr. Bad Luck
    Recorded: Olympic Studios, London, May 5, 1967
    Producer: Chas Chandler
    Additional bass and drum recording, Air Studios, London, June 5, 1987
    Vocal, Guitar: Jimi Hendrix
    Bass: Noel Redding
    Drums: Mitch Mitchell

    Sunshine Of Your Love
    Recorded: Olympic Studios, London, February 16, 1969
    Producer: Jimi Hendrix
    Guitar: Jimi Hendrix
    Bass: Noel Redding
    Drums: Mitch Mitchell
    Percussion: Rocki Dzidzornu

    Lover Man
    Recorded: Olympic Studios, London, February 16, 1969
    Producer: Jimi Hendrix
    Vocal, Guitar: Jimi Hendrix
    Bass: Noel Redding
    Drums: Mitch Mitchell

    Ships Passing Through The Night
    Recorded: Record Plant, New York, April 14, 1969
    Producer: Jimi Hendrix
    Guitar, Vocals: Jimi Hendrix
    Bass: Noel Redding
    Drums: Mitch Mitchell

    Fire
    Recorded: Olympic Studios, London, February 17, 1969
    Producer: Jimi Hendrix
    Vocal, Guitar: Jimi Hendrix
    Bass, Backing Vocal: Noel Redding
    Drums: Mitch Mitchell

    Red House
    Recorded: Olympic Studios, London, February 17, 1969
    Producer: Jimi Hendrix
    Vocal, Guitar: Jimi Hendrix
    Bass: Noel Redding
    Drums: Mitch Mitchell

    Lullaby For The Summer
    Recorded: Record Plant, New York, April 7, 1969
    Producer: Jimi Hendrix
    Mixed By Eddie Kramer
    Guitar: Jimi Hendrix
    Bass: Noel Redding
    Drums: Mitch Mitchell

    Crying Blue Rain
    Recorded: Olympic Studios, London, February 16, 1969
    Producer: Jimi Hendrix
    Additional bass and drum recording, Air Studios, London, June 5, 1987
    Vocal, Guitar: Jimi Hendrix
    Percussion: Rocki Dzidzornu
    Bass: Noel Redding
    Drums: Mitch Mitchell

  • Rick Bookstaber: Hedge Funds Are Pumping The Gold Bubble And Luring Investors Off A Cliff

    The SEC’s Rick Bookstaber can hardly watch as sheep-like investors chase the gold bubble straight off a cliff.

    Although his employer doesn’t give market advice, the SEC’s senior policy adviser shows his personal frustration in a post on Roubini Global Economics. First, he drops this great line about how people don’t even pretend that gold isn’t a bubble:

    Even if a guy is just after sex, he at least has the decency to act like there is some substance behind his interest.

    Second, Bookstaber thinks hedge funds managers like John Paulson have a pump and dump scheme on gold.

    RGE:

    Given that “hedge fund” and “highly secretive” are usually said in the same breath, don’t you get suspicious when so many of the top managers are so vocally out there about their gold investments? And when their positions are structured in a way that make them open to view? Paulson and Soros have huge positions in gold ETFs. We know that, because if you buy ETFs, they show up in your 13-F filing. Granted, with an equity investment you can’t help putting that information out into the market, but with an asset there are plenty of ways to take the position without signaling it.

    That they are taking a highly visible route to their positions suggests the game that is being played is one of leading the herd. The 13-F reports positions with a big lag, so no one will notice if they quietly slip out the side door while the party is still hopping. And how about when the view is backed up by none other than Goldman Sachs? Will they let everyone know when they think it has gone too far before they get out. Or before they go short? Maybe they already have.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • It Begins: China Cracks Down On The Shadow Banking System That Is Inflating Its Real Estate Bubble

    snake liquor china alcohol chinese

    In what appears to be an effort to stem the rise of real estate prices in China, the China Banking Regulatory Commission said today that it would step up monitoring of non-bank financing.

