Category: News

  • Profile Lite Nasal Gel Mask With Headgear

    The Respironics Profile Lite Nasal Gel Mask features a softer, lighter gel cushion and forehead pad that gently rests against a patient’s face for a soft, pillowy fit. A simple, 10-minute customization process molds the Profile Lite to the patient’s facial contours.Patients can customize the Profile Lite on their own and repeat the process as needed to find the perfect fit.The Profile Lite mask consists of four parts and just two that need to be cleaned, making it easier to use and care for than other masks.Uses a one-size adjustable headgear that is interchangeable with most Respironics masks.Requires less tightening to ensure a seal, which means better patient comfort and may lead to improved compliance.A silent exhalation port on the Profile Lite minimizes disturbances for you and your partner.1004089 – Respironics Profile Lite CPAP Mask with Headgear, Medium – 1/Ea

    View Profile Lite Nasal Gel Mask With Headgear Details

  • Honda CR-Z: The Most Desirable Car On The Planet?

    The Honda CR-Z is, to me at least, a bit of a confusing car. Honda absolutely nailed the sporty hatchback look, and this car can certainly pass for a contemporary cousin of the now-classic CRX. But while it looks sporty, and it even has a six-speed transmission, the engine output is, well… about the same as a 20 year old CRX. So they went and made it a hybrid. But for a hybrid, it gets sub-par gas mileage. So it kinda fails, for me at least, on both fronts, and I feel like I’m not alone on this.

    Apparently though, across the Atlantic, British car reviewers are raving about the CR-Z. Did I miss something?

    (more…)

  • Nom de Guerre – Small Collar 3/4 Sleeve Shirt

    It’s good to know that Nom de Guerre has finally opened their online shop to the public. As part of their Spring/Summer 2010 collection, various 3/4 sleeve shirts have gotten some looks from us. Two standouts from the collection are the green and blue pieces. Definitely simple and straight to the point. Amazing collar detail and clean construction. Available now at Nom de Guerre.




  • Mayor Gets City Council To Pass Law Demanding Critical Website Get Shut Down

    What is it with politicians and their problems with free speech? Apparently, the mayor of Bordentown, New Jersey, one James E. Lynch Jr., is pretty damn upset about the website BordentownMayorReallySucks.com. I guess you can understand why. Now, of course, when you have critics like that, there are all sorts of things you can do in response. You can respond to the criticism. You can ignore the criticism. You can take legal action against specific statements if you believe they are defamatory. What you don’t get to do is pass a law that requires the company that hosts the site to shut it down.

    But, it appears, that’s exactly what Bordentown Mayor James Lynch is doing.

    Apparently, Lynch convinced the town council to agree to a “resolution” demanding the ISP that hosts the site take it down, saying that it “violates New Jersey’s consumer affairs law and possibly other state and federal laws.” I love the vagueness of “possibly” violating other laws. Now, as the article notes, the site was, at one time (briefly) just called BordentownMayor.com, but quickly renamed itself. So it’s unlikely that there’s any confusion going on these days. Sucks sites have been found to be legal time and time and time again.

    If there’s specific defamatory content, as the mayor claims, I could see a reasonable case for dealing with that (though, in all honesty, doing so would just call more attention to the content). But demanding that the entire site be shut down? That’s going way beyond what the law allows, and no town resolution gets to ignore things like the First Amendment. But, the best part may be the quote from Mayor Lynch:


    “This website has to be removed,” the mayor said. “I’m not going to go down the freedom of speech road. But some of the stuff that’s on there is fraudulent. You want to put information out? Fine. Say you don’t like me? Fine. But attacks on my wife, my daughter? I won’t stand for that.”

    Except, you are going down that freedom of speech road by trying to take down the whole site, in pretty clear violation of the First Amendment. If there is specific content that is defamatory, then sue over that content. Do not use your position is mayor to pass a special resolution demanding a website be shut down completely.

