Author: Serkadis

  • Chicago Preview: Scion tC Release Series 6.0

    Filed under: , ,


    2010 Scion tC Release Series 6.0 – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Scion has chosen Speedway Blue for its latest Release Series special, the 2010 tC Release Series 6.0 (tC RS 6.0), that should start speeding into dealerships in March. Gotta say, we’re digging the blue a whole lot more than the electric lilac color that they chose for the xB RS 7.0 that debuted in Los Angeles. This latest RS will land at the Chicago Auto Show this week, and will be limited to just 1,100 units stickering at $18,620 with a stick, or $19,420 with an automatic.

    Like prior RS limited edition models, the tC RS 6.0 gets its bespoke hue and a host of other tweaks, including a matte-black vinyl graphic that’s pure muscle car. In fact, it reminds us of the popular Mustang tone and a certain Challenger from the Dodge boys, although we wouldn’t recommend lining up against either of those with this Scion’s untouched 161-horsepower 2.4-liter four-cylinder engine.

    Besides the paint and graphics, this particular RS package also includes bright blue highlights on the seats and steering wheel, a specially tuned 200-watt Alpine audio system with iPod/USB jack, and a 4.3-inch GPS touch screen. More details in the press release after the jump and check out the high-res images in the gallery below.

    [Source: Toyota]

    Continue reading Chicago Preview: Scion tC Release Series 6.0

    Chicago Preview: Scion tC Release Series 6.0 originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 09 Feb 2010 14:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • 10 Real-Life Reasons Why the Primal Blueprint Works for Me

    puzzlepiece2copy 10 Real Life Reasons Why the Primal Blueprint Works for MeThere’s been a lot more talk in the mainstream recently about “caveman” diets and barefoot training. Primal/Paleo/Evo seems to be gaining in popularity and may be nearing the critical mass needed to garner mainstream appreciation. John Durant appeared on Stephen Colbert last week, Art De Vany was featured in Der Spiegel, Born to Run is a NYT Bestseller and my book recently made the top ten Health and Fitness titles on Amazon. Even so, we Primal types still get those occasional looks of derision or incomprehension when we show up at the gym with our Fives on and a bag of homemade jerky hanging off our belt to do a quick 15 minute HIIT session. I think there’s a sense among outsiders that the Grok fairy tale trumps the science within the Primal crowd – that the notion of living like a caveman is a cute ideal but irrelevant in a 21st century high-tech context. Of course, it’s not true; science always leads the way here at MDA and on most Primal/Paleo/Evo sites. But even with the science completely supporting the idea that we ought to emulate our hunter-gatherer ancestors in many aspects of life, I still hear things like, “I trust my doctor too much to give up the statins and start eating fats.” Or “I’m lazy, undisciplined, and I love good food too much to be able to change this late in my life.” Hey, me too! So for those of you who are looking for more detailed rationale why living Primal is best for everyone (including your doubting spouse and your parents), here are my 10 Real-Life Reasons Why the Primal Blueprint Works for Me.

    1. I’m lazy.

    Ironically, I spent 25 years of my life pursuing high level fitness and peak health through hard work, discipline, sacrifice and misery. That didn’t work out for me. I’m over it. Now I just want the best results with the least amount of pain, suffering, and sacrifice. I jokingly tell my ex-triathlete buddies, “I’d rather look fit than be fit.” Of course, the irony is that when you actually do what it takes to look fit (eat right, cut the Chronic Cardio, sprint a bit now and then and lift intensely two or three times a week ) you become VERY fit. And healthy. And happy. And more productive. The best part of Primal Blueprint living is that you can get appreciably better results with significantly less time, less effort and less sacrifice. Instead of the old 20-30 hours a week I used to put in training, I now train less than three hours total a week. I try to play the rest of the time.