    Here’s the report from Xinhau, the official Chinese news service:

    More focus would be put on businesses in connection with trust companies and the real estate sector to prevent banks from using non-banking financing to circumvent policies, said Liu Mingkang, chairman of the CBRC.

    The 2010 government loan target is 7.5 trillion yuan (1.10 trillion U.S. dollars). But in January alone, banks extended 1.39 trillion yuan in new loans — 18.53 percent of the full-year target.

    More work should be done to improve risk management capacity to achieve sustainable development of the non-banking financing sector, Liu said.

    Non-banking financial institutions under the CBRC supervision include trust companies, finance companies, financial leasing companies, auto financing companies and money brokers.

    – China would step up work to monitor non-banking financing, said the China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC) Tuesday in a statement on its web-site.

    More focus would be put on businesses in connection with trust companies and the real estate sector to prevent banks from using non-banking financing to circumvent policies, said Liu Mingkang, chairman of the CBRC.

    The 2010 government loan target is 7.5 trillion yuan (1.10 trillion U.S. dollars). But in January alone, banks extended 1.39 trillion yuan in new loans — 18.53 percent of the full-year target.

    More work should be done to improve risk management capacity to achieve sustainable development of the non-banking financing sector, Liu said.

    Non-banking financial institutions under the CBRC supervision include trust companies, finance companies, financial leasing companies, auto financing companies and money brokers.

    – China would step up work to monitor non-banking financing, said the China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC) Tuesday in a statement on its web-site.

    More focus would be put on businesses in connection with trust companies and the real estate sector to prevent banks from using non-banking financing to circumvent policies, said Liu Mingkang, chairman of the CBRC.

    The 2010 government loan target is 7.5 trillion yuan (1.10 trillion U.S. dollars). But in January alone, banks extended 1.39 trillion yuan in new loans — 18.53 percent of the full-year target.

    More work should be done to improve risk management capacity to achieve sustainable development of the non-banking financing sector, Liu said.

    Non-banking financial institutions under the CBRC supervision include trust companies, finance companies, financial leasing companies, auto financing companies and money brokers.

    – China would step up work to monitor non-banking financing, said the China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC) Tuesday in a statement on its web-site.

    More focus would be put on businesses in connection with trust companies and the real estate sector to prevent banks from using non-banking financing to circumvent policies, said Liu Mingkang, chairman of the CBRC.

    The 2010 government loan target is 7.5 trillion yuan (1.10 trillion U.S. dollars). But in January alone, banks extended 1.39 trillion yuan in new loans — 18.53 percent of the full-year target.

    More work should be done to improve risk management capacity to achieve sustainable development of the non-banking financing sector, Liu said.

    Non-banking financial institutions under the CBRC supervision include trust companies, finance companies, financial leasing companies, auto financing companies and money brokers.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Dynasty Warriors: Strikeforce to get free DLC

    As a thank you to their loyal fanbase, Koei Tecmo will be handing out rounds of free Dynasty Warriors: Strikeforce DLC every week around Easter. Don’t worry, this won’t simply be costumes like the ones for Empires,

  • Lindsey Gr-Amnesty, RINO Extraordinaire.

    03.09.10 05:55 AM posted by Skip MacLure

    <div class="entry"> <div class="snap_preview"> I wish someone would tell me why this character should have a single Republican member of Congress listen to him, much less be influenced by a single word emanating from his smarmy mouth. In his latest essay in treacherous gum beating he’s let it be known that he’ll play deal maker on Guantanamo Bay.

    Lindsey Graham
    On Sunday, this cretin actually had the chutzpah to tell the White House that he would work to convince Republicans to ‘go along with closing Guantanamo Bay’, if the President reverses his intention of trying high-profile terrorists on continental U.S. soil.

    Graham, ever anxious to ingratiate himself with the administration and bolster his RINO credentials, came in a little late on this one though, since public rage over the proposed trials has all but forced Obama to go back to Guantanamo and military tribunals… aside from the fact that in all likelihood he would be unable to garner support from the Republican membership, other than perhaps a few like-minded RINOs.

    read more &raquo;

    http://www.conservativeoutpost.com/l…extraordinaire

  • WOW: Rubio up over Crist by 32 points

    03.09.10 10:03 AM posted by Drew McKissick

    Talk about hand-writing on the wall.

