Author: Serkadis

  • Man angry at IRS crashes plane into building

    A software engineer furious with the Internal Revenue Service launched a suicide attack on the agency Thursday by crashing his small plane into an office building containing nearly 200 IRS employees, setting off a raging fire that sent workers fleeing for their lives.

    At least one person in the building was missing.

    The FBI tentatively identified the pilot as Joseph Stack. A federal law official said investigators were looking at a long anti-government screed and farewell note that he apparently posted on the Web earlier in the day as an explanation for what he was about to do.

    In it, the author cited run-ins he had with the IRS and ranted about the tax agency, government bailouts and corporate America’s “thugs and plunderers.”

    “I have had all I can stand,” he wrote in the note, dated Thursday, adding: “I choose not to keep looking over my shoulder at ‘big brother’ while he strips my carcass.”

    Stack, 53, also apparently set fire to his house about six miles from the crash site before embarking on the suicide flight, said two law enforcement officials, who like other authorities spoke on condition of anonymity because the investigation was still going on.

    The pilot took off in a single-engine Piper Cherokee from an airport in Georgetown, about 30 miles from Austin, without filing a flight plan. He flew low over the Austin skyline before plowing into the side of the hulking, seven-story, black-glass building just before 10 a.m. with a thunderous explosion that instantly stirred memories of Sept. 11.

    Flames shot from the building, windows exploded, a huge pillar of black smoke rose over the city, and terrified workers rushed to get out.

    The Pentagon scrambled two F-16 fighter jets from Houston to patrol the skies over the burning building before it became clear that it was the act of a lone pilot, and President Barack Obama was briefed on the crash.

    “It felt like a bomb blew off,” said Peggy Walker, an IRS revenue officer who was sitting at her desk. “The ceiling caved in and windows blew in. We got up and ran.”

    Stack was presumed dead, and police said they had not recovered his body. Thirteen people were treated after the crash and two remained in critical condition Thursday evening, authorities said. About 190 IRS employees work in the building.

    Gerry Cullen was eating breakfast at a restaurant across the street when the plane struck the building and “vanished in a fireball.”

    Matt Farney, who was in the parking lot of a nearby Home Depot, said he saw a low-flying plane near some apartments and the office building just before it crashed.

    “I figured he was going to buzz the apartments or he was showing off,” Farney said. “It was insane. It didn’t look like he was out of control or anything.”

    Sitting at her desk in another building a half-mile from the crash, Michelle Santibanez said she felt vibrations from the crash. She and her co-workers ran to the windows, where they witnessed a scene that reminded them of 9/11, she said.

    “It was the same kind of scenario, with window panels falling out and desks falling out and paperwork flying,” said Santibanez, an accountant.

    The building, situated in a heavily congested section of Austin, was still smoldering six hours after the crash, with much of the damage on the second and third floors.

    The entire outside of the second floor was gone on the side of the building where the plane hit. Support beams were bent inward. Venetian blinds dangled from blown-out windows, and large sections of the exterior were blackened with soot.

    Andrew Jacobson, an IRS revenue officer who was on the second floor when the plane hit with a “big whoomp” and then a second explosion, said about six people couldn’t use the stairwell because of smoke and debris. He found a metal bar to break a window so the group could crawl out onto a concrete ledge, where they were rescued by firefighters. His bloody hands were bandaged.

    The FBI was investigating. The National Transportation Safety Board sent an investigator as well.

    In the long, rambling, self-described “rant” that Stack apparently posted on the Internet, he began: “If you’re reading this, you’re no doubt asking yourself, ‘Why did this have to happen?’”

    He recounted his financial reverses, his difficulty finding work in Austin, and at least two clashes with the IRS, one of them after he filed no return because, he said, he had no income, the other after he failed to report his wife Sheryl’s income.

    He railed against politicians, the Catholic Church, the “unthinkable atrocities” committed by big business, and the government bailouts that followed. He said he slowly came to the conclusion that “violence not only is the answer, it is the only answer.”

