Author: Serkadis

  • Apple Sues HTC Over iPhone

    While Tuesdays are known for Apple product launches, today the company announced not a new Mac but a lawsuit over patent infringement related to the iPhone. The target was mobile phone maker HTC, and none other than Steve Jobs was making the accusations.

    “We can sit by and watch competitors steal our patented inventions, or we can do something about it. We’ve decided to do something about it,” said Steve Jobs, Apple’s CEO. “We think competition is healthy, but competitors should create their own original technology, not steal ours.”

    At issue are some 20 patents relating to the “iPhone’s user interface, underlying architecture and hardware,” though specifics have not yet been divulged, nor has there been a response from HTC. More details will undoubtedly be made public as the lawsuit proceeds in both the U.S. District Court in Delaware and with the U.S. International Trade Commission.

    Nonetheless, the accusation of intellectual property theft over handheld device patents sounds oddly familiar, except it wasn’t Apple making the accusation recently, but Nokia.

    In December, Nokia sued Apple over patents relating to standards covering “wireless data, speech coding, security and encryption,” accusing Apple of “attempting to get a free ride on the back of Nokia’s innovation.” Apple promptly countersued, General Counsel Bruce Sewell also using the S-Word, stating that “other companies must compete with us by inventing their own technologies, not just by stealing ours.”

    If this all sounds harsh, it is. The flurry of patent lawsuits and counter-lawsuits is something of an anomaly, in that companies like Apple, HTC, and Nokia normally use their massive patent portfolios to protect themselves from litigation. It’s like the concept of nuclear weapon stockpiles and mutually assured destruction (MAD), but with lawyers. What’s got Apple and others pushing the red button now is nothing less than the future of personal computing. As portability moves from the laptop to the handheld, companies like Apple apparently feel the potential legal fallout is worth the risk.

  • Peter Gabriel's The Filter Signs Video Recommendations Deal with Dailymotion

    Dailymotion’s video recommendations are about to get better, or, at least, that is the hope of the new deal with white-label recommendations and discovery engine The Filter, the brainchild of British rock icon Peter Gabriel. The Filter will provide video recommendations for Dailymotion’s 66 million international users … (read more)

  • Kat Dennings Picture Gallery

    When you Google Kat Dennings the first thing that pops up in suggested search is “Kat Dennings Measurements” which pretty much sums up why she caught our eye in 40 Year Old Virgin. She’s since grown on us even further in movies like Charlie Bartlett, The House Bunny, and Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist (where she plays something of a Manic Pixie Dream Girl, but that only made us love her more). We think Dennings career trajectory is looking pretty promising, making her a good choice for our next picture gallery.

    Enjoy our Kat Dennings pictures, after the jump:













  • January-March 2010 Drought Reports: North America

    USDroughtMonitor2010March

    PercentLongTermAvgPrecipitation2010Feb

    NorthAmericanDroughtIndex31jan2010

    PalmerZIndexFeb2010

    StandardizedPrecipitationIndex2010Feb

    StandardizedPrecipitationIndex2010Feb_3monthsStandardizedPrecipitationIndex2010Feb_6months

    StandardizedPrecipitationIndex2010Feb_9months

    StandardizedPrecipitationIndex2010Feb_12months

    StandardizedPrecipitationIndex2010Feb_24months

    Images are located at NCDC, NOAA http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/sotc/?report=drought&year=2010&month=2&submitted=Get+Report Image Permission: This image is in the public domain because it contains materials that originally came from the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, taken or made during the course of an employee’s official duties.

  • Bloomingdale needs residents’ help in fighting ash borer

    Bloomingdale officials are asking residents to be proactive in helping stop emerald ash borer infestation in village trees.

    Despite three years of efforts to avoid the pest – deadly to ash trees – workers found infestation in late February on trees along Springfield Drive, between Army Trail Road and Butterfield Drive.

    Ash trees comprise about 25 percent of Bloomingdale’s village-owned tree population of about 2,300.

    But that doesn’t include any ash trees on private property outside homes, condos and businesses. So village officials are trying to educate residents and business owners on how to spot the pest. And they are making forestry workers available to confirm suspected infestations.

    “There is no fully effective insecticidal treatment that has proved to thwart this imminent infestation,” said Michael Marchi, director of village services.