    In what can be termed as nothing less than "big", the latest poll of the Republican candidates in the Florida Senate primary has House Speaker Marco Rubio ahead of incumben Governor Charlie Crist by 32 points.

    Via Public Policy Polling:

    Rubio now leads Crist 60-28, including a staggering 71-17 lead with conservatives. Crist has a 49-36 advantage with party moderates, but they account for just 31% of likely primary voters compared to 65% who describe themselves as conservative.

    Rubio is benefiting from a widely held sentiment among Florida GOP voters that Congressional Republicans are too liberal and that Crist would add to the problem. 41% of them think that the party leadership in Washington is too liberal, and with those folks Rubio holds an 83-10 lead. 50% think that Crist himself is too liberal and with those voters Rubio’s advantage expands even wider to 90-5.

    Wow.* And, believe it or not, it gets worse for Crist.

    It also looks like it’s too late for Crist to audible and make another run for Governor. GOP voters say they’d prefer likely nominee Bill McCollum over Crist by a 49-35 margin. In fact Republicans generally just want Crist to go away- 56% say they’d like him out of office a year from now to 19% who’d like to see him continue as Governor and only 14% who want him in the Senate. read more &raquo;

    http://www.conservativeoutpost.com/w…rist_32_points

  • An Interview With CNET About Sony


    Less than a week ago, Erica Ogg of CNET e-mailed me a few questions for a piece she was doing about Sony. The title of her post was, “Can Sony stop breaking its fans’ hearts?” and is about how the company is full of talent and innovation but doesn’t seem to execute the grand slam other CE manufacturers such as Apple, Nintendo, etc have accomplished. I was briefly quoted in the article (our e-mail conversations were much larger), and you’ll soon realize that it would have been impossible for her to use everything I said.

    Her questions are in bold –

    Erica Ogg: What’s the sense you get about Sony products lately…are they reactionary to competitors or are they truly working on new inventive things?

    Christopher: The sense that I’ve always had about Sony is that they have various methods of delivering products. Many times competitors have taken Sony’s technology or product idea and added another layer (usually software or price related) that glorifies the experience and makes it easier to use. It’s no secret that they were an analog hardware company for most of its life and slipped when everything went digital. But the whole feeling lately that Sony isn’t inventive, or headed in the right direction is odd and something I would have said several years ago. Not now. Sony has done a complete 180 compared to 5 years ago. I think that their product strategy is a little vast at times, but plays to many different price ranges and ensures quality and competitiveness.

    Sony has worldwide, regional and specific strategies. Let’s take a look at several of the upcoming products for 2010, for example.

    Worldwide, Sony will begin to offer 3D televisions (along with nearly every other major CE manufacturer), Blu-Ray 3D players, and enable the PS3 to have the ability to play 3D games for free through a firmware update. On top of that, Sony is accelerating the creation of 3D content by essentially providing and educating everyone about the back end, from cameras, lenses, studio/mastering equipment, and so on – from the lens to the living room. Sure, you can argue that 3D content will be limited, its a gimmick, and so forth, but I’m excited for 3D games and eventually Blu-rays. No other game manufacturer has anything like this coming as quickly as Sony. Then we’ll eventually have live 3D TV, which will be limited at first, but still very exciting in certain applications such as sports. I think its pretty inventive that Sony is playing a key role in making this whole thing mainstream. Let’s say Sony didn’t play a backseat role like many others – we would probably be muddled in the 2D age for a while.