    “I saw it written once that the definition of insanity is repeating the same process over and over and expecting the outcome to suddenly be different. I am finally ready to stop this insanity. Well, Mr. Big Brother IRS man, let’s try something different; take my pound of flesh and sleep well,” he wrote.

    According to California state records, Stack had a troubled business history, twice starting software companies in California that ultimately were suspended by the state’s tax board, one in 2000, the other in 2004. Also, his first wife filed for bankruptcy in 1999, listing a debt to the IRS of nearly $126,000.

    The blaze at Stack’s home, a red-brick house on a tree-lined street in a middle-class neighborhood, caved in the roof and blew out the windows. Elbert Hutchins, who lives one house away, said the house caught fire about 9:15 a.m. He said a woman and her teenage daughter drove up to the house before firefighters arrived.

    “They both were very, very distraught,” said Hutchins, a retiree who said he didn’t know the family well. “‘That’s our house!’ they cried. ‘That’s our house!’”

    Red Cross spokeswoman Marty McKellips said the agency was treating two people who live in the house.

    Read the original article from Journal Star.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Residents criticize Olympian Drive project

    URBANA – Although no vote was scheduled on the issue, about a dozen local residents appeared before the Champaign County Board on Thursday night to speak on the proposed $27.5 million Olympian Drive project.

    Most opposed the proposal, contending it would be costly and unneeded and would take about 85 acres of good farmland out of production.

    “The time has come to put this project to rest,” said Janet Scharlau, who lives on North Lincoln Avenue, near to where the planned east-west road would be built.

    “This is a classic case of the proverbial road to nowhere,” said another opponent, Bill Cope of Champaign.

    But a number of project supporters, including Urbana Mayor Laurel Prussing, Champaign County Economic Development Corp. Director John Dimit and Habeeb Habeeb, a member of the local chamber of commerce board, spoke in favor of the road, which would link U.S. 45 and Interstate 57 north of Champaign-Urbana.

    Prussing said the project “is an opportunity we’ve worked for for many years.”

    Habeeb noted that planners a generation ago foresaw the need to improve Duncan, Windsor and Curtis roads on the outskirts of Champaign-Urbana.

    “Your job is not to think about what we need tomorrow,” he said. “Your job is to think about what we need tomorrow and the next day and five years later and 10 years later.”

    The county board, which debated and listened to comments about the Olympian Drive project for almost 2½ hours, could vote in March on one provision of it – an intergovernmental agreement with the city of Urbana regarding timelines, funding and other responsibilities.

    Local officials say it would be 2013 at the earliest before any construction would begin.

    Cameron Moore, director of the Champaign County Regional Planning Commission, said he expects the cost of the project to hit $30 million. Last year’s state capital bill included $5 million for it. The Illinois Commerce Commission is expected to provide nearly $10 million for a bridge over the Canadian National Railroad tracks.

    More than $2.5 million in federal dollars has already been appropriated. A local match of $5 million to $6 million would be required, as would $8 million to $10 million more in federal funds.

    Eight of the 27 board members missed the meeting – Democrats Jan Anderson, Lloyd Carter, Matt Gladney, Alan Kurtz and Brendan McGinty, as well as Republicans Chris Doenitz, Brad Jones and Steve Moser.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Woodman Institute Museum

    New Hampshire, US | Museums and Collections

    The thing about natural history museums is that they are usually concerned about remaining ‘up-to-date’ both scientifically and curatorially. This can make finding science museums that have the look and feel that they might have had around the turn of the century a rather difficult thing to do. The Woodman Museum is an exception to this rule.

    The museum was established on January 7, 1915 when philanthropist Annie Woodman, passed away leaving 100,000 to establish an “institute to promote local education in science, history and the arts.” Due to this expansiveness the museum has an eclectic collection, among it “egg collections in old glass cases with hand typed labels; taxidermied animals; a room full of old dolls; pinned butterflies; oyster jugs; and other local history items.” It is the natural history items that are particularly delightful today.