    That is why Bloomingdale wants people with ash trees on their property to inspect for symptoms that include: dying leaves; D-shaped exit holes; shoots sprouting from the tree’s trunk; S-shaped larval collections under the bark; and woodpecker damage, since the birds are attracted to the larvae.

    Damage tends to start at the top and then the borers work their way down, making it tougher to spot, Marchi said. They can live in an ash for three to five years before signs of infestation appear.

    In previous years, the borer was found in Addison, unincorporated Bloomingdale Township and unincorporated Glendale Heights.

    In addition, the village is asking residents or business owners who find adult or larval forms of the borer to freeze the insect and bring it to Bloomingdale Public Works, 305 Glen Ellyn Road, or call (630) 671-5800.

    Ultimately, Bloomingdale is asking people who find evidence of the pest on their property to have the tree removed at their own expense. Village officials say to get several quotes and make sure the contractor has a compliance certification from the Illinois Department of Agriculture.

    “They will know how to properly handle wood product from the quarantined area and prevent further spread of the ash borer,” Marchi said.

    Residents or business owners who live on property larger than one acre will also need a village permit to remove trees. The permit is free, but village officials hope anyone who removes an infested tree will notify them.

    “It will help us keep tabs and give us a better idea of where people are finding it in town,” Marchi said.

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • PG 2 Girls 1 Cup

    It’s missing the weird background music though.

    (College Humor)


  • 10 Hottest Chicks In The History Of Musicals

    If you have to watch something like this a hot girl in her underwear helps.

    (Daily Fill)


  • 2010 Geneva: Alfa Romeo 2uettottanta Concept is really hard to pronounce

    At the 2010 Geneva Motor Show today, Pininfarina is celebrating its 80th anniversary with the debut of a new concept – the Alfa Romeo 2uettottanta concept. The goal of the 2uettottanta was to produce a “concept car with Alfa Romeo mechanicals, reflecting Pininfarina’s desire to look to the future with optimism.”

    The 2-seater spider is also a tribute Alfa Romeo, which is celebrating its centenary at the 2010 Geneva Motor Show with two other concepts and a bunch of other debuts.

    As for the Alfa Romeo 2uettottanta Concept – Alfa says that it is not a pure styling exercise but also a project and research. The main goal behind the 2uettottanta is to get a hold of the spirit of the spider in the configuration, the proportions and the conception of the car as well as in its style.

    “For this project, the Pininfarina creative team were given carte blanche to express the values inherent in the Alfa spider “by Pininfarina”, the values that are deemed to have made the Giulietta Spider or the Duetto all-time classics,” Alfa said in a statement. “To achieve this result, the car was given a particular set-up, with a low centre of gravity and a passenger compartment that is very exposed so as not to isolate the occupants from the surrounding environment. The result is to bring the road “nearer” to the eyes of the driver and to increase the sense of dynamism even at low speed.”

    So will we see the 2uettottanta go into production? We sure hope so.

    Alfa Romeo 2uettottanta Concept:

    – By: Omar Rana


  • Asian Stocks Will Be Deluged By A Hedge Fund Liquidity Surge

    Low Tide Tidal Wave

    If anecdotal evidence is true, then investor allocations to Asian hedge funds will soar in 2010. This would be great news for virtually every major stock in the region.

    Hedgefundblogger:

    2010 is expected to be a very big year for Asia hedge fund allocations. According to an executive at Bank of America’s Merill Lynch unit, Asia is expected to assume as much as 20% of the total global inflows for hedge funds this year.

    “Asia is still underrepresented in global hedge fund allocations,” James Fallon, director, financing sales at BofA Merrill Lynch, told the Reuters Private Equity and Hedge Funds Summit.

    Asia accounts for under 10 percent of total global hedge fund assets at present. But hedge funds in the region rose nearly 40 percent in 2009, far outstripping the growth in their U.S. and European counterparts.

    The reason this is such a big deal is that many Asian markets aren’t large enough to handle sudden inflows or outflows of liquidity as it stands. Each market may have a lot of stocks, but few stocks within each market are large enough to accommodate reasonably-sized hedge funds.

    Thus if major allocation shifts are on the way, major stocks (Asian ‘large caps’) could easily go up this year regardless of local market fundamentals.

    For example, when a big fund is handed millions of dollars and told to turn it into Korea exposure, it usually has to do so regardless of what it really thinks about the overall Korean market.