    2. I love good food.

    Some people mistakenly think the Primal Blueprint requires giving up eating good food. Nothing could be further from the truth. When I was a college endurance athlete, my buddies nicknamed me “Arnold,” after Arnold Ziffle, the pig on Green Acres. I could eat more than just about anyone in school (including the football linemen). I ate everything and enjoyed it all. But I became a slave to the carbs and to the hunger that they generated every three hours of my life. Later, when I retired and researched the damage I was doing eating grains, sugars, hydrogenated oils and all the other stuff I consumed to fuel my massive cardio efforts, I feared I might have to suffer a lifetime dearth of gustatory delights if I wanted to keep my boyish figure. Never happened. Primal eating reprograms the genes in a way that takes the edge off hunger, while assuring more-than-adequate energy and stable blood glucose levels. Now, I eat as much as I want, whenever I want from a list of fabulously tasty foods. I just avoid eating most things from that other list. Hunger doesn’t drive my life the way it used to. When I sit in a restaurant with a rare 20-ounce rib eye steak, a bowl of butter-sautéed mushrooms and a glass of fine Cabernet in front of me, I never feel sorry for myself that I didn’t order pasta or that I won’t be having the bread or potatoes or rice. And for dessert, if I’m still hungry, I’d really rather have another lamb chop or a bowl of berries than a slice of cardboard cake or mucous-inducing ice cream. Worst case, I can have a small taste of the latter and be satisfied.

    3. I like to play.

    I spent a fair amount of my life training for grueling endurance contests (marathons, Ironman triathlons, 24-hour relay running events). Only just recently did it occur to me that I NEVER really had fun while I was competing or while I was training. Admittedly, I could sometimes get into “the zone,” but that’s really only a temporary zone of less pain. I did appreciate the valiance of my efforts and certainly felt pride in my accomplishments, but from the time the gun went off until I crossed the finish line, I never once could truthfully say, “Isn’t this fun?”  In contrast, today I plan most of my (minimal) training around being able to participate in fun activities later. And while I don’t necessarily see play as “workout time,” it is most assuredly contributing to my fitness. Primal Blueprint training gives me the functional strength and endurance to jump into an aggressive Ultimate Frisbee game, stand-up paddle and surf for two hours, take a 90-minute trail hike with sprints thrown in, play a round of golf, or snowboard for five days in a row. I stay fit so I can play at stuff I find FUN.

    4. I like to sleep.

    I used to feel guilty if I slept too much. As if I were missing out on something that might be taking place while the lights were still on somewhere. Now I get at least eight hours every night and embrace the idea that I am NOT wasting time, but am recharging the batteries and will probably live longer as a result. I think most people would prefer to get adequate sleep, but feel like it’s a sign of weakness that they “need” eight or nine hours. It’s not. Sleep is integral to health.

    5. I don’t like being sick.

    No one does. At the peak of my endurance career, I got colds and flus five to seven times a year. I also had severe seasonal grass pollen allergies. The nature of Chronic Cardio training (all that cortisol) and the obligate high carbohydrate diet (all that sugar) kept my immune system so trashed that anything that was going around was going to take me down with it. And stuff is always going around. The Primal Blueprint works because everything about it is contemplated to support or boost the immune system and not trash it. My allergies have long since disappeared. I rarely get any kind of cold or flu now and, if I do, it’s with no real down time and over quickly. Many people argue that this benefit alone is worth the switch to Primal.

    6. I’m vain (I want to look good naked).

    The Primal Blueprint exercise laws are designed to sculpt a lean, muscled and balanced look without being overly “huge” or disproportional the way bodybuilders can get. It works perfectly for both men and women. I often say here that 80% of your body composition is determined by how you eat. The remaining 20% is a combination of genetics and exercise. If you dial the eating in properly, it doesn’t take very much exercise to optimize muscle size and strength, and to cut the last few percentage points in body fat. Notice I said optimize and not maximize. Think Calvin Klein underwear and SI Swimsuit models as opposed to swollen Muscle&Fitness or WWF cover models.