    Among the scientific items are the largest American rock and mineral collection north of Boston, a ten foot stuffed polar bear from the Arctic (actually a later edition shot in 1969 on an ice floe near Siberia), an old piano made with genuine ivory keys, a 37 pound lobster, a large green sea turtle, a “man-killing, bi-valve clam from Australia,” a collection of stuffed birds, exhibits of “shells, fish and reptiles, a moose, a polar bear, alligator, hippopotamus” a four legged chicken, a two headed snake, and (somewhat sadly), the last cougar to be killed in New Hampshire, shot in 1853.

    Spanning four buildings the non-natural history items include a complete early garrison log cabin set up inside another building, the “saddle in which President Abraham Lincoln rode to review troops shortly before his assassination,” numerous war relics dating back to the revolution, an old 13 star American flag, and “a set of samurai armor a Japanese delegate to the 1905 Portsmouth Peace Conference (Treaty of Portsmouth) gave to a waiter at the Hotel Wentworth.”

    A museum of a museum, stepping into the Woodman Institute Museum, is like walking a hundred years back in time.

  • New Parkland program educates science teachers

    CHAMPAIGN — While Jennifer Smith’s eighth-grade students at Monticello Middle School are learning about the nervous system, the circulatory system and water quality in science class this year, Smith has been learning as well.

    The science teacher took an online class in genetics last fall from Parkland College, and this semester she is learning about biotechnology.

    She is one of a handful of teachers who are participating in a new project at Parkland, a science-education seminar for K-12 teachers.

    The goal is for teachers to increase their knowledge of a particular area of science and to help with curriculum development in the natural sciences.

    Teachers in the seminar can enroll in any natural-science course and get a tuition waiver for three credit hours per semester. They also enroll in a seminar course that requires them to develop a unit of study for their students.

    “I just wanted to find a way, first of all, to network with other teachers and get ideas and feedback from them, and strengthen my own background in areas we’re trying to build up in our curriculum here,” Smith said.

    She hoped to learn how to structure a unit of study better and see what other teachers were doing.

    She’s modified her lessons on genetics and biotechnology, adding more hands-on activities and more technology, including a cloning activity students can do online.

    “I’m interested in seeing how it will work this year,” Smith said of the revised lessons.

    She expects to see a difference in how her students react.

    “Part of it is, I’m going to be a lot more confident in teaching because I know a lot more now,” she said.

    That’s the aim of the seminar.

    It was created by Christina Beatty and Sheryl Drake, both chemistry teachers at Parkland who formerly taught in small school districts.

    The two applied for and received a one-year grant through Parkland for the project.

    Most of Parkland’s science courses are online, which makes it easier for teachers to take them, particularly during the school year. All of the teachers in the seminar so far have taken their courses online.

    Smith was one of two teachers in the seminar last fall, and she’s participating again this spring, along with two other teachers. Beatty said she and Drake expect a larger enrollment in the summer, when teachers aren’t in the classroom.

    The seminar was funded for up to 20 teachers this year. There are 15 spots available for the summer, but several are already filled.

    While the seminar is open to any teacher, Drake said it is especially helpful to teachers in small districts, who might be the only science instructors in their building and thus have to teach every field of science, including those outside their particular area of expertise.

    It is also aimed at teachers who are teaching a new integrated class or a topic outside their field of specialty. The teachers are able to learn new things, or refresh their knowledge of a particular field, she and Beatty said.

    “We’re wanting to give them the opportunity to know more,” Drake said.

    “And enhance their background and become better science teachers,” Beatty added.

    They also want teachers in the seminar to share their work with each other, so they get not just the unit of study they develop, but also those of the other teachers in the seminar.

    They also collaborate by critiquing each other’s work.

    Beatty said she and Drake wanted to make the seminar as open-ended as possible for teachers to develop materials they think will be most useful.

    “They’re the experts in their classrooms,” Beatty said.

    Smith tells her students about her Parkland science classes.

    “They asked how I know so much about (science),” she said. “I told them, ‘I’m taking classes just like you’re taking classes, so I can answer your questions.’

