Author: Serkadis

  • Mercedes-Benz F800 Style will inspire front-end design for future models

    Speaking to the media at the launch of the new F800 Style study, Mercedes-Benz’s design boss Gorden Wagener said that all future models will have their styling inspired by the new concept. He said most of the styling inspiration will be apparent at the front end of all future Mercedes models, starting with this year with the new CLS-Class.

    Wagener also said that all future models will come with LED daytime lights as standard, however, the light’s “expression” will not be aggressive.

    When asked by AutoCar what elements of the F800’s design will make production? Wagener said: “the front end shows our new brand face. All future models will get this and there will be a full alphabet of Mercedes cars with this front.”

    Click here for pricing on the 2010 Mercedes-Benz CLS.

    He also said that there will be a more standardized styling with the interiors as well.

    “There will be family recognition in our interiors and things like the F800’s centre console and wraparound dash will make production in future Mercedes,” Wagener said “You can see the F800’s interior in a C-class.”

    The new Mercedes-Benz F800 Style Concept, which hints at the next-generation CLS, will debut at the 2010 Geneva Motor Show.

    Click here for our original post on the Mercedes-Benz F800 Style Concept.

    Mercedes-Benz F800 Style Concept:

    – By: Kap Shah

    Source: AutoCar


  • Über Crossover: Hamann’s 670 horsepower Tycoon Evo M to debut in Geneva

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    Hamann Tycoon Evo M – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Last year Hamann introduced the BMW X6-based Tycoon, and while the widebody kit gave the crossover a mean look, it was only backed up by a mere 360 horsepower from the twin-turbo inline-six. That horsepower deficiency will soon be resolved as Hamann plans to introduce the Tycoon Evo M at the Geneva Motor Show next week. Under the hood is the X6 M‘s 4.4-liter twin-turbo V8 that only needs a high-flow exhaust system and a reprogrammed ECU to reach 670 horsepower and 576 pound-feet of torque. Hamann claims that the extra 115 horsepower is good for a 4.2 second sprint to 62 mph and a top speed of 186 mph.

    Along with the additional power, Hamann has also developed a revised widebody kit to fit the X6 M. The fenders have been widened 60mm, and LED running lights are now featured prominently on the front fascia. Additional upgrades include lightweight 23-inch forged wheels and aluminum and carbon fiber interior accessories. We’ll have live photos from the Geneva show floor in just a few short days, but until then you can browse the high-res gallery below and read more details in the press release after the jump.

    [Source: Hamann Motorsport]

    Continue reading Über Crossover: Hamann’s 670 horsepower Tycoon Evo M to debut in Geneva

    Über Crossover: Hamann’s 670 horsepower Tycoon Evo M to debut in Geneva originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 22 Feb 2010 14:25:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Windows Phone 7 will have “multiplayer, multiscreen games” Xbox Live games

    dscn0704tIn a 15 min Investor Conference call Andy Less spoke some more about Windows Phone 7 Series. Interesting titbits include that Windows Phone 7 was conceived 18 months ago, when Microsoft decided to do a “hard reset” on their Mobile Strategy.

    They also mentioned that Microsoft considered making its own hardware, but has decided setting strict minimum requirements for their hardware OEM’s will serve the same purpose of creating a large, easy to developer for ecosystem for ISV’s.

    He also mentioned the UI was called “smart design”, and included an architecture for extensibility that would allows OEM’s to differentiate without Microsoft and the OEM’s tripping over each other.

    Its his comments about Xbox Live which was however most interesting:

    "We are very excited about the way in which the platform works across screens, so we have commonality of platform across the PC, the Xbox, and the web and the phone. We provide a new set of tools that makes it easy and very fast for people to develop applications for the phone but also in a way that works across screens, and we’ll announce details of that at MIX. You’re also right to point out that a marketplace is included, and the marketplace will work for applications but also for games, so the gaming marketplace for the first time will utilize Xbox Live, and that enables you to create multiplayer, multiscreen games, and the marketplace will facilitate that, so that it will actually work across screens."

    The promise is of Windows Phone users being able to play games in some way against Xbox 360 users, although of course how exciting the realization will be remains to be seen.

    Microsoft plans to engage developers with evangelism at MIX10, and is believed to plan on using the slogan that every .Net developer is now a mobile developer.