    7. I like to be tan (vain part 2).

    Sorry, I never understood the porcelain skin thing. I notice the dramatic effect a lack of sun has on my disposition as much as I notice it on my skin if I skip a few weeks (winter sucks – except for snowboarding). Getting adequate sunlight daily is an integral part of the PB as it has been for humans for millions of years. Vitamin D is critical to maintaining good health. As I say in my book, I honestly believe we’ve seen an increase in overall cancer incidence as a result of (ironically) heeding the advice of doctors to stay out of the sun. I think everyone would rather be outside for a while every day if they knew it was not only NOT harmful, but beneficial. A slight tan just looks good, and it’s indicative of a healthy Vitamin D status. Getting sun also improves mood and productivity as numerous studies continue to show.

    8. I’m not organized.

    If you saw my desk you’d probably cringe. Stuff all over it everywhere. Same goes with my training style these days, and I love it. I almost never train with anyone, because I like being able to head out the door on a whim and go sprint or hike or bang off a few hundred pushups. I hate having a set training schedule or the idea of having to meet someone at such and such a time to work out together. Don’t get me wrong, I do train with friends once in a while, but the Primal Blueprint training outline fits my fractal, sporadic, random, intermittent, flakey and spontaneous nature. If I don’t feel like training today, the PB says “take the day off – you’ll be stronger and more focused tomorrow.” Not to be outdone, the Primal Blueprint eating style is also unorganized. Not set meal times, no regimentation, no calorie-counting or portion control. Eat when you want and as much – or not – as you want. Of course, none of this is to say you HAVE to be disorganized to benefit from the PB. If you’re organized, it works that much better. But for those who eschew schedules, the PB is perfect.

    9. I want to stay uninjured.

    Downtime from injury sucks. As I said earlier, I want to get more play time now as I get older. I recognize that my body doesn’t recover from workouts as easily as it used to. I also notice that I have to pay attention to potential soreness a bit more. PB fitness provides a set of guidelines and workout styles that foster balanced, functional strength. It actually focuses on injury prevention and avoidance, while building muscle and burning fat.

    10. I like certainty.

    I’m a skeptic at heart (OK, I’m actually a cynic). I hate investing my precious time, money, energy or emotion in anything I don’t feel confident will yield dividends. It has to be based in science, rational thought and real results. Conversely, I hate thinking that some of my choices in exercise, diet and health may have been wrong (as they were so egregiously when I followed Conventional Wisdom). I need to have confidence that my choices are good ones. The research backing the PB is the most solid there is. Evolutionary biology and modern genetic – and epigenetic – science are proving that we have remarkable influence over how our genes express themselves throughout our lives. Stuff we do and things we eat turn genes on or off. It’s that simple. Intervals and Tabata work have been proven over and over to be more effective at increasing speed and stamina than Chronic Cardio. The dietary science of low-carb is nearly irrefutable now, as more and more researchers and docs begin to understand the true nature of insulin and they rethink the cholesterol hypothesis. Look, there is no right or wrong here. You can eat Twinkies and smoke cigarettes for the rest of your life and you still might reach 90 or 100. But I have never in my life been more certain of anything than I am that the Primal Blueprint way of eating, exercising and living is the optimal way to have the most energy, the most fun, look the best and live the longest. And I know I can do this for the rest of my life.

    What would you add to this list? Let me know in the comment board and thanks for reading!

    Get Free Health Tips, Recipes and Workouts Delivered to Your Inbox

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  • El Porsche 911 Turbo S hará acto de presencia en el Salón de Ginebra

    Conforme se acerca la fecha de celebración del Salón de Ginebra vamos conociendo los modelos que harán acto de presencia en dicho evento. Pues bien, hoy se ha confirmado que el Porsche 911 Turbo S estará en esta feria del automovil.

    Porsche 911 Turbo S 

    Recordemos que este modelo hace uso de un motor Turbo S con el que desarrolla 530 CV y un par máximo de 700 Nm. Gracias a estas prestaciones puede acelerar de 0 a 100 km/h en sólo 3,3 segundos y puede conseguir una velocidad máxima de 315 km/h.