    “It’s important for students to see me as a learner too,” Smith continued. “Teachers don’t stop learning, and I think it’s important to share that with them.”

    How to apply:

    Parkland College’s Science Education Seminar is open to any K-12 teachers. Those living in or teaching in Parkland’s district are eligible for a tuition waiver.

    Those living in or teaching outside the district can participate, but they will be charged in-district tuition rates for the natural-science course they take.

    Parkland is looking for participants for the summer session.

    For information about the Science Education Seminar, or to apply, see the Web site at natsci.parkland.edu/scied or call 217-351-2285.

    There are 15 spots available for the summer, but several have already been filled.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Inquest verdict in two cases: homicide

    URBANA — An Urbana man found dead in his home in September was a homicide victim, a Champaign County coroner’s jury has ruled.

    But no one has been arrested in connection with the death of Richard D. Combs, 43, who lived in an apartment at 1703 E. Florida Ave.

    Urbana police detective Matt Quinley testified that Mr. Combs’ girlfriend arrived home from work about 8:20 a.m. on Sept. 3 and found him in the entryway to their apartment, just behind the door. Quinley said he had multiple injuries to his face and mouth and that the apartment had been ransacked.

    Champaign County Coroner Duane Northrup said an autopsy showed Mr. Combs died of a heart attack with a contributing factor being stress due to an assault.

    Quinley said Mr. Combs’ car had also been stolen. It was recovered four days later in the 1500 block of Kiler Drive in Champaign.

    Police found grocery bags with frozen food items on the floor near Mr. Combs, leading them to believe that whoever struggled with him was waiting inside the apartment when he arrived.

    In another inquest concerning an unsolved death, jurors ruled the death of Holly Cassano, 22, of Mahomet, also to be a homicide.

    Ms. Cassano was found on Nov. 2 in her mobile home by her mother about 10:30 a.m. She was the victim of multiple stab wounds.

    Champaign County sheriff’s investigator David Sherrick said simply that there were signs of a struggle in the home but declined to give many details because of the ongoing investigation.

    No weapon was found and there was no evidence of forced entry to her home on DuPage Street, Sherrick said. No one has been arrested for her murder.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • New charges for driver of van that killed girl

    Charges were upgraded Thursday afternoon for an Englewood man who drove a van that fatally struck a 6-year-old girl and critically wounded her aunt Tuesday night on the South Side.

    Eddie Lumpkin, 48, was driving a vehicle that struck a girl and her aunt in the 7300 block of South Ashland Avenue about 6:35 p.m. Tuesday, police said.

    Lumpkin, of the 7300 block of South Damen Avenue, was initially cited for DUI, not having insurance, failing to carry a drivers license, failing to reduce speed, negligent driving and striking a pedestrian in the road, police News Affairs Officer Laura Kubiak said Wednesday.

    As of 2:40 p.m. Thursday, Lumpkin was additionally charged with two felony counts of aggravated DUI and one count of reckless homicide, according to a release from News Affairs. He was also cited with transporting liquor in the vehicle.

    Jada Washington, 6, of the 1400 block of West 73rd Street, was pronounced dead at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the University of Chicago Comer Childrens Hospital, according to the Cook County medical examiners office.

    An autopsy Wednesday found the girl died of cervical injuries from a minivan striking her and her death was ruled an accident, the medical examiner’s office said.

    Jadas 21-year-old aunt was taken to Advocate Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn in critical condition, police said. Fire Media Affairs Director Larry Langford said the woman suffered multiple fractures.

    Langford said the van appeared to strike the two as they crossed the street. When emergency crews arrived, the driver and van were still on the scene in the middle of the block.

    Lumpkin will appear for a bond hearing Friday.

    The police Major Accident Investigation Unit are investigating.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • 4 firefighters injured in S. Side backdraft

    Four firefighters were injured in a backdraft while battling a blaze Thursday afternoon in Chicago’s Back of the Yards neighborhood.

    Three firefighters were taken to Holy Cross Hospital and one was taken to University of Chicago Hospital after suffering apparent injuries, including facial burns, fire spokesman Larry Langford said.