    Regionally, Sony has different product lineups that they believe will work the best there based on market data, competition, and so forth. A perfect example of this is the Walkman situation. Apple probably has well above 85% market share with portable music players in the last several years in the USA and Sony plays a very limited range of Walkman MP3/Video players here. It’s the safe bet. In Japan, Sony has a 64GB A-Series OLED Walkman that has an incredibly vibrant color display and rich functionality. In Europe, they only play the 16GB version of the device, and in Asia Pacific they offer it up to 32GB. Those decisions were made after market research – the choice probably resides in the question, “Can we make money playing the whole range, or a specific capacity in this regional area?” That is probably the common sizes people (when I say people, I mean the masses) are buying in that area.

    Also, as far as I know Sony was the first major CE manufacturer to put a large touchscreen OLED screen in a portable music player. Now it seems like having OLED in a mobile device is one of the hottest aspects.

    A good example of a specific strategy Sony is doing is the upcoming Dash Personal Internet Viewer just for the US, which is the alarm clock of the 21st century with a custom chumby OS and access to 1500+ apps including weather, traffic, news, e-mail, Netflix Watch Instantly, Facebook, Twitter, and more. When I go to the store I don’t see anything like that sitting on the shelves. Chumby has been around for a while but this is another example of Sony bringing incredible, cutting edge technology to the masses.

    How do you think Sony customers/fans’ perception of Sony has changed over the past couple years as Apple has become more influential as a consumer electronics company?

    I think Apple won many people in the USA because they have a brilliant leader who can transform a product launch into a phenomenon, build mostly great devices with revolutionary software, and have an incredible fan base. Steve Jobs is an American icon and identity that Sony simply doesn’t have here. Sony did in the 80’s with Akio Morita. Apple has had a pretty good track run of successful products especially in the last ten years and have sold many devices. They are an ubiquitous name and have a custom tailored experience, from the store right down to the box. Apple clearly influences Sony and vice versa. I will admit one of my favorite devices of all time is an iPhone, because it created a world of connectedness I’d never experienced in my life.

    When I think of consumers who usually choose Sony, they appreciate the quality the brand name usually represents and are willing to pay a higher price. Sony attracts people because they have beautiful hardware design, innovative features, but also have some competitively priced products in many areas of electronics. Most of their devices are top tier quality, especially with things such as HD, Audio, and so forth. Some people have had bad experiences with Sony products, but on the overall scale of things it has been a company that delivers quality.

    Just like Apple, Sony is an ubiquitous name and has a custom tailored experience, from the store right down to the box. If I had to rank companies that are the most watched brands, sure you can say Apple, Google, Microsoft, but Sony isn’t that far behind. It’s such a large brand (you must also think movies and music) that has so many people behind it.

    Do you think fans growing impatient? If so, can you cite specific examples?

    Sony has turned some fans off in various product categories that was disappointing to observe. Let’s talk about gaming.

    After commanding the market for so long with the PS2, Sony makes a successor. The PS3 was very expensive at launch, had a bunch of revisions, and was built at a cost for a long time. While Sony is trying to sell the PS3, Nintendo blew up because they offered an innovative controller with the Wii and it was relatively low cost and easy to use, therefore attracting the everyday person. That’s the pinnacle of strategy in this category – when women, old people, and all those other genres of people who usually don’t spend money on gaming start to do so.

    Those who didn’t want to pay the high price for the PS3, wanted more complexity and advanced graphics than the Wii, chose the XBOX360. Microsoft stole so many consumers from Sony it’s absurd – if you had said that to me at the peak of the PS2’s success it would have been hysterical. But Microsoft did just that by offering a lower priced system first with capabilities that made it seem on par with what Sony was trying to offer, even though the PS3 is far more advanced. But the 360 had just enough going for it in the overall experience to entice the advanced consumer Sony was seeking. The consumer who was tired of waiting for whatever was stopping them from choosing the PS3.

    You mentioned the whole Wii/Xbox juggernaut stealing momentum from the PS3. What about the proprietary format issue…that seemed to be a huge turnoff for fans. Do you think they’re over that?

    I don’t think many people view Blu-ray has a proprietary format these days since it has become so mainstream. There are still many people who use DVD. Those who choose to embrace the splendors of HD either see it in a theater, business (bar, restaurant, etc), Blu-ray and HD content from the Internet, or their content provider (cable, satellite, etc). This is pretty much the accepted landscape of the HD world.