    En su equipamiento, podemos destacar elementos como el cambio PDF, los frenos carbonocerámicos y llantas monotuerca de 19 pulgadas. El Porsche 911 Turbo S tendrá un precio apróximado de 145.400€.

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  • Volkswagen Scirocco R ya disponible

    Desde hoy ya se encuentra a la venta el Volkswagen Scirocco R, la versión más potonte de dicha gama hasta la fecha de Volkswagen. Su precio base es de 33.900€ y puede ser adquirido tanto con una caja de cambios manual de seis velocidades o con una automática DSG de siete marchas.

    Volkswagen Scirocco R

    El modelo más básico esta asociado a un motor 1.4 TSI que desarrolla 122 CV. También podemos adquirir un 2.0 TSI del modelo convencional respecto al Scirocco R de 54 CV.

    En el equipamiento de seire se incluye el control de estabilidad, seis airbags, faros de doble xenón, control de presión de los neumáticos, climatizador de dos zonas, cargador de CD y unas llantas de 17 pulgadas.

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  • Survey hints at Dead Space Extraction HD, Planet Cracker game

    It seems the months before Dead Space 2 may still hold something new for fans of the Visceral franchise. A recent survey suggests that a downloadable HD version of the Wii exclusive Dead Space Extraction

  • State Fire Marshal announces grant money for small equipment to bolster emergency response capabilities

    $2 million will help fire departments purchase small equipment, tools

    SPRINGFIELD — Illinois State Fire Marshal Larry Matkaitis today announced that $2 million in grants are now available to help fire departments across the state purchase small equipment and protective clothing that will enable them to better serve their communities.

    Applications must be postmarked no later than Feb. 20, 2010.

    “It’s important for local fire departments to have the right equipment in order to protect the communities they serve when responding to emergencies,” said Matkaitis.

    “Like many local government agencies, fire departments also are struggling to make ends meet due to tighter budgets. Our small equipment grant program is an added resource to help front-line responders receive the proper equipment to fight fires and save lives.”

    The Small Equipment Grant Program, under which fire departments, fire protection districts and township fire departments can apply for grants of up to $26,000 for purchasing items such as turnout coats for firefighters, firefighting tools and extrication equipment.

    Larger items, such as fire trucks and other vehicles, are not eligible under this program. In 2009, 25 Illinois fire departments received nearly a half-million dollars from the program.

    Only fire departments maintained by a local unit of government to provide fire suppression within a geographical area are eligible for the program.

    In addition, departments receiving grants must have participated in the National Fire Incident Reporting System (NFIRS) for at least the past two years.

    More information and applications for the Small Equipment Grant Program can be found on the Office of the State Fire Marshal’s Web site at state.il.us/osfm or by calling (217) 785-4717.


  • Federal Reserve Behind Greece Bailout?

    Channel: Fox Business
    Date: 02/09/2010

    Transcript coming soon

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  • Alnwick Poison Gardens

    United Kingdom, Europe | Extraordinary Flora

    Inspired by the legendary botanical gardens in Padua where the Medicis plotted the untimely, frothing ends of their enemies, an English duchess created this garden, dedicating it entirely to flora which are deadly and/or narcotic. Behind big black gates, the carefully curated garden contains about 100 legendary killers like Atropa belladonna (deadly nightshade), Strychnos nux-vomica (strychnine), and Conium maculatum (hemlock). Guides explain their deadly properties while keeping ne’er-do-wells and curious children away from the plants, warning them: “Do not touch any of the plants, don’t even smell them. There are plants here that can kill you.”

    The duchess herself is an unlikely patron. Until 1995, she was just Jane Percy, mother of four. Then in 1995 her husband unexpectedly became the twelfth Duke of Northumberland following his brother’s untimely death, and the next thing they knew they had a castle to deal with. As she inspected her newly inherited digs and expansive gardens, much of which had been meticulously designed by the famous landscape designer Capability Brown, she came across an overgrown, neglected section. Formal gardens had been planted in that spot by the first duke in 1750, and it passed through several incarnations until World War II, when it was converted from a place of Italian ornamental splendor into a victory garden of vegetables. By 1950, it had closed. She decided to restore it, not to its former glory, but into a new, modern garden.