    They were hurt while trying to extinguish a fire in a 1 1/2-story coach house in the 4800 block of South Paulina Street, he said. The fire was reported about 2:45 p.m.

    The firefighters were inside the home, turning the corner near a staircase when a “classic backdraft” happened, blowing the fire right on them, Langford said.

    It appears the firefighters suffered minor injuries but were taken to hospitals to make sure their airways were not damaged, he said.

    The fire caused extensive damage to the house, Langford said. The cause and origin were not immediately known.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Ubisoft DRM Gets Worse And Worse: Kicks You Out Of Game If You Have A Flakey WiFi Connection

    Last month, we wrote a bit about Ubisoft’s bizarre anti-consumer policy of using DRM on games that requires an internet connection to check in (even if you’re just playing locally). But, it gets worse. As a whole bunch of you sent in (but compgeek was first), apparently it doesn’t just check once to see if you have an internet connection, but regularly checks, and if you’ve lost that internet connection, it will boot you out of the game and you’ll lose everything that you’ve done since your last checkpoint or save. This is a serious problem for anyone who has even slightly flakey WiFi or an internet connection that goes down frequently (all too common these days). Ubisoft’s history with DRM is filled with similar missteps, and it’s really amazing that the company seems to be so oblivious to why treating fans badly is such a bad idea.

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  • The Nazi Graveyard of Brazil

    Brazil, South America | Catacombs, Crypts, & Cemeteries

    On a small island on a tributary of the River Jary in Brazil stands a nine-foot high wooden cross with what seems a very odd decoration: a swastika.

    Even stranger is that on the cross it reads ‘Joseph Greiner died here on 2.1.1936 ” which was three years before WWII officially started in 1939 (a year before the Japanese invasion of China in 1937, sometimes considered the start of the war) and over a decade before Nazi’s began making their way to Brazil, in hopes of hiding out in the South American country. So, what was a Nazi doing in Brazil halfway around the world in 1936? As the cross states it was “a death from fever in the service of German Research Work.”

    Known as the “Guayana Project, it was a mission of exploration and a testament to just how grand the Nazi’s imagined their empire would be. As the report brought back to the Third Reich explained ‘The two largest scantly populated, but rich in resources, areas on earth are in Siberia and South America. ‘They alone offer spacious immigration and settlement possibilities for the Nordic peoples…
    For the more advanced white race it offers outstanding possibilities for exploitation.’

    In 1935, under the cover of collecting biological specimens, Schulz Kampfhenkel (the expedition leader), Joseph Greiner, and another Nazi soldier, as well as many hired locals – described in a letter back to the Third Reich as not being able to be ‘measured in civilized terms as we known them in Germany’ – explored the region bordering French Guyana and sent back details about how the Nazi’s might infiltrate and begin colonizing the country for themselves. It was suggested that the countries already existing Germans, roughly a million at the time, might become the start of what would be the the great South American Third Reich Empire.

    Of course, this did not happen. Greiner died of malaria while on the expedition, and Kampfhenkel brought his report to the Reich. In the end it wasn’t the malaria, or the jungle, that put a stop to the plans to expand into Brazil but bureaucracy, and a lack of interest.’Given time, the plan may be submitted again” wrote Heinrich Himmler who was in charge of approving the plans.

    Today all that remains of this monomaniacal plan is the graves of the Nazi’s who perished in pursuit of it, known to locals as “the Nazi Graveyard.”

  • Graphic testimony of son’s death brings mother to tears

    Jerry Weber died nearly 18 years ago.

    But time has not dulled the brutality of the Aurora father’s final moments or the razor-sharp pain his murder inflicted on those who still love him so.

    In graphic detail, noted forensic pathologist Dr. Larry Blum testified Thursday that Weber died after being shot at close range in the head, neck, eye and forehead.

    Prosecutors described his death as an “execution,” with the assailant pressing the .22-caliber gun against the back of Weber’s neck before firing one of four shots.

    Blum said he could not determine the sequence of the gunshots, but he told a DuPage County jury that the 24-year-old man did not die instantly.