    Listen to the whole conference all here.

    Via Techflash.com

  • Canned beer loses its ‘bad’ reputation

    From Green Right Now Reports

    Photo: cask.com

    Photo: cask.com

    Still think of aluminum cans as the red-headed stepchild of the beer container industry? Bon Appetit magazine suggests that it may be time to take a second look.

    According to the publication, nearly 75 breweries in the United States and Canada have switched their premium beers from glass to aluminum cans. Among reasons cited for the move: Delivering a fresher and better-tasting beer, the versatility of the can, and – yes! – a lower environmental impact.

    The article (“The Beer Can Revolution”) includes the results of an in-house taste test with Matthew Lenning, Bon Appetit’s design director and avowed beer aficionado.

    “I was completely preconditioned to think that canned beer equaled bad beer,” Lenning said. “Tasting is believing, however.”

    As for the can’s advantages in terms of sustainability, the article had this to say:

    “Cans are easier on the environment. They are nearly 50 percent lighter to ship than bottles, which greatly reduces their carbon footprint. Jamie Gordon at Cask Brewing Systems, the Canadian company that invented the craft canning system in 1999 and sold its first U.S. model to Oskar Blues several years later, says the number one reason brewers call him is environmental concerns.

    “Creating a more eco-friendly product is what led (Garrett) Marrero (Maui Brewing Co.) to put his craft brews exclusively in cans, a decision that helped earn him a ‘Who’s Keeping Hawaii Green’ award in 2008.”

    Marrero also talked about the relative ease with which aluminum can be re-used.

    “Aluminum is infinitely recyclable, and recycled cans can be back on the shelf with new product within eight weeks,” he said. “To use bottles, we’d have to ship from thousands of miles away only to ship it back. The cans are locally produced and have a one-way journey. It’s better for the beer, better for the environment.”

  • Tennessee couple to be first witnesses at Toyota’s House hearing tomorrow

    A couple from Tennessee will be the first witnesses at Tuesday’s House hearing on Toyota’s sudden acceleration issues. Rhonda Smith, who reported the incident in Oct. 2006, told Knoxville TV station WATE that she experienced a problem with her new Lexus ES350 when it had less than 3,000 miles on it.

    “I didn’t think the car was going to stop. I can still see the guardrail where I thought it was going to put the car,” Smith said. “Toyota totally ignored us and totally ignored many other people with this problem.”

    Smith said that she filed a complaint with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, which dismissed it in Dec. 2006.

    Toyota has recalled 5.4 million vehicles for pedal entrapment in the floor mats and another 2.3 million vehicles for a sticky pedal issue.

    – By: Stephen Calogera

    Source: Detroit News


  • Cadillac to set up new distribution network in Europe, diesel dead

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    2011 Cadillac CTS-V Coupe – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Amidst all the turmoil at General Motors last year, Cadillac lost a large chunk of its European distribution with the collapse of its partner, the Kroymans Group. General Motors has now decided to make a renewed push into the continent with its premium brand and is setting up its own distribution network to handle sales and service.

    Cadillac Europe will handle the task of marketing the CTS and SRX in all of their various incarnations. The CTS Sportwagon and Coupe will join the sedan following the coupe’s European debut in Geneva next week. Europe was actually intended to be the primary market for the Sportwagon since drivers there don’t seem to have the aversion to that body style that Americans do. Later this year, the SRX joins the party and Cadillac will continue to offer the big Escalade hybrid to the three of four people that are interested.

    Unfortunately, according to Cadillac spokesman Nick Twork, the much-anticipated 2.9-liter turbodiesel V6 that was announced three years ago at the Geneva Motor Show is no longer part of the plan. The oil burner that likely would have done much to help expand Cadillac’s appeal in that market. Instead, Twork tells Autoblog that Cadillac will “be a niche brand.”

    Continue reading Cadillac to set up new distribution network in Europe, diesel dead

    Cadillac to set up new distribution network in Europe, diesel dead originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 22 Feb 2010 13:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Having trouble with your Chevy, Caddy, Buick or GMC? Tweet about it, GM is listening

    The saying goes that if you scream and shout enough, someone will eventually listen and come to your rescue. Mark Reuss, General Motors’ North America president, says that the company is listening better to customers thanks to the connectivity and interactivity allowed through social media.