    So we’re not saying that any particular stock should go up, we’re just saying that if these expected allocation changes become reality then most Asian large caps easily could go up for no good reason, other than new allocations to the region. Just remember not to be around when fund flows head for the exits, and make sure the above actually happens.

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • Hyundai Tucson ix35 Hydrogen FCV Readies for 2012 Rollout

    Next week at the Geneva Motor Show, the Hyundai Tucson ix35 hydrogen fuel cell vehicle is being shown off in anticipation of its limited rollout in 2012. And it is about time for an extreme makeover (Okay, perhaps just a moderate upgrade).

    The Hyundai Tucson FCEV was first introduced in 2004. The vehicle had a top speed of 93 mph and a driving range of 186 miles. The Hyundai Tucson ix35 FCEV however has a top speed of around 99 mph and a driving range of over 400 miles.

    The electric motor of the Hyundai Tucson ix35 is rated at 134 hp and the Korean automaker is introducing various ways to reduce production costs in anticipation of the rollout in just 2 years.

    For instance, inside the fuel cell, graphite is being switched to a less costly metal, induction motors are being used rather than permanent-magnet and lithium batteries are replacing ultracapacitors.

    It’s most likely that the first Hyundai Tucson ix35 hydrogen FCVs will rollout out on the South Korean Hydrogen Highway. Hyundai has stated that it expects a few thousand models of the Tucson ix35 to rollout at first.

  • 25 Sexy Snow Bunnies

    Now that it’s March we can start saying goodbye to Winter. Thank you baby Jesus.

    (Holy Taco)


  • Here Are The Big Movers In The S&P 500

    • S&P Heatmap March 2ndShares of Staples, Inc. (SPLS) are down 6.73% to $24.12 amid reports that profits have fallen despite higher sales. And that’s just the start of the losers.

     

    • AIG (AIG) is down 3.84% to $24.79 after having a killer day yesterday. One guess is that its rally was short-lived as more facts stream in regarding the Prudential PLC (PUK) deal involving its Asian insurance arm.

    Other losers include:

    • CF Industries Holdings, Inc. (CF), down 3.71% to $103.55 a share,
    • Office Depot, Inc. (ODP) down 2.11% to $7.42 a share.
    • Kimberly-Clark Corporation (KMB), down 2.07% to $59.49 a share.

    But there’s also winners in this market. Shares of Qualcomm Inc. (QCOM) are up 4.72% to $37.24 a share due to a dividend raise. Advanced Micro Devices Inc. (AMD), better known as AMD, is gaining too, up 4.51% to $8.58 a share as tech stocks rise.

    Shares of Massey Energy Co. (MEE) are up 3.55% to $46.12 a share, as well as Marshall & Isley Corporation (MI), up 3.12% to $7.28 a share, and Patterson Companies Inc. (PDCO), up 3.09% to $31.05 a share.

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • The HUDDLE

    The chat is now closed. Join us next time.

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    Let’s catch up on the markets and talk strategy. Keep it clean, write in English, and tell us what you’re seeing in the box embedded below

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • These are the best game design schools in the US and Canada

    If you love video games, then pursuing a career in game design might not be too far from your line of interests. If you’re looking to make it big, you gotta have the on-paper creds to make

  • Last two months colder than usual

    People who think it’s been colder than usual in Springfield aren’t imagining things.

    The National Weather Service reports that both January and February have been colder than usual. The average maximum temperature in February, for instance, was 33.7 degrees, 5.2 degrees colder than the normal February. The average minimum temperature for February was 18.5 degrees, which is 3.7 degrees colder than the normal February low for Springfield.

    Since Jan. 1, the daily high has been below 30 degrees 21 times.

    Taken together, the numbers mean one thing – it’s been cold.

    “We might see a break in the temperatures later in the week and into weekend,” Dan Smith, a meteorologist with the National Weather Service said Monday. “But, as far as anything prolonged, it doesn’t look like that’s going to happen for awhile.

    “Looks like another cold front will be coming through probably next Monday, and that will drop the temperatures again. We just can’t stay mild very long.”

    Smith said the cold weather could be linked to a fluctuation in the jet stream pattern. This winter, the jet stream has been in the south and has kept a lot of the larger storms along the Gulf coast and up along the east coast. The jet stream is also drawing cold air down from the north, which is making it colder in the Springfield area.