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  • EPO: A Doping Drug Makes an Unwanted Cycling Comeback | 80beats

    cyclingAfter years of denial, Floyd Landis–the cyclist who was stripped of his winning title to the 2006 Tour de France after failing a drug test–admitted last week that he did take performance enhancing drugs. And his confession is causing a stir, partly because he also implicated former teammate Lance Armstrong, seven-time-winner of the Tour de France (Armstrong denies the accusation), and partly because of the particular drugs he fessed up to taking:

    Mr. Landis said in [several emails to cycling officials] that during his career, he and other American riders learned how to conduct blood transfusions, take the synthetic blood booster Erythropoietin, or EPO, and use steroids. All these practices are banned in cycling. Mr. Landis said he started using testosterone patches, then progressed to blood transfusions, EPO, and a liquid steroid taken orally. [Wall Street Journal]

    EPO shook the cycling community in the 1990s, when police raids during the 1998 Tour de France (dubbed the “Tour de Dopage“) found that several riders were using EPO. It looks like the drug, believed to be thwarted by drug tests, has returned.

    Our kidneys produce most of our natural erythropoietin, a hormone that leads to the creation of red blood cells. Since red blood cells carry oxygen, more cells means more oxygen in the blood. More oxygen means longer, harder workouts.

    Anemics, who suffer from fatigue, naturally have low levels of the hormone. Dopers, who take a synthetic version, have high levels, which can give them endurance but also lead to dangerous side effects such as blood-thickening (and thus strokes).

    Regulatory agencies like the International Cycling Union and the World Anti-Doping Agency have developed tests to combat the use of such drugs in competitive sports. For example, the biological passport program, unveiled in 2007, uses repeated sampling to make an electronic record of the cyclist’s natural levels of various hormones, which become benchmarks to test against before a particular race. And since a urine test introduced in 2000 could determine EPO levels, apparent use of the drug declined over the past decade.

    But Landis’s confession forces regulatory agencies to face a loophole that helped riders pass urine tests. It’s called microdosing:

    “In 2003, the athletes started to use a new procedure together with blood doping,” said Francesca Rossi, the director of antidoping at the International Cycling Union, the sport’s governing body. “I know that this microdosing strategy can be difficult to detect.” Working with doctors, cyclists discovered that carefully controlled, small doses of EPO eluded the urine test while still raising their red cell count. Microdoses of EPO let athletes put in superhuman hours of training without suffering the natural consequence of fatigue. [New York Times]

    The debate over how much EPO doping is going on in competitive cycling will certainly continue in the messy aftermath of Landis’s claims. In one allegation, Landis claimed that Armstrong was caught with EPO in 2001 Tour de Suisse, but that officials had covered it up.

    Landis suffered another blow to his credibility. The International Cycling Union said no riders tested positive for EPO at the 2001 Tour de Suisse, disputing comments made by the disgraced cyclist. [Boston Globe]

    Related Content:
    80beats: Can “Biological Passports” Save Sports From Doping?
    80beats: First Hard Evidence: Human Growth Hormone Gives Sprinters a Winning Edge
    80beats: Geneticists Are On the Lookout for the First Gene-Doping Athletes
    80beats: Warning All Competitive Male Cyclists: Less than 5% of Your Sperm May Be Normal

    Image: flickr / whileseated


  • How would you stop the Gulf oil leak?

    by Grist.

    They’ve tried underwater robots, a containment dome, a riser
    tube
    (which has been siphoning up at least a bit of the gushing flow), and relief
    wells
    (still being drilling, a process that will take months).  They’re
    now attempting a top kill.  They might
    still try a junk shot and top hat, and—what the hell—even nukes.

    But, at least so far, total fail.

    So what would you, dear readers, propose?  Share your best—or at least most entertaining—ideas in the comment section below.

    Related Links:

    Obama’s finally connecting the Gulf spill and clean energy. Champagne time?

    The federal government needs to take command of the disaster response

    Will Obama admin allow Shell Oil to do to Arctic waters what BP did to the Gulf?






  • On the Idol Red Carpet

    It really does seem like yesterday, as I remember standing outside the Kodak Theater in Hollywood, more than a world away from Pakistan. It was my first assignment back, covering the new phenomenon ‘American Idol’ and the crowd had gathered around to see Randy, Paula, Simon and the final two…Kelly and Justin. Who knew so many years later it would come to this!