    In one case, a customer who had been complaining about a rattling noise coming from his vehicle said he couldn’t find anyone to fix it. Reuss eventually dispatched an engineer to the customer’s house on New Year’s Eve to find the problem and fix it.

    Follow egmCarTech on Twitter.

    “Every day our agents search Facebook and Twitter accounts checking to see whether customers who use these social media Web sites are having problems with their vehicles,” Reuss said. “We’ve never done that before. I wish we had because we’re learning a lot about what we can do better. And I know because I’ve made a lot of those calls myself.”

    So, if you’re having troubles with your Chevy, Cadillac, Buick or GMC – you should Tweet about it.

    “Going forward, we’ll be doing a lot more of exactly this kind of listening,” Reuss said. “And the explosion of new social networking tools is playing a huge role here.”

    – By: Kap Shah

    Source: Automotive News (Subscription Required)


  • MTV reports on Telephone

    Though Lady Gaga and Beyoncé’s “Telephone” video still doesn’t have an official premiere date, info about the clip is slowly but surely making its way to the fans. Last week, Gaga gave fans a glimpse of what she will look like in the video, and B recently dished about the clip when she stopped by “The Tyra Banks Show.”

    “I am such a huge fan of hers. We just filmed her video two weeks ago in Los Angeles, and it’s gonna be so crazy,” said Beyoncé, who also worked with Gaga on her clip for “Video Phone.” “I don’t want to give too much away because I don’t want her to be upset, but it’s a part two of ‘Paparazzi.’ She’s just so smart and she’s becoming an icon in her own right.”

    Beyoncé also said she was going to Brazil to shoot the video for Alicia Keys’ “Put It in a Love Song.” She told Tyra that she loves working with other powerful women.

    “I actually leave today and go to Brazil. … I’m going there to work — I am finishing my last leg of my tour. I’m filming a video with Alicia Keys there,” she said. “I’m so excited to work with women. I’m a girl’s girl, so to show that women who are successful can support each other and have a good time, I’m just so happy to bring that message across with Gaga and Alicia Keys. … I learn something from all these ladies.”

    Gaga recently revealed the cover art for the “Telephone” single, which is due out on March 2, on her Web site. It features a photo of Gaga wearing a hat made from a telephone and a picture of a Sasha Fierce-mode Beyoncé.

    There still very few details about the “Telephone” video available. We know that part of it will take place at a diner and that at some point Beyoncé breaks Gaga out of jail. “We die in [the video],” Semi Precious Weapons lead singer Justin Tranter said of his band’s cameo. “And I think that’s probably all I’m allowed to tell. … And, I think, what people have already talked about: It’s very Tarantino-inspired, sort of like violent melodrama glamour.”

  • 100 jobs to be lost as Bunge halts soy processing at Danville facility

    DANVILLE — Bunge North America announced this morning that it will discontinue soybean processing at its Danville facility effective April 23.

    About 100 employees will lose their jobs by the shutdown of the soy operations. The site will continue to employ 185 workers in the other operations there.

    The plant at 321 E. North St. in Danville will continue to serve local farms as a grain elevator for soybeans, and the corn mill will remain open as well, according to Bunge corporate officials.

    Mark Van Emon, vice president and general manager of Bunge Oilseed Processing, said the decision was made because the soybean processing market has more capacity than required and so it could operate all of its facilities efficiently as possible.

    Bunge North America is based in St. Louis and operates grain elevators, oilseed processing plants, edible oil refineries and packaging facilities and corn dry mills in the United States, Canada and Mexico.
     

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • British comédienne performs Single Ladies

    British comédienne Katy Brand is known for being funny and witty. She also has a good voice, as demonstrated by her spoofs of Lily Allen and Amy Winehouse for her own TV show: Katy Brand’s Big Ass Show, on ITV. However, it is on BBC1 that Katy Brand rocked the TV audience: in the ‘Let’s Dance for Sport Relief’ show, she showed up dressed as Beyonce in the well-known video for her Single Ladies song.

  • Heavy Rain staying out of UAE

    One of the biggest releases this week is the PS3-exclusive Heavy Rain. Gamers in the United Arab Emirates won’t be seeing an official release, though, as apparently it’s been banned over there.