    The poison garden opened in 2005 as just a portion of the ambitious 14-acre new gardens. Wanting in part to hark back to old apothecary’s gardens, the duchess shied away from planting healing medicinals and instead sought out hard-to-get deadly poisons. Also included in the gardens are narcotic plants like opium poppies, cannabis, magic mushrooms, and tobacco. Because the danger posed by poisonous plants is very real (some can kill or sicken just through touch), some plants are caged, and the garden is secured each evening behind gates under a 24-hour security watch.

    Other parts of the garden include an enormous multi-level treehouse and a bamboo labyrinth. You may also find the looming Alnwick Castle strangely familiar, having seen it stand in as Hogwarts in the first two Harry Potter films.

    The gardens are planned in several phases, some of which are still incomplete – funds in the millions of pounds have not been as forthcoming lately.

    Join us for a special Obscura Day – March 20th, 2010 – tour of the gardens and learn about the weird and wonderful world of poisonous flora. Inspired by legendary medieval poison gardens, the Alnwick Poison Garden on the grounds of Alnwick Castle is one of very few places in the world dedicated not only to medical herbs, but to deadly plants.

  • AP: Lawmakers investigating Toyota have previous ties to the automaker

    Filed under: , , , ,

    It looks like the Toyota recall mess is going to keep getting messier. Today we’re hearing that there might be some, let’s say, inappropriate ties between the Japanese automaker and the lawmakers that have been investigating its recent round of recalls. The Associated Press reports that the group of investigators includes “a senator who was so eager to lure the Japanese automaker to his state that he tramped along through fields as its executives scouted plant sites, and a congresswoman who owes much of her wealth to a Toyota supplier.”

    Several other members of the congressional committees on the case are said to represent states that host Toyota manufacturing facilities as well, an obvious conflict of interest when you think of the possibility that sanctions against Toyota could jeopardize constituent jobs. It’s certainly not hard to understand why some people might question their objectivity.

    As if that weren’t bad enough, one of Toyota’s executives is reported to be a former worker at one of those federal agencies that’s supposed to be keeping an eye on the automaker. Lead Toyota investigator in the Senate, West Virginia Democrat Jay Rockefeller, goes so far as to say he felt like part of the selection committee when Toyota chose the site for its plant in Buffalo, West Virginia. And yet Rockefeller apparently thinks it’s fine to stay on the committee.

    On the House side of Congress, the investigating panel includes California Rep. Jane Harman, who happens to host Toyota’s U.S. headquarters in her district. Harman and her husband, Sidney, also reportedly own at least $115,000 in Toyota stock. Harman International Industries, a company founded by Sidney Harman, also sells audio and entertainment systems to Toyota, and has earned millions in the process.

    The ties to Toyota fall on both sides of the aisle as well, so neither party is likely to point fingers any time soon. We’ll keep an eye on this part of the Toyota case, just like the rest of the story, as it continues to develop.

    [Source: Associated Press via MSNBC]

    AP: Lawmakers investigating Toyota have previous ties to the automaker originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 09 Feb 2010 13:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Icelandic Phallological Museum

    Húsavík, Iceland | Medical Museums

    The Icelandic Phallological Museum in Husavik bills itself as “probably the only museum in the world to contain a collection of phallic specimens belonging to all the various types of mammal found in a single country.”

    Included in the museum are 204 “penises and penile parts” belonging to 45 different species, including 54 specimens from 16 different kinds of whale, and one lifted off a “rogue polar bear.” The museum notes that it “has also been fortunate enough to receive legally-certified gift tokens for four specimens belonging to Homo Sapiens.” The museum aims not merely to titillate, but to advance the “ancient science” of phallology, which examines how male genitalia have influenced history, art, psychology, and literature.

    Join us on Obscura Day – March 20th, 2010 – for a special tour of the Icelandic Phallological Museum in Husavik, which bills itself as the only museum in the world to contain a collection of phallic specimens belonging to all the various types of mammal found in a single country.