    After Weber was shot in the head, “there still was a heartbeat,” Blum said.

    The slain man’s mother, Karen Bond, seated in the courtroom gallery, sobbed as autopsy photos of her youngest child’s bloodied face were displayed. Weber would have celebrated his 42nd birthday next week.

    Edward Tenney is accused of opening fire on Weber late April 16, 1992, before robbing him of a black leather wallet containing $6, during a chance encounter in a muddy field near Sheffer and Vaughn roads, near what is now the sprawling Stonebridge subdivision.

    Tenney, 50, maintains his innocence. But his cousin, Donald Lippert, 34, testified this week that he watched Tenney commit the murder after the two spotted Weber trying to free his mired white work van from a muddy Aurora Township field. Lippert, also armed, said he gave Tenney his weapon after the other one jammed.

    Tenney is serving life prison sentences for the 1993 shootings of two Kane County women, killed in separate home invasions, including that of dairy heiress Jill Oberweis.

    Prosecutors in the ongoing DuPage County trial are seeking the death penalty against Tenney if he is convicted of murdering Weber, a carpet installer whose wife, Sharon,

    discovered his bullet-ridden body that next morning when he failed to return home from gathering flagstones for a backyard garden project.

    Sharon Weber gave birth to their second child just three weeks earlier. She has not remarried and raised their two sons, David and Erik, while putting herself through school to become a registered nurse. As a witness, the widow has not been allowed to sit in the courtroom during the trial’s guilt/innocence phase.

    Lippert received an 80-year prison term for his role in the three slayings. He is eligible for parole in 2035 after serving half the sentence.

    Weber’s murder remained unsolved for three years. Police were led to Tenney in October 1993 when they arrested him on an unrelated burglary warrant at his girlfriend’s apartment, about a mile from the murder scene, and recovered one of the two guns they later linked to the crime through ballistics testing.

    It wasn’t until May 1995, though, that police recovered the other gun and Weber’s wallet from other members of Lippert’s family, who lived with Tenney back in 1992 and said they still were storing some of his belongings. One of them also said Tenney confessed to him after the slaying, but he was too afraid to tell police.

    The trial before Circuit Judge Daniel Guerin resumes Friday in Wheaton.

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • TouchPro(CDMA) WMPoweruser Series ROM

    image

    Today is the day for ROM update posts, so this one is asking you “what’s wrong with your ROM.” When released, the TouchPro(CDMA) ROM was reported to be fast, sleek, stable and just perfect. That impression makes this post again, pointless, but we still would like to know.

    We would like for ROM users to comment below and tell us all the issues they have experienced with this ROM. If you ever found a bug or any issues you would like us to fix with the next release please comment and tell us. I would also like to know if their is something special you would like for us to include, tweaks, packages anything and we will consider.

  • Dragon Ball: Origins 2 announced for the DS

    A new chapter in the Origins series is set to unfold this summer as Namco Bandai has confirmed the North American release of Dragon Ball: Origins 2, exclusively for the Nintendo DS.

  • Toyota president agrees to testify before Congress

    WASHINGTON — Toyota president Akio Toyoda says he will testify at a congressional hearing next week on the automaker’s recalls.

    Toyoda said in a statement he looks “forward to speaking directly with Congress and the American people.”

    Toyoda is the grandson of the Japanese automaker’s founder. He had said he wasn’t planning to attend the hearings but would consider appearing before Congress if invited.

    Toyota has recalled 8.5 million vehicles globally to address problems with accelerator pedals and brakes. The executive’s appearance before Congress is expected to raise the profile of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee hearing, scheduled for Wednesday.

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • BREAKING: Toyota CEO accepts invitation to testify before the House Committee

    Last week, Toyota’s CEO Akio Toyoda said that he will not appear before U.S. lawmakers at hearings scheduled for the end of this month. However, he said he would consider appearing before Congress if he was invited. Earlier this morning, Rep. Ed Towns (D-New York), chairman of the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, sent Toyoda an official invitation.