  • UK Women: Beyonce has best body

    Beyonce is the celebrity with the best body in the eyes of British women, but males prefer Hollywood actress Megan Fox, a new survey has found. The singer topped the poll among females with 24 per cent of the vote, but one in five men stated Transformers actress Megan boasted the sexiest body and named her as the woman they would most like to sleep with if their partner gave them a celebrity pass.

    The attractiveness study, conducted by Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment to mark the DVD and Blu-ray release of Jennifer’s Body starring Megan, found that as well as being women’s overall body choice, Beyonce boasted the sexiest individual assets.
    Approximately 34 Per cent of men and women surveyed named her as the celebrity with the best bottom, while a quarter of respondents said she had the best legs. Beyonce’s bosom also topped among women, with 23 per cent saying she had the best celebrity cleavage.

  • The 14 Freakiest Serial Killers You’ve Probably Never Heard Of

    We all know of the Mansons, Dahmers and John Wayne Gacys of the world—the mass killers that are media darlings. But for every nutbar killer who are splashed all over the headlines, there are plenty who never make the limelight. Some are from other parts of the world, some from too long ago to remember. But each of them is interesting and terrifying in their own right.

    14. Eddie Leonski, the “Brownout Strangler”

    In WWII, American servicemen were shipped out all over the world in order to fight the Axis menace. One such Private was Eddie Leonski, sent to Melbourne during the war. The war time conditions were such that the city was under Brown Out conditions, lowering the light levels through the darker hours to minimal levels. Leonski used the cover of semi-darkness to assault and murder three women in Melbourne. He was tried at a military tribunal, and sentenced to be hanged; only the second American serviceman to suffer this fate in WWII.

    13. Mohammed Bijeh, the “Desert Vampire”

    An Iranian serial killer and rapist, who had 16 young victims over the course of a year. He was eventually caught and pleaded guilty to the crimes he was accused of. He was sentenced to 100 lashes and to be hanged to death. Presented in front of a roaring crowd of 5,000 in 2005, he was chained up and lashed. A relative of one of his victims broke through and stabbed him in the back. After the lashes were completed, the mother of a victim placed a rope around his neck, and he was hoisted up by crane. That’s right, he was intentionally strangled to death. In the western world, the goal of hanging is usually to snap the neck, leading to a relatively painless execution. In this case they wanted him to die as slowly as possible.

    12. William Palmer, “Palmer the Poisoner”

    Palmer was a doctor and ladies man in 19th century England, who ended up being one of the most notorious murderers of his time. People became naturally suspicious of the good doctor, when over the course of his life, five of his children died as babies, as did his mother-in-law, two people he owed money to, his wife after he took out a large insurance plan in her name, his illegitimate baby, and his brother. You think this would have raised a few eyebrows, but what tipped of the constabulary was when a friend of his who had just won big at the horse races died mysteriously. Turns out Dr. Palmer was a big fan of strychnine. What especially stands out is the death of his first victim: a friend who he poisoned during a drinking competition. C’mon doc, circle of death isn’t meant to be taken literally!

    11. Tillie Klimek

    Tillie found a schtick, and stuck to it. Namely: murderous insurance fraud. She went through five husbands, three neighborhood children, and just about anyone else she could get her hands on. Not only did she grab insurance money out of the deal, she also gained a reputation as a fortune teller based on predicting the deaths of these people. At one point, she was buying a dress for her husband’s funeral, when a stranger asked when he had died. Her response? “Ten days from now.” What a charmer!

    10. The Doodler

    The Doodler was an un-caught serial killer who was responsible for 14 killings and assaults among the gay population of San Francisco in 1974 and 75. His name came from his habit of sketching his victims before having sex with them, and then stabbing them. Two of his survivors even ID’d the guy in a police line-up, but no charges were ever brought. You know why? Because the victims would have to out themselves as gay to in order to testify. That’s right, the homophobia was so rampant that these people were too scared of admitting their sexuality even in order to bring a mass murderer to justice. Harvey Milk said of the whole situation, “I understand their position. I respect the pressure society has put on them.”