  • If You’re Outside Of Europe, Cheer For A Greece Bailout That Creams France And Germany

    carla-nicholas-sarkozy.jpg

    It makes complete sense for U.S. stocks to love the idea of a Greek bailout by the Eurozone.

    That's because, in the end, any such bailout patches over market uncertainty likely using European money (More specifically, Eurozone money).

    This is a pretty good deal for any investor or company outside of Europe and not under obligation to ultimately pay down European debts in the long-run. American stock market investors should love any solution which uses other people's money to reduce global economic uncertainty.

    Of course, the same probably applies for foreign equity (not bond) investors around the world in relation to America's debt-driven efforts to stabilize the U.S. financial system and economy. The global economy has been saved by American attempts to soften its own downturn, but foreign investors aren't on the hook for higher resultant American debt burdens.

    So if you're outside of Europe, cheer for an overly-generous, France-and-Germany-gouging Greek bailout. It would paper over long-term problems with other people's cash. Surely it's not one's ideal situation, but it's better than many other possible outcomes. For investors in the Eurozone, the situation obviously isn't so simple.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Ron Paul and the Tea Party

    Ron Paul discusses the Tea Party and politics with Rachel Maddow.

    Show: The Rachel Maddow Show
    Host: Rachel Maddow
    Channel: MSNBC
    Date: 02/09/2010

    Transcript coming soon

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  • Newnes Glow Worm Tunnel

    New South Wales, Australia | Fascinating Fauna

    Sometimes abandoned man-made structures turn into dangerous eyesores, rotting away slowly before returning to nature or being torn down. Yet other times, like when abandoned ships are re-purposed as living reefs, or mines colonized by bats, abandoned structures take on a new semi-natural life all their own, like a crab with a jar for a shell. Such is the case with the Newnes railroad tunnel.

    The Newnes railroad was closed in 1932 after 25 years of shipping Oil Shale. The rails were pulled out of the 600-metre tunnel which had been bored through the sandstone in the Wollemi National Park, and the tunnel was left to its own devices. In this case that meant thousands and thousands of glow worms.

    The glow worm is a catch-all name for the bioluminescent larvae of various species. In this case the Arachnocampa richardsae, a type of fungas gnat which creates bioluminecse. Found in massive numbers in caves, the fugnas gnat larvae cling to rocky walls of the abandoned tunnel and hunt with long glowing strings of sticky mucus.

    To see the glowing gnats enter the tunnel during daylight hours, to the middle – it gets dark in the middle where there is a bend in the tunnel – with a flashlight, so as not to bump into the walls, turn off the light and wait a minute or two. One by one they gnats will begin to shine like stars emerging in the night.

    A similar cave can be found in New Zealand at the Waitomo Glow Worm Cave.

    Join us on Obscura Day – March 20th, 2010 – on an expedition to observe the incredible bioluminescent glow worm population that has colonized the Newnes Railroad Tunnel in New South Wales.

  • Comedian Has To Retell Joke 2nd Time, Because Viacom Couldn’t Have Him Sing Four Words: ‘We Are The World’

    Copyright insanity continues. Stephan Kinsella posts an email from Luke Mroz, who recently attended a Comedy Central taping of some standup comics, that is going to be used in an upcoming TV show. Mroz explains how copyright law got in the way and forced one comedian to have to come back out and tell a joke a second time:


    One of the performers was one of my favorite comedians named Robert Kelly. He told a really good joke about how he rarely used the word love because it loses its strength if you use it to much. When his wife tells him she loves him, he shrugs it off. When his father told him he loved him, for the first time in his adult life when he graduated high school, he feigned breaking down into tears and acting like an emotional wreck. While doing this, he feigned being hugged and sang the phrase “We are the world”. He then went on to his next joke.

    After another comedian, the taping ended. We were informed that the crowd had to stay put because Bob Kelly had to come out and re-film a joke. It was the joke I just mentioned. They said it had to be re-taped because Comedy Central didn’t have the rights to the song “We Are The World”.