    As March goes forward, the weather should change for the better, Smith added.

    Normally, the average daily high in Springfield at the end of March is in the upper 50s.

    John Reynolds can be reached at 788-1524.

    Weather so far

    Below are weather statistics for the Springfield area. All data is from the National Weather Service.

    *Temperatures

    Average maximum for January 2010: 27.9 degrees, which is 5.2 degrees colder than the normal January average.

    Average maximum for February 2010: 33.7 degrees, which is also 5.2 degrees colder than the normal February average.

    Average minimum for January 2010: 15.2 degrees, which is 1.9 degrees colder than the normal January average.

    Average minimum for February 2010: 18.5 degrees, which is 3.7 degrees colder than the normal February average.

    *Precipitation:

    January: Total precipitation for month, 1.32 inches, which is .3 inches less than the normal January total.

    February: Total precipitation for month, 2.13 inches, which is .33 inches more than the normal February total:

    *Other weather numbers

    Number of days of heavy rain: January, 1; February,, 0

    Number of days of light rain: January, 4; February, 7

    Number of days of heavy snow: January, 0; February, 0

    Number of days of light snow: January, 9; February, 14

    Number of days with fog: January, 18; February, 16

    Number of days cloudy: January, 13; February, 10

    Read the original article from The State Journal-Register.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • School board expected to OK release of 85 contractual jobs

    Budget issues could figure prominently into tonight’s Springfield School Board meeting.

    The board is expected to approve the release of 85 employees who are under one-year contracts with the district: certified (teaching) staff members, 15 permanent substitute teachers and 54 non-certified employees.

    Certified employees include full- and part-time classroom and fine arts teachers, post-secondary coaches, special education teachers and reading specialists. Non-certified employees include parent educators and special education attendants.

    The board also will discuss whether to approve plans to open the Capital College Preparatory Academy next fall. The school, a partnership between the district and the Springfield Urban League, would first enroll only sixth-graders but gradually grow to include students through 12th grade. It also would place girls and boys in separate classes and require them to wear dress clothes. The program would be housed at Feitshans Academy, 1101 S. 15th St., and the University of Illinois Springfield.

    Some board members said their approval of the academy would be based on the cost of the program.

    “It sounds like a neat program. And sounds like it would benefit a certain group of kids,” said board member Susan White. “My problem is that I need to be convinced there truly is not an added cost, or substantial cost, involved. And I’m not there yet. In light of the current budget-cut situation, I don’t want to be irresponsible.”

    Many of the released employees either were hired late last year using grant money that might not be renewed or to fill in temporarily for someone on leave, said district personnel director Alexander Ikejiaku. They have nothing to do with the district’s recently proposed $5.3 million in budget cuts, he said.

    “Basically, this category describes all hiring that is either temporary, out-of-the-ordinary or cautionary from a funding perspective,” Ikejiaku said in an email.

    In past years, many, but not all, released employees have been rehired the following school year. But cuts in state funding and district belt-tightening make this uncertain for next school year.

    “The district’s experience over many years is that they have been hired back and then some. Keep in mind, though, that not everyone on that list sits around waiting to be hired back,” Ikejiaku said. “Quite a few of them take the initiative to move on to other endeavors … once they know they have a one-year-only contract.

    “What usually happens is that the district would go through the motion of calling everyone on the contract-fulfilled list as vacancies occur, and cross them out as they are either placed or decline the offer,” he said. “After that, if there are still vacancies, we go on to hire brand new teachers.”

    Pete Sherman can be reached at 788-1539.

    Want to go? 

    What: Springfield School Board meeting

    Where: 1900 W. Monroe St.

    When: 6 p.m.

    To read the agenda: http://esbpublic.springfield.k12.il.us/

    Read the original article from The State Journal-Register.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Local residents trying to reach relatives in Chile

    Two days after a devastating earthquake hit Chile, Springfield resident Carrie Martinez is still trying to track down friends and relatives.

    Martinez, who grew up in Chatham, spent about seven years in Chile between 1999 and 2007. Her ex-husband, Luis, is safe in Santiago, but there are still some people she hasn’t heard from.

    “It’s frustrating,” Martinez said. “Every time I call over there, there’s no line available. The only way I can get through is calling a home phone or business phone. If you call a cell phone, the call will not go through.”