    FOLLOW ADAM ON TWITTER

    Every year I have had some sort of assignment here at Idol and for season nine our coverage has evolved as I will now be standing on the red carpet as we stream live onto foxnews.com. If you want to see the stream, just head to the main page and click on the link. Before you go, make sure you tell me who you think will be this year’s Idol and who out of the top 12 will make it. Is a successful recording artists amongst this group, will someone make it big on Broadway like we’ve seen before? Give me your thoughts and who do you think will win…Crystal or Lee?

    I was in the audience last night and will again tonight. As I sat there and watched the thousands pack into the theater here in downtown Los Angeles, I was amazed at how many people came from all over the country…some driving more than 400 miles to make it to the show on time. It seemed to me Lee had the most support in the audience by the numbers of signs and loud cheers. By the end though, that may have changed. While Lee sang well, Crystal blew it out of the theater. Her voice was extremely strong and on point for the most part and I was most impressed with both, but especially her performances.

    Afterwards I got to interview the top 12 and even some idols from seasons past. I will update you on how those went and also all about tonight on the red carpet.

  • Timex – Vintage Field Army Watch

    As part of J.Crew recent inventory updates, the online shop now has the Timxe Vintage Field Army Watch. According to the J.Crew site: It’s based on an iconic 1940s military style from the Timex archives (and only available here), we gave it a new, subtly distressed off-white dial face, Arabic numerals and an olive-toned watch strap. Like our other version, this piece is built for the trenches: it has a quartz analog movement and is water resistant to 50 meters. Definitely a must have for someone looking for something in the vintage department in terms of watches. Would also go well with the military motorcycle we just posted below. Available now at J.Crew.


  • Sorry, But The Story About China Dumping Eurozone Bonds Makes No Sense

    Earlier today, the FT reported that China’s State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE) was reviewing its $630 billion in Eurozone holdings, with an eye towards dumping them (maybe).

    The news helped contribute to the dive in the euro, and subsequent late-day fall in stocks.

    The problem is… the story doesn’t make any sense.

    If anything, China has been in the market buying euros in hopes of propping up their currency.

    Why? Because Europe is China’s biggest export market, and a decline in the Eurozone will hammer its exporters.

    All of this is reminiscent to when the US dollar was getting hammered, and there were countless warnings about China dumping our Treasuries. It didn’t happen, and it’s not going to happen this time.

    china euro

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Report: Toyota and Daimler planning “extensive cooperation” on fuel cell development

    Filed under: , ,

    Toyota Highlander FCHV-adv and Mercedes-Benz F-Cell

    Daimler began developing fuel-cell vehicles way back in 1994. To date, the company has spent $1.23 billion on the propulsion technology. Toyota entered into the hydrogen realm even earlier by kicking off development back in 1992. With decades of combined experience, both companies have become front runners in fuel-cell technology. Toyota and Honda became the first automakers to put commercial hydrogen fuel-cell vehicles on the roads back in 2002.

    As you are likely aware, Toyota has teamed up with Tesla for development of electric vehicles at NUMMI. Now, a new report suggests that the company may join forces with Daimler (which also holds stake in Tesla) to develop affordable hydrogen-powered vehicles.

    According to the Financial Times Deutschland (as reported in Reuters), Toyota and Daimler plan “extensive cooperation in the field of fuel cells for electric cars.” The Financial Times also suggests that the collaborative work could take the form of a joint venture. The newspaper contacted both companies for official confirmation, but Toyota denied knowledge of any such deal and Daimler was not available for comment.

    Last year, some of the major players in fuel cell technology agreed to work together to promote the adoption of the hydrogen-powered vehicle. Within that group, we saw names like Daimler, Toyota, General Motors, Ford, Honda, Nissan and Hyundai. With so many companies pledging to combine their might on fuel-cell vehicle development, we assumed that some sort of joint venture would emerge. Tim Urquhart, an analyst at IHS Global Insight suggests that a Toyota-Daimler joint venture could benefit both companies. As Urquhart said:

    The high development costs associated with trying to bring fuel-cell powertrain technology to production means that it is a highly logical step for Daimler and Toyota to try and share the costs and their extensive knowledge in fuel-cell technology.