    9. Miyuki Ishikawa, “Oni-Sanba” (demon-midwife)

    Ishikawa was a midwife at a maternity ward in Japan. Faced with a system that didn’t allow abortions she dealt with poor parents who had no way of affording to look after their new offspring. So she began neglecting the babies, letting them die of natural causes. Her behavior so disgusted the other midwives, that they all quit in protest. While Ishikawa’s motivations were at least vaguely understandable, eventually she began charging the parents to deal with their children, a move which shifts the whole thing into a far more disturbing category. Her husband and a local doctor were both in on the plan, and helped her fake death certificates and deal with the bodies. When she was finally caught, they estimated she had lead deaths of at least 103 newborns. But, because the deaths were from neglect rather than direct action, she was only imprisoned for 8 years. A year later abortion was legalized in Japan.

    8. Raymond Fernandez and Martha Beck, the “Lonely Heart Killers”

    In the 1940s, these two love birds killed as many as 20 women, and robbed even more. Fernandez would wine and dine them, before seducing them, and then the pair would steal all their money. Given that this was the 40s, the ladies were far too embarrassed about hooking up with a stranger to go to the police over the crime. Beck usually posed as Fernandez’ sister over this period, and did everything in her power to prevent their victims from having sex with her man. While they’re thought to have killed 20 women, they were convicted over three murders, including a small child of one of the women. Both were killed by electric chair at Sing Sing.

    7. Delfina and María de Jesús González, “Las Poquianchis”

    Delfina and Maria were two sisters from Guanajuato who ran a brothel called Rancho El Ángel. However, once they were convicted, it became known as the bordello from hell! The sisters would recruit local women for prostitution, and once they were too old, too ill, or had been raped so often that they were no longer able to perform, they were killed. The sisters didn’t just kill their employees, but also babies, and any client who came to the ranch with a significant amount of cash on hand. When the police investigated their ranch, they found the corpses of 80 women, 11 men and a number of fetuses. The sisters were sentenced to 40 years in prison each.

    6. Micajah “Big” Harpe and Wiley “Little” Harpe, “America’s First Serial Killers”

    While the authenticity of being called America’s first serial killers is perhaps limited, the Harpe brothers were certainly early starters. They were based in Tennessee, Kentucky and Illinois in the late 1700s. It’s hard to separate fact from fiction about the pair, but they were known for gutting their victims, filling their corpses with rocks and then throwing them in a river. They were said to kill regardless of sex, age or race. Equal opportunity murderers, it seems. One story claims that Big Harpe smashed his own daughter’s head in when he grew tired of her crying, and that this was the only crime he regretted. As with most of their lives, there are multiple accounts of their deaths. The tales suggest Big was killed and decapitated, his head placed on a pole in what became known as Harpshead, Kentucky. Little Harpe was caught by the law, and hanged.

    5. Henry Lee Lucas

    Henry Lee Lucas is said to have been the prolific killer in America, who at one point confessed to 600 deaths. The only problem? He might have been entirely innocent. Of his many confessions and then retractions, some 350 were deemed believable by the state. He is known to have killed at least 3 people for certain, but was eventually convicted for 11. The problem was that many of his confessions were given under extreme duress, in horrible conditions were he said he was willing to confess to anything to receive better treatment. The other evidence against him wasn’t exactly clear cut, and it seems as though many unsolved murders were attributed to the man. It even got to the point where Amnesty International launched a campaign to help him, saying “the belief of two former state Attorneys General that Lucas was in all likelihood innocent of the crime for which he was sentenced to death.” In the end, Lucas’ sentence was commuted to life in prison by George W. Bush, the only commutation during his time as Governor of Texas, and the only commutation in Texas since they reinstated the death penalty in 1982. He died in prison of natural causes.

    4. Mary Ann Cotton

    Another woman out for insurance money, but Cotton had a surprisingly high kill count. Over the course of her life, she’s thought to have murdered 21 people, mostly by arsenic poisoning. Her usual scheme would be to get close to a man, kill his wife and kids, marry him, take out an insurance policy, and then kill him too. She also killed her mother and a number of her own children in the same manner. She killed off four husbands, two lovers, and a great many women and children before being arrested. She was hanged, but died of strangulation rather than snapped neck.