    Saturday’s 8.8 magnitude quake was centered in the town of Concepcion, about 270 miles from Santiago. Like several people in the Springfield area, Martinez says communication has been hit-and-miss.

    Martinez said the initial contact with her ex-husband was through Facebook. She was able to get a message to friends in Argentina, who managed to get through on Luis’ cell phone. Later, Luis called his family in Chatham.

    “He explained that there was a boat at the port that got thrown all the way up (on the beach). There were several houses along the water that were also destroyed,” Martinez said.

    Veronica Espina, a professor at UIS who grew up in Chile, also has ties to Santiago.

    “I would say 90 percent of my family lives in Santiago. If it wasn’t for Facebook, I would be panicking,” Espina said. “I’ve heard from sisters, cousins and aunties, my family is well.”

    Espina also has a few family members in Concepcion.

    “I was really worried about them, but then I remembered that in February, people leave the city to vacation. They were someplace else, so they are OK,” Espina said.

    Espina said some buildings in Santiago were damaged by the quake, and an unknown number of smaller villages were heavily damaged. Buildings in those communities were of traditional adobe construction, and many collapsed when the quake hit.

    “(Friends and family members) heard that a couple of towns know for their crafts and artisan markets are completely gone. They don’t exist anymore because of the adobe construction. That’s pretty horrible.”

    Yarela Beltran-Osgood returned in January from a month-long visit to several cities in Chile.

    Beltran-Osgood was born in Chile in 1977 and grew up in Concepcion.

    She attended Springfield High School for two years as a foreign exchange student and graduated in 1996. During that time, she met the man who would become her husband, Stephen Osgood.

    “We have been communicating the best we can with family and friends through Facebook,” she said. “Cell phones and land lines are down, and the internet is intermittent. We’ll be talking one minute through Facebook, and the next minute they are gone.”

    Beltran-Osgood said she still hasn’t heard from many of her friends who live in the Concepción area.

    “We do not know a whole lot of details of how the damage has affected our family and friends,” she said. “My parents still own a house in Concepción and we are unsure the condition of the house. Two of my cousins live in multi-story apartment buildings in Santiago, the capital. Their buildings have cracks in the walls.”

    John Reynolds can be reached at 788-1524. Rhys Saunders can be reached at 788-1521.

    Area couple arrived in Chile only hours before quake

    Springfield native Doug Closter and his wife, Noemi, arrived in Santiago, Chile, less than 12 hours before Saturday’s devastating earthquake.

    The couple had boarded a bus to Vina del Mar, north of the quake’s epicenter near the city of Concepcion, before the disaster struck, said Closter’s mother, Kay Closter of Springfield.

    “They were awakened by things falling off the walls and vases were breaking,” Kay Closter said. “Most of the damage where they were consisted of cracked walls and broken glass.”

    Perhaps even more fortunate is the fact that Doug Closter, 27, is no stranger to crisis situations.

    The 2001 Pleasant Plains High School graduate served three tours of duty in Iraq with the U.S. Marine Corps.

    “He is taking it in stride,” Kay Closter said. “He’s probably thinking, ‘I’ve been in much worse situations than this.’”

    Closter says communication with her son has been limited, but, most importantly, she knows he and Noemi are OK.

    Doug Closter was to start school next week in Vina del Mar as part of the international business studies program at San Diego State University.

    Kay Closter found out about the earthquake about 4 a.m. Saturday, after her sister saw it on the news.

    “We felt very helpless. You don’t know what to do. We didn’t know exactly where he was, we just knew he was in Chile,” Kay Closter said.

    The family heard from Doug and Noemi via email about 10 a.m. Saturday.

    “The apartment where they are has very limited water. (On Saturday) there was no food and water, but they had power and gas,” Kay Closter said.

    Though she’s accustomed to the worry that accompanies military deployments, Kay Closter said natural disasters are a different fear all together.

    “Even though you breath a sigh of relief when hear from them, you don’t know what the aftershocks are going to bring,” she said. “That’s still something that’s out of your control, so you just have to trust them and trust God and trust their instincts.

    “He always seems to pull through.”

    Want to help?

    The Salvation Army has established an easy way for people to donate money to help the earthquake victims in Chile.

    People who want to help can send a $10 donation by texting the word “CHILE” to 52000 via a mobile phone. The donation will appear as a charge on their phone bill.