    At this point, it may just be wishful thinking, but we’d love to see a joint venture between the two companies. It would surely help out the hydrogen vehicle programs of each respective company and a joint venture might even bring more jobs back to NUMMI.

    [Source: Reuters]

    Report: Toyota and Daimler planning “extensive cooperation” on fuel cell development originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 26 May 2010 16:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Google Street View takes to the slopes of Whistler [w/video + map]

    Filed under: , ,

    Google Street View Snowmobile – Click above to see what it caught in the video and interactive map after the jump

    Google may have grounded its Street View fleet, but that doesn’t mean there isn’t still plenty to see on the search engine giant’s most immersive of online tools. We’ve recently brought you news of the Street View team taking to the Woodward Dream Cruise, the Lotus test track and Laguna Seca, to name just a few. But as the proprietors of countless unsecured networks can tell you, Google’s reach extends far beyond pavement.

    In the ramp-up to the Winter Olympics in Vancouver, British Columbia, just a few months ago, Google strapped its cameras to snowmobiles to map out the extensive winter sport playground at Whistler. Still feeling the Olympic fever? Planning a trip to Canada’s West Coast? Just plain curious? Check it out in the video after the jump.

    [Source: Google]

    Continue reading Google Street View takes to the slopes of Whistler [w/video + map]

    Google Street View takes to the slopes of Whistler [w/video + map] originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 26 May 2010 16:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • 50 Hottest Cougars: 30-21

    30. Kate Walsh

    Age: 42


    29. Catherine Keener

    Age: 51

    28. Joely Richardson

    Age: 45

    27. Eva Larue

    Age: 43

    26. Nicole Kidman

    Age: 42

    25. Jane Seymour

    Age: 59

    24. Sheryl Crow

    Age: 48

    23. Naomi Watts

    Age: 41

    22. Michelle Forbes

    Age: 45

    21. Holly Robinson-Peete

    Age: 45

    Click here for the 50 hottest cougars 20-11!


  • Summer Leadership Academy Registration

    SLA IS BACK AND BETTER THAN EVER!

    Back to Basics. Back to Schools. Back to the Future of Training.

    The Illinois Education Association Summer Leadership Academy (SLA) will be held July 27 – July 30, 2010 at Illinois State University in Normal, Illinois.

    Last summer all IEA local presidents were invited to a Training Assessment and Development Summit to help shape the future of the Summer Leadership Academy (SLA). Now you are invited to the 2010 SLA to experience the beginning of a much anticipated reshaping of IEA leadership training.

    The theme for the 2010 Summer Leadership Academy is Leadership Fundamentals: Power, Endurance, Strength. Leadership is fundamental to achieving the mission of IEA, which is “to effect excellence and equity in public education and to be THE advocacy organization for all public education employees.”

  • Green labeling is just a waypoint

    Alan Atkisson wonders, Can a Glass of Orange Juice in Sweden be “Climate Smart”? He concludes, Maybe consumer items like this could be labeled, “Relatively less climate-stupid.” I agree.

    For green labeling to actually work, there must be a “green information” system parallel to the money economy, and people must pay attention to it. That’s a booming business right now.

    US_$20_Series_2006_Obverse

    Optimistically assuming that all end users have the insight and altruism needed to make the correct environment/money tradeoff, that creates tremendous evolutionary pressure on the production system to evade the intent of the labeling by using cheaper not-so-green alternatives in hidden upstream locations. To paraphrase Groucho, greenness is the key to business success – if you can fake it, you’ve got it made. The evasion need not be so cynical; it simply requires incomplete information, for example sourcing products from places where measurement systems are incomplete. I really rather doubt that we’ll ever have life cycle analysis for every product performed with the same stringency now enforced by money auditing systems.

    The optimistic assumptions above are probably misplaced. Altruism is great, but I hate to rely on it, as it’s not clear to me that it’s an ESS. But insight is probably the real constraint. Life cycle analysis is good stuff, but even if it were practical to pass many attributes through the supply chain, with firm-level attribution, the result is complex information about tradeoffs that’s better suited for engineers than for consumers. Add to