    Remember, all he did was “sing” the four words in the title once. He didn’t break out into a full rendition of the song. Just “We Are The World.” That’s it. And he had to come back out and tell the joke a second time to avoid Comedy Central (really: Viacom) having to clear the rights on that song — a song that was written for charity. But copyright isn’t stopping free expression?

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  • Project Natal coming to Windows Mobile?

    projectnatal

    Regular readers will know know we keep a close eye on Microsoft’s job postings, and occasionally come across something interesting.

    The one below appears to be a pretty standard Project Natal job post, but then goes off into an unexpected tangent by demanding Windows Phone experience.

    Does this mean that gesture-based UI is really coming to Windows Mobile?

    Read the job post below and tell us what you think.

    Sr Software Test Engineer (SDET) X box Live – Project Natal Job

    Date: Feb 8, 2010

    Location: Redmond, WA, US

    Job Category: Software Engineering: Test
    Location: United States, WA, Redmond
    Job ID: 707967 11095
    Product: Xbox Live
    Division: Entertainment & Devices Division

    Do you love Graphics? Want to take the latest graphics code, tools, and technologies for a ride before anyone else in the world? Want to participate in an effort to create the next generation of technology that will make our customers jump with excitement and our competitors shake with fear? If so, check out the Natal project – The Natal Platform Team is building the components at the core of this high profile project that is a huge part of the Microsoft consumer strategy. The result will be a revolutionary component for rich game and entertainment experiences that will forever change the face of entertainment. Do you have what it will take to help deliver on the vision? Jump in and find out…

    Responsibilities include:
    Design and implement graphics test cases which programmatically measure quality.
    Investigate & implement new graphics testing techniques
    Port existing graphics tests to new platforms
    Write graphics test specifications
    Lead by example
    Own the quality of one or more feature areas in the System Test team
    Identify product defects and track to their appropriate resolution
    Collaborate with feature area Devs and PMs
    Collaborate with partner teams
    Provide feedback on key user scenarios, functional and technical designs, and
    Contribute to overall product test planning and architecture
    specifications.
    Contribute to implementation of automation tools & solutions
    Create and integrate test tools into test infrastructure
    Qualifications include:
    Experience writing graphics code with D3D10 or D3D11
    Experience writing complex HLSL (or equivalent) shaders
    Skills with 3D vector and matrix math
    6 + years of product development and testing experience
    Demonstrable experience of multiple successful product ship cycles
    Strong C/C++ development and debugging skills
    Able to work independently or with a team with minimal supervision
    Excellent working knowledge of test methodologies and techniques
    Utilization and evangelism of testing best practices
    Experience with creating and enhancing existing automation systems
    Examples of successful implementation of solutions to difficult product quality challenges
    Familiar with test-driven development
    Excellent problem solving skills
    Strong communication and collaboration skills
    Self disciplined and detail oriented
    Solid understanding of the Xbox 360 software and system architecture desired
    Experience working on Windows Mobile Phones a plus
    A BA/BS in Computer Science or related technical discipline is required

    Read the full job post here.

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  • Now French CDS Are Soaring, And They Make For A Monster Buying Opportunity

    Here’s an interesting chart from RBS which shows something we haven’t seen much attention to. It’s French CDS spreads (vs. German Bunds), and not surprisingly they’re soaring.

    france

    As RBS puts it, there’s NO WAY France goes bust, but Germany remains intact. While you can imagine Greece or Portugal breaking away, France is simply too central to the EMU to even imagine it having a different fate than Germany. Granted the markets can remain crazy for longer than you can remain solvent, as the old saying goes, but this is absurd.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Ghost Recon: Future Soldier also coming to Wii and handhelds, Xbox 360 beta not starting until …

    Ubisoft has revealed that the recently-announced Ghost Recon: Future Soldier will also be getting handheld and Wii versions. They’ve also clarified the start date for the game’s Xbox 360-exclusive beta.