    The Salvation Army has had a presence in Chile since 1909. It offers social and services including hospitals, schools for impoverished children, and adult rehabilitation.

    Verizon Wireless also has waived all calling fees for customers trying to reach loved ones in Chile. Additionally, the company is working with international relief organizations to allow people to donate money through their cellular phones.

    To make a $10 donation to Habitat for Humanity, text the word “CHILE” to 25383; to make a $10 donation to World Vision, text the word “CHILE” to 20222.

    Read the original article from The State Journal-Register.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Kirk backs jobless benefits extension

    U.S. Rep. Mark Kirk of Highland Park, the Republican candidate for U.S. Senate in Illinois, opposes a Kentucky Republican senator’s stand against extension of unemployment benefits.

    Sen. Jim Bunning, R-Ky., is blocking action in the Senate to extend the benefits. The blocked legislation also includes some highway money and Bunning’s action has temporarily shut down more than 40 projects nationwide, including a $1 million road project in Alexander County in far southern Illinois.

    “I voted for the unemployment extension last week,” Kirk told The State Journal-Register during a visit to Springfield Monday. “In Washington, 41 senators can stop something, but one senator can only delay it. My read on this is the vote is pretty much 99 to one.”

    Bunning says the $10 billion expansion would add to the budget deficit. He proposes paying for the extension with unspent money from last year’s economic recovery package.

    Lawmakers are likely to resolve the dispute this week, the Associated Press reported, but Democrats point to the impasse as an example of the GOP blocking relief to the unemployed.

    “I think it’s a reasonable cost given the pain that Illinois families are going though,” Kirk said of the bill.

    Kirk said he thinks Democrats are trying to “change the subject” away from Broadway Bank, the family bank of Kirk’s Democratic rival for the U.S. Senate, state Treasurer Alexi Giannoulias.

    Giannoulias was an executive of the Chicago bank before he was elected to his first term as treasurer in 2006. The bank, which lost $75.3 million last year, is under pressure to come up with about $85 million in new capital, bank spokesman Tilden Katz told the Associated Press.

    “I think he should be held accountable for the decisions that he made as a loan officer of the bank,” Kirk said of Giannoulias.

    Kathleen Strand, spokeswoman for the Giannoulias campaign, responded that Kirk had supported “the failed and reckless Bush policies that got us into this economic mess.”

    Kirk was interviewed at the Crowne Plaza Hotel in Springfield, where he was scheduled Monday evening to give the keynote speech to the annual conference of the Illinois Law Enforcement Alarm System. Kirk also attended a fund-raiser at a Springfield home.

    Kirk said Illinois has the highest per-capital gang membership of all 50 states and said he wants to eliminate the powerful Gangster Disciples.

    “I’d like to set an 18- or 24-month deadline, line up federal, state and local law enforcement, and executive a campaign plan and take ’em out,” he said.

    Peoria has 20 gangs, Kirk said, and gangs also plague Danville and the Metro East area.

    “There are 68,000 Gangster Disciples – 18,000 in prison alone,” he said. “This is a criminal empire that far eclipses anything that Al Capone had.”

    Bernard Schoenburg can be reached at 788-1540.

    Read the original article from The State Journal-Register.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Firehouse closings complicate fire department response

    The Springfield Fire Department’s reaction to firefighter layoffs is more complicated than simply closing one firehouse one week and another one the next.

    Eleven of the 12 city firehouses are to be closed, one at a time, on a rotating basis in the wake of 17 firefighter layoffs caused by the city budget crisis. The closures started Sunday with Station 3, 801 North Grand Ave. W., which officials originally said would be shuttered for six days.

    Station 3 was closed Sunday, but firefighters were back working from the station on Monday. Because of staffing quirks caused by vacations, scheduled days off and similar factors, fire staffing – and therefore station closures – will vary from day to day, officials said. They weren’t sure if Station 3 would be open today.

    The staffing problems also mean fire rigs might be moved from station to station. As a result, even if a firehouse is open, it might not have the right type of equipment to fight a certain fire, so equipment also might have to be called from a station farther away.

    For instance, two rigs, Engine 3 and Engine 11, were out of service for the entire day Sunday, according to Deputy Division Chief Greg Surbeck.

    Engine 3 normally is housed at Fire Station 3 and Engine 11 at Station 11, 1805 Toronto Road.