    3. Amelia Dyer

    Next on our list of unassuming Victorian ladies who are actually vicious mass murderers: Amelia Dyer! Obviously checkered shawls and hair bows were THE way to dress in 19th century England. Dyer was actually relatively well educated and brought up, not precisely the product of Dickensian poverty and nastiness. She was trained as a nurse, but found a much easier way to make money was as a baby farmer. When unmarried women suddenly found themselves in a delicate condition, they could either keep the baby and spend the rest of their days in shame and infamy, or pay someone like Dyer to take it. For a fee, these people would take in the young mothers, care for them, and then pass the children into foster care—for a substantial fee, for more wealthy clients it got as high as £80, which was a years wage for a laborer. Of course, the profit margins are much, much better if the babies don’t eat much, or just happen to pass away. So instead of giving the children food, Dyer just kept them doped up on opium, until they starved. Man, imagine heroin being cheaper than food! What a world! Since the parents would be disgraced if their sins came to light, they kept quiet about the whole thing, and Dyer kept taking the money. Eventually she even got tired of letting the kids starve, and just started murdering them via strangulation with white ribbon. Far more efficient! She was eventually tried for a single death, but is thought to have murdered dozens of children.

    2. Herman Webster Mudgett, aka Dr. Henry Howard Holmes

    Holmes was a mass killer based in Chicago, who built himself a hotel for the 1893 World’s Fair. While he confessed to 27 murders, only nine of those were confirmed, and it’s possible he killed many more. The convenient fact that he owned a hotel gave him a handy area in which to undertake his nefarious deeds. He owned a drugstore beneath the hotel, and intentionally built the structure in an incredibly twisted way. It was a maze of over one hundred windowless rooms with doorways opening to brick walls, oddly angled hallways, stairways to nowhere, doors openable only from the outside, and a host of other strange and labyrinthine constructions. He even changed the instructions to the building crew constantly, so only he knew his way around. He would then select female employees or visiting guests, and torture and killed them. He had rooms fitted with gas pipes to asphyxiate, or threw them in an airtight soundproof vault to suffocate. Bodies were dropped by chute into the basement, where they were dissected, and sold to medical students; dissolved in acid; or cremated. He also performed illegal abortions, which often lead to the mothers’ death, but I’m guessing he didn’t mind. Holmes wasn’t caught till years later, after traveling all over the USA and Canada, and probably killing many others as he went. Estimates of his actual death toll go as high as 230, and he was hanged for his crimes.

    1. Woo Bum-kon

    Woo Bum-kon was a South Korean cop, who undertook the largest killing spree in modern times. Man, is there any game the Koreans don’t have a high score in? By the end of his rampage, he left 57 people dead, 35 wounded and then took his own life. After a drawn out argument with his girlfriend, he went to the police armory of the village he lived in, and proceeded to get absolutely tanked. He then stocked up on weaponry, including a rifle and grenades, and left. First, he went to the local telephone exchange, and shot three operators so no-one could make a phonecall. Then he slowly and methodologically went door to door, gaining entry because people trusted him as a police officer. He shot his victims in most cases, but in one case he took out an entire family with a grenade. This went on for eight hours before he moved on to a neighboring village to continue. This went on until he had made his way through five local villages, at which point he strapped two grenades to his chest, grabbed three hostages, and blew them and himself up. That’s a hell of a rampage.


  • Rumormill: TVR on the comeback trail with American V8 power?

    Filed under: , , ,

    TVR Speed 12 – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Hey you Anglophiles, looks like TVR is coming back. And really, it’s a shame they went anywhere in the first place, but that’s the British car industry for you. Nevertheless, a flurry of rumors and speculation has just cropped up, all of them seeming to indicate that a new TVR is coming very soon. Again.

    The big news of course is that the new British sports car will have American power. What engine? We don’t know, but it sounds like Russian owner Nikolai Smolenski understands that the U.S. market is the number one market for sports cars in the world, and that having an American power plant under the new car’s look-at-me hood is the easy way to sell ’em to us Yanks. You may remember that the last crop of TVRs all featured completely bespoke, TVR-built engines and were not sold in the USA. Of course, using a Ford or Chevy (or hey, maybe Chrysler) crate engine will save Smolenski and TVR untold millions of rubles in development costs.