  • Niagara Science Museum

    Niagara County, New York | Strange Science

    When Nick Dalacu was a 17-year-old science student in Bucharest, he began collecting old scientific equipment. There was plenty to be found in the dusty halls of his Romanian university. “Collecting has been my lifelong obsession,” says Dalacu, now 67. Dalacu has made good on that lifelong obsession in his Niagara Science Museum, located in the former National Carbon office building of Union Carbide, where he displays his collection of many thousands of beautiful antique science instruments.

    Among many other rooms and objects, the museum contains a recreated 1930s medical office, a galvanometer collection, a collection of antique optical instruments, microscopes and radios, and – most intriguing of all – a high-voltage laboratory. Amazingly, almost everything in the museum has been restored to working order so that Dalacu can demonstrate how each item works.

    Part of the motive behind the museum was to display the items in a “Wunderkammer” style, grouped by aesthetic and curiosity, and eschewing the info-graphic, interactivity-heavy style of most modern museums. The aim of the museum is to evoke the same “sense of awe and discovery” that the great cabinets of wonder once did.

    This does not mean the museum isn’t modern; in fact, the museum is entirely powered by solar panels produced by Dalacu’s current company. The museum isn’t just a showcase of antique science equipment either: one can buy anything from a used Flammable Cabinet to an Antique Vacuum Chamber from the museum’s online store at http://www.scienceline.net/index.php/cPath/54.

    Join us on Obscura Day – Marth 20th, 2010 – at the Niagara Science Museum for an afternoon of classic, historical experiments conducted with restored antique scientific equipment!

  • The Road From Ruin: This Was A Global Crisis And No One Has The Slightest Interest In Doing Anything About It

    Matthew Bishop, U.S. Business Editor, The Economist

    The Road From Ruin: How To Revive Capitalism And Put America Back On Top

    • Bishop: This crisis was a failure of ideas.  It was also a global crisis
    • How do we fix the U.S. economy?  We don’t, really, because no one wants to change anything
    • America could go the way of Japan in the 1990s
    • No one is showing leadership, least of all the US.

    Produced By: Kamelia Angelova & William Wei

    More Video: Click HERE >

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  • Spy Shots: 2012 Mercedes-Benz S-Class spotted

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    2012 Mercedes-Benz S-Class mule – click above for high-res image gallery

    We find it hard to believe that the W221 S-Class has been with us for five years already. Introduced to the world in the fall of 2005 at the Geneva Motor Show, the tenth generation S-Class is the biggest, fastest and heaviest of them all – at least in S65 twin-turbo V12 trim. However, like all good things, the W221 must come to an end to make way for the 11th generation S-Class. As Mercedes-Benz seems to be intent on keeping the S-Class on a six-year production cycle, it comes as no big surprise that some spy photographer friends of ours just captured the 2012 S-Class in the heavily camo’d flesh.

    What exactly are we looking at? It’s really tough to say, as this particular mule is draped in a hot mess of panels, shrouds and rubber bunting. The side sills are even missing. That said, we got a taste of what a new S-Class might look like when Mercedes-Benz showed the world its eco-friendly F700 concept back at the 2007 Geneva show. Rumors persist that the future range topping MB will indeed come with shrunken headlights and a more upright grille, but not quite as extreme as on the F700.

    Obviously, the protruding tail lights seen here on the mule are pure fiction, and will miserably fail European pedestrian safety standards. You can also see that the door cuts on the car above are different than the current S-Class, though they are disguised to the point of not really being able to tell. Especially as these are far from the final, production body panels.

    Weight probably won’t fall very much thanks to Mercedes’ mission of always swaddling the S-Class with as much new technology and safety equipment as possible. However, a plug-in hybrid S-Class is on the way, along with a full hybrid, a mild hybrid and all those big bad V8s and V12s we love so much. Expect the new S-Class to appear in 2011 as a 2012 model.

    Spy Shots: 2012 Mercedes-Benz S-Class spotted originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 09 Feb 2010 13:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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