    Rigs vary

    On Monday, only a single engine – Engine 11 – was out of service, he said. Station 11 instead was housing Truck 3, which is equipped with an aerial ladder and rescue equipment normally assigned to truck companies. However, Truck 3 can’t pump water to put out a fire.

    As a result, areas covered by Station 11 would not have seen a difference Monday in emergency medical services offered by the fire department, Surbeck said. Firefighting, however, could have been affected.

    In general, in firefighting terminology, an engine can pump water. A truck cannot.

    “The response – getting someone on scene – would be the same amount of time,” Surbeck said. “I guess to get something with water would be increased a little bit.

    “We’re playing business a different way right now,” he said. “We’re trying to maintain our normal response times with the equipment we’ve got available.”

    Surbeck said Monday happened to be a quiet day for Station 11.

    Because of the layoffs, Mayor Tim Davlin’s administration says there isn’t enough personnel to staff all 12 fire stations simultaneously.

    The only station exempt from closing will be Fire Station 1, which covers downtown from Ninth Street and Capitol Avenue. Fire Station 1 also is the department headquarters.

    On Sunday, with Station 3 closed, eight companies were sent to a vehicle fire in a surface parking area beneath the overhang of a building at 621 E. Monroe St.

    That left four engines and one truck to cover the rest of the city, Surbeck said. Two of the remaining engines were relocated to spread out fire protection, he said.

    Fire contained

    Sunday’s fire, called in about 8:30 p.m. by a passerby, was contained to the parking area and first floor.

    The second floor above the parking area consists of apartments that are being remodeled. They were not damaged, Surbeck said. The only resident of the building got out before firefighters arrived.

    It took firefighters about 90 minutes to contain the blaze, Surbeck said.

    Calling out eight companies is typical for a commercial fire, especially one downtown and near other buildings.

    “If you’ve got that much fire in a commercial building, that’s pretty much a standard,” he said of the response. “It’s up to the incident commander, but that’s only a few more companies than what we send on a normal house fire.”

    House fires require less manpower because the structures are typically smaller than commercial buildings and are not directly next to other buildings, he said.

    “With a 100-year-old building, there’s going to have a lot of changes in it, and we’ll be slower to get walls opened up than in a modern house,” Surbeck said. “Downtown, when you have buildings sharing the same walls, the fire can spread quickly, and that’s when (firefighters) want to get ahead of it and contain it.”

    Rhys Saunders can be reached at 788-1521. Staff writer Deana Poole contributed to this story.

    Fire equipment terms

    * Engine – A truck outfitted for firefighting, specifically one outfitted to pump water from a hydrant or other water source.

    *Ladder truck – A truck outfitted with an aerial ladder, but not necessarily outfitted to pump water.

    *Tanker – A truck that carries its own supply of water or other firefighting agent.

    Firefighter vote

    Springfield firefighters will vote today and Wednesday on proposed concessions that could save the jobs of nine laid-off firefighters.

    The contract concessions to be considered by members of International Association of Firefighters Local 37 are:

    *Delayed pay raises. Raises due March 1 and Sept. 1 would be postponed to Feb. 12 and Feb. 26, 20011.

    *Monthly budget reviews. The city budget would be reviewed monthly to see if any major revenue changes have occurred that would reduce the number of layoffs.

    “Fire department personnel will be taxed with no more layoffs or furlough days, unless budget FY 2011 projections fall short of anticipated revenues,” the proposals says. “Should this occur, we will talk about the possibility of further concessions”

    *No-layoff guarantee. No further layoffs, beyond eight, would occur between March 1, 2010 and Sept. 1, 2010.

    Seventeen firefighters were laid off over the weekend. Nine of the 17 firefighters could be recalled if the union approves concessions.

    The remaining eight firefighters would remain laid off to compensate for furlough days that the union didn’t want to take because the union believes furlough days require engine houses to be shut down. The union says it’s working with the city on furlough alternatives.

    Springfield Fire Department firehouses

    View Springfield Fire Department stations in a larger map

    Read the original article from The State Journal-Register.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Apple cant compete, decides to sue HTC for Patent Infringement

    Apple today filed a lawsuit against HTC for infringing on 20 Apple patents related to the iPhone’s user interface, underlying architecture and hardware. The lawsuit was filed concurrently with the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC) and in U.S. District Court in Delaware.