    Also new is where the next TVR will be built. Traditionally, TVRs come from Blackpool, UK, but word is that a bunch of TVR parts were recently shipped to Germany where Smolenski has wanted to restart production for a couple of years. Moreover, TVR parts suppliers have reportedly been served with cease and desist notices, as TVR Motors Company (Smolenski’s company) is officially the parts supplier to the UK. However, it seems like these kinds of letters have been sent before.

    So, what’s the same with this new TVR? The reports we’re seeing claim that you can expect classic “TVR values” such as front-engine, rear-wheel drive, two seats and totally bonkers styling. Sounds as if the new car will be showing up with at least 500 horsepower, too. We’re not sure when we’ll see the new TVR, but it sounds as if the Goodwood Festival of Speed is the safest bet. Until then…

    [Source: TVR Blog, Pistonheads]

    Rumormill: TVR on the comeback trail with American V8 power? originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 22 Feb 2010 13:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Content Creation Is An Evolutionary Process

    We recently wrote about Julian Sanchez’s video explanation of how culture is often a more important part of remix culture than the remix itself. That is, the act of sharing an experience with others is often the key to culture, and those that focus on the content alone often seem to miss this aspect of it, which explains why they often seek to limit the ability to share that culture through copyright. Of course, as with any such debate, when supporters of stronger copyright fail to have significant reasoning for how to counter such an argument, they tend to fall back on the “but it’s not art” or “if that’s the type of creativity that we get from remixing, we’re better off with out it” types of arguments. That is, they begin to focus on the subjective quality of the content, not realizing that such content often isn’t directed at them as a target audience, and the people it is directed at, who do enjoy it, really don’t care what they think.

    Julian has now built on that discussion, first pointing out how obnoxious it is to denigrate these works of art, when nearly all artwork comes from similar derivative processes, but then taking it a step further to point out how the creative process is evolutionary:


    Current intellectual property law frowns on “copying” as opposed to mere “influence.” If I write and record a song that is manifestly influenced by the sound of the Beatles, that’s just how culture works; if I remix or reperform a medley of their songs, that’s infringing. One way to think about the distinction is to ask how much mutation of the original work has occurred in my head before I send it out into the world. We can imagine my sitting with a guitar playing “Taxman,” beginning by improvising new lyrics, and gradually altering the melody until I’ve produced a song that is sufficiently transformed to count as an original work, though perhaps still a recognizably Beatlesesque one. I’m free and clear under copyright law just so long as I only record and distribute the final product, which consists of enough of my own contribution that it no longer counts as a “copy.”

    Implicit in this model is the premise that creativity is fundamentally an individual enterprise–an act of intelligent design. Yet so much of our culture, historically, has not been produced in this way, but by a collective process of mutation and evolution, by the selection of many small tweaks that (whether by chance or owing to some stroke of insight) improve the work, at least in the eyes of the next person to take it up. Perhaps ironically, this is the kind of evolutionary process by which myths evolve–myths of life breathed into mud, or of Athena springing full-grown from the head of Zeus. Our legal system now takes these evolved myths as its paradigm of creation.

    In the past, we’ve frequently made the point when it comes to innovation, inventing and patents that innovation is a process, rather than a single burst. In fact, innovation is an ongoing process that never ends. And yet, patents treat innovation as a once-and-done “flash of genius” sort of thing, despite little evidence that innovation ever happens this way. Effectively, this is the same argument that Julian is making, but for content, rather than innovation. And it makes a lot of sense. The problem that we’ve seen with patents, where sticking monopoly rights and privileges into the middle of that process leads to hindering the forward progress of that process by limiting how others can continue the innovation, can also apply to content and copyright:


    The Romantic model of creativity as an individual act of genius excludes the form cultural creation has taken throughout most of human history, and the legal regime best suited to promote and incentivize individual acts of creation on the Romantic model may be quite hostile to the aggregative process of creation on an evolutionary or peer-produced model. The law says, in effect, that we will protect creativity that occurs all at once, in one brain, or at least as the upshot of a planned and organized effort–but at the cost of forbidding the individually derivative elements of distributed and spontaneous creation.

    The point of all of this becomes clear quite quickly, once you think about it. We often have copyright defenders in our comments make a statement like: “please show me any new content that is actively hindered by copyright.” But, of course, that’s trying to show a negative. How do you show the content that wasn’t created? But what Julian is pointing out is that so much content really is an iterative, derivative, transformative process, but the monopoly rights put forth by copyright law effectively hinder that process in the false belief that creativity and content creation is separate from such a process, but springs fresh from the minds of geniuses, without acknowledging the fact that they are merely building on the works of those before them.