    The only reason I feel Blu-ray was ever viewed as proprietary is because of the rocky start it had competiting with HD DVD, where it was an object of slander and still in the stage of forming alliances. There was also the issue of cost at the beginning – everything associated with it was expensive and the US economy was tumbling. Fast forward to 2010, where the economy is improving. Consumers can enjoy enormous games are on 25-50GB discs, backed by a huge network infrastructure (e.g. MAG).

    I just don’t get how someone can use a system that has games where you have to change discs – wouldn’t you rather have it all on one? Final Fantasy XIII will have 3 DVD discs on the XBOX, and only require one Blu-ray disc for the PS3. I think the power of that fact will begin to resonate in consumers as games become larger and more complex.

    Does the idea of a Sony fanboy really exist anymore?

    Absolutely. I meet them all the time on PlayStation Network in games, talk to them on Twitter, see them in comments on technology blogs, watch them proudly talk about their products in forums, or the explosive traffic Sony Insider has received, and so forth. Most of the people working for Sony, not only in electronics, but in other areas are “fanboys.” There are also many “fangirls.” They love what they do. I don’t think I’ve ever met one person working at Sony who was miserable – they love the brand, and want they genuinely want the consumer to have the best experience possible. I see nothing but total dedication with those people, of which you would see only in successful business environments.

    I also get a sense, just in reading the comments on a lot of message boards today regarding these new products Sony will apparently launch soon, that there are a lot of people who want to be excited but are sort of cautious because they’ve been hurt before by things from Sony that didn’t pan out. Do you agree that there’s that feeling out there among fans?

    There is definitely that feeling of skepticism with Sony products in the online world. There have been some memorable, high profile slips, such as Minidisc, ATRAC, SACD, Connect Music Service, or more recently the mediocre success of the PSP Go amongst other examples. Consumers have the right to be weary – Sony makes huge gambles with their innovations, hoping that they will take off and become mainstream. The general feeling is that when Sony launched a product in the past (specifically the 90’s and early ’00’s), it could do so much, but generally was lacking a few key features and was generally more successful in an environment with only other Sony products. It was like that for a long time. Things have changed greatly though – a good example of this is that nearly all of Sony’s 2010 digital imaging products have slots for Memory Stick Duo and SD cards.

    It took Sony a while, but they are getting it. Offer as much choice as possible.

    If you look at their products for 2010 and the general strategy for the coming years it seems to me that Sony is playing things the right way now. As for regaining trust, only the consumer can make that choice. But I believe many people still feel Sony, despite its errors, is a very trustworthy brand.

  • Are Washington DC Insiders Manipulating InTrade To Manufacture Momentum For Healthcare Reform?

    Pelosi Medicare

    This will be the last post of the day we write about the InTrade health care reform contract, but we introduce one additional angle on this story.

    The theory has been raised — most directly to us by Twitter user @fleckman — that the surge does not represent the view of insiders (that it’s going to pass) but rather it represents an attempt on the part of DC insiders to bid up the market and create a sense of inevitability.

    There’s some logic to it: the contract goes up, we write about it, Krugman writes about it, and suddenly everyone agrees that it has momentum.

    But, is InTrade really influential enough to frome the debate? Maybe not generally, but here’s how a Washington DC observer explained it to us:

    Nancy Pelosi goes to Joe Freshman, D-Wherever, says, this bill is going to pass, you are going to get blamed for it because you voted for it last time. It’s not like you can beat it and make it go away, because it is going to pass. You vote nay, you get blamed, I give you nothing. You vote Yeah, it passes by 4 votes, you weren’t the deciding vote, you also get pork on which to run.

    Or, if that’s too strong:

    can Nancy Pelosi convince Joe Freshman that inTrade matters? seems unlikely to me but if PhRMA is considering bailing (they did fire Tauzin, after all), inTrade might keep more lobbyists in line

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