    “We can sit by and watch competitors steal our patented inventions, or we can do something about it. We’ve decided to do something about it,” complained Steve Jobs, Apple’s CEO. “We think competition is healthy, but competitors should create their own original technology, not steal ours.” he went on to whine.

    Apple claimed to have reinvented the mobile phone in 2007 with its 2G iPhone®, which then lacked cut and paste, and in 2008 discovered native applications were better than web pages, which they were pushing at the time.  Over 40 million iPhones using native applications have now been sold.

    Apple ignited the personal computer revolution in the 1970s with the Apple II and reinvented the personal computer in the 1980s with the Macintosh but now only hold around 3% of the computer market world wide.

    Of note is that any Windows Mobile licensee has automatic patent protection for any Microsoft technology included in the device, which may mean the patents either cover HTC implementations of other technology, HTC’s work on Android or that Microsoft will soon join HTC in the dock.

    Read less at Apple here.

    Update: The patents in question.

    • The ‘331 Patent, entitled "Time-Based, Non-Constant Translation Of User Interface Objects Between States," was duly and legally issued on April 22, 2008 by the United States Patent and Trademark Office.
    • The ‘949 Patent, entitled "Touch Screen Device, Method, And Graphical User Interface For Determining Commands By Applying Heuristics," was duly and legally issued on January 20, 2009 by the United States Patent and Trademark Office. A copy of the ‘949 Patent is attached hereto as Exhibit B.
    • The ‘849 Patent, entitled "Unlocking A Device By Performing Gestures On An Unlock Image," was duly and legally issued on February 2, 2010 by the United States Patent and Trademark Office. A copy of the ‘849 Patent is attached hereto as Exhibit C.
    • The ‘381 Patent, entitled "List Scrolling And Document Translation, Scaling, And Rotation On A Touch-Screen Display," was duly and legally issued on December 23, 2008 by the United States Patent and Trademark Office. A copy of the ‘381 Patent is attached hereto as Exhibit D.
    • The ‘726 Patent, entitled "System And Method For Managing Power Conditions Within A Digital Camera Device," was duly and legally issued on July 6, 1999 by the United States Patent and Trademark Office. A copy of the ‘726 Patent is attached hereto as Exhibit E.
    • The ‘076 Patent, entitled "Automated Response To And Sensing Of User Activity In Portable Devices," was duly and legally issued on December 15, 2009 by the United States Patent and Trademark Office. A copy of the ‘076 Patent is attached hereto as Exhibit F.
    • The ‘105 Patent, entitled "GMSK Signal Processors For Improved Communications Capacity And Quality," was duly and legally issued on December 8, 1998 by the United States Patent and Trademark Office. A copy of the ‘105 Patent is attached hereto as Exhibit G.
    • The ‘453 Patent, entitled "Conserving Power By Reducing Voltage Supplied To An Instruction-Processing Portion Of A Processor," was duly and legally issued on June 3, 2008 by the United States Patent and Trademark Office. A copy of the ‘453 Patent is attached hereto as Exhibit H.
    • The ‘599 Patent, entitled "Object-Oriented Graphic System," was duly and legally issued on October 3, 1995 by the United States Patent and Trademark Office. A copy of the ‘599 Patent is attached hereto as Exhibit I.
    • The ‘354 Patent, entitled "Object-Oriented Event Notification System With Listener Registration Of Both Interests And Methods," was duly and legally issued on July 23, 2002 by the United States Patent and Trademark Office. A copy of the ‘354 Patent is attached hereto as Exhibit J.

    Most of these patents, as expected, are user interface related, and while not native to Windows Mobile 6.1, are now nearly standard in Windows Mobile 6.5 and Windows Phone 7.  This should get interesting…

    Update 2:

    Engadget further reports that Apple specifically complained to the ITC about the Nexus One, Touch Pro, Touch Diamond, Touch Pro2, Tilt II, Pure, Imagio, Dream / G1, myTouch 3G, Hero, HD2, and Droid Eris, but when it came to Windows Mobile devices the complaints are all hardware based, due to the inclusion of DSP chips. The Android devices appear to be suffering the full brunt of the complaint, meaning their UI implementation is in question.

    As mentioned earlier, Windows Mobile handsets come with indemnity for the Microsoft technology implemented in them, which likely had a protective effect on those HTC handsets.

    Via Engadget.com