    Content creation is an evolutionary process. Stifling evolution through blocking important mutations via copyright law creates a loss for society and culture, and doesn’t seem to “promote the progress” at all.

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  • Battlefield 3 will "blow everyone away", says former DICE CEO

    Battlefield: Bad Company 2 isn’t even out the door yet but hype is already building for Battlefield 3. Interestingly enough, the hype’s not coming from DICE or EA but from the studio’s former CEO.

  • America Just Came Back And Started Beating The Crap Out Of Europe

    boxing-punch.jpg

    Remember when, at the height of the crisis, critics were lambasting the American economic model and praising the stability of Europe?

    Well beyond European sovereign debt fears, there's a simple damning fact for Europe in the recent GDP data.

    As highlighted by the Wall Street Journal, in the fourth quarter of 2009 U.S. GDP growth was annualized 5.7% while that of Europe was just a near-double-dip 0.4%.

    Even if the U.S. economy was boosted by some one-off effects in Q4, the wide disparity between these growth rates implies that, as the WSJ says, 'a few things were done right in the American response to the economic crisis of the past two years, and a few things less right in Europe.'

    One important difference that caught our eye was that U.S. banks appear to be in better shape than those in Europe right now.

    WSJ via Yahoo:

    "Our policy has done more, and sooner, in that direction than Europe has been able to do, or in some cases, wanted to do," says Mr. Mussa [a former IMF economist]. In addition, though the U.S. hasn't succeeded yet in legislating a full change in its financial-regulatory system, regulators' moves in that direction have helped to prod banks to clean up their balance sheets, reduce their leverage and shore up their capital. Data show that American banks have written down bad assets and raised new capital faster than their European counterparts, and have reduced their leverage further.

    Thus for all their failings, the 'stress tests' might have done some good. Stimulus too:

    As a result, financing is at least starting to move more normally through the U.S. banking system.

    And, yes, that stimulus package has added some to growth. Perhaps best of all going forward, one of the complaints voiced a year ago by critics of the stimulus -- that its big infrastructure projects would take so long to roll out that they wouldn't be of much immediate help on the jobs front -- has proved correct. That means there's more in the pipeline to be spent this year than was rolled out last year.

    The tables can turn fast, but right now the U.S. is killing it, relatively. Jobs are still a huge problem. But even on this metric the U.S. could soon be looking better than Europe. Employment is, unfortunately, a lagging economic indicator, so it will look good only once everything else does. Which will still be awhile.


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  • No injuries in house fire on Bradley Avenue in Champaign

    CHAMPAIGN — An early-morning fire in a home in Champaign remains under investigation.

    Firefighters were called to a home at 1205 W. Bradley Ave. shortly after 6:30 Monday morning. Flames were showing through a picture window when they arrived at the single-story wood frame house.

    No one was home and no injuries were reported, and firefighters reported the fire extinguished less than 15 minutes after their arrival.

    A report from the fire department said there was heavy smoke and fire damage throughout the house.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Police seek help in solving armed robbery in Rantoul

    Rantoul police are seeking the public’s help with information in the armed robbery of a Rantoul business Saturday.

    A woman wearing a coat with the hood up and a ski mask walked into Rantoul IGA, 1201 E. Grove Ave., at 12:08 p.m., displayed a handgun at the lottery ticket counter and demanded money from a store employee.

    The robber received an undisclosed amount of currency and left.

    Police said the woman entered the passenger side of a vehicle parked near the west doors of the store. The vehicle then headed west.

    The woman is described as being white with a thin build and standing between 5 feet 1 inch and 5 feet 6 inches tall. She has a large mole or skin mark above her top lip and speaks with a “rough” voice.

    She wore a black coat with a fur-trimmed hood, ski mask and white jeans.

    On Monday, Sgt. Marcus Beach said police continue to search for those involved in the robbery.
    Police are asking anyone with information to contact Beach at 217-893-0991 or Champaign County Crime Stoppers at 217-373-8477.

    “We’re looking for someone who might have seen something inside the store or outside the store,” Beach said.
     

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services