    According to a statement from Toyoda, he has accepted Town’s offer.

    “I have received Congressman Towns’ invitation to testify before the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform on February 24 and I accept,” Toyoda said. “I look forward to speaking directly with Congress and the American people.”

    – By: Omar Rana


  • Floating Mesa

    Potter County, Texas | Outsider Art

    Another creation of the eccentric millionaire known as Stanley Marsh 3, – who prefers the Arabic numeral to the Roman numeral which he find pretentious – Marsh is most know for his Caddilac Ranch creation. The Floating Mesa, one the many odd spectacles created by him in and around Amarillo, is a short drive northwest of town.

    The illusion is that the top portion of the mesa is floating, which is fully realized whenever the sky is the right shade of white. On clear days with no overcast, the line of plywood sheets painted white appears to blend in with the sky behind the mesa. While the Floating Mesa’s illusion only works from one side, the effect is nonetheless intriguing.

    When asked about his art Stanley Marsh 3 simply replied, ” Art is a legalized form of insanity, and I do it very well”.

  • HTC HD2 WMPoweruser Series ROM

    image

    The HTC HD2 WMPoweruser Series ROM was one of the four that was released two weeks ago, and it’s about time for an update. The ROM, when released was reported to be pretty good, speedy, smooth and had very little bugs. It seems the time has come to bring the newest software, Sense, tweaks and enchantment to this beast of a device.

     

    We would like if the current HD2 owners that use the ROM regularly could comment below and report all the bugs, freezes and generally your experience with this ROM.

  • Four firefighters injured in backdraft

    CHICAGO — Four firefighters were injured in a backdraft while battling a blaze Thursday afternoon in a South Side Back of the Yards neighborhood home.

    Three firefighters were taken to Holy Cross Hospital in “stable” condition and one was taken to University of Chicago Hospital in good condition after suffering apparent injuries, including facial burns, Fire Media Affairs Dir. Larry Langford said.

    They were hurt while trying to extinguish a fire in a 1-1/2 story coach house at 4855 S. Paulina St. about 2:45 p.m., he said.

    The firefighters were inside the home, turning the corner near a staircase when a “classic backdraft” happened, blowing the fire right on them, Langford said.

    It appears the firefighters suffered minor injuries, although they required hospitalization to ensure their airways were not compromised, he said.

    The fire was fully extinguished but caused extensive damage to the house, Langford said. The cause and origin were not immediately known.

    Read the original article from FOX Chicago News.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • PlayStation Store US Update – 02/18/10

    Ok guys, it’s time once again for your weekly dose of PlayStation Store goodness. This week’s contents includes a huge selection of Ubisoft Game Sale, the premiere episode of the PSN original series “the Tester”, new MAG

  • Spy Shots: 2011 Porsche 911 Convertible

    Filed under: , , , ,

    2011 Porsche 911 Convertible – Click above for high-res image gallery

    The latest round of Porsche 911 spy shots showed the coupe undergoing cold weather testing, and now our frost-bitten shooters have caught the convertible ahead of its reveal later this year.

    Being a 911, the stylistic changes won’t be revolutionary, but we’ve gotten word from insiders that active aerodynamics are part of the package (think the Ferrari 458 Italia‘s pliable nose), along with a new speed-deployable rear spoiler and a handful of openings in the bodywork to tweak airflow and cool off components.

    Underneath the new platform, which insiders hint will carry the 991 designation (we don’t get the roll-back either), Porsche’s boffins are likely to employ a new electro-hydraulic power steering system to further reduce emissions, with the standard 3.6- and 3.8-liter direct-injected flat-sixes carrying over unchanged. Inside, our spies suggest that the wheelbase may be lengthened to make rear seat accommodations more suitable for fully-formed humans and that Porsche may ditch the traditional hand brake lever in favor of an electronic switch, similar to the Panamera‘s.

    We should get our first official eyeful of the next generation 911 later this year, with sales beginning in early 2011.

    Spy Shots: 2011 Porsche 911 Convertible originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 18 Feb 2010 19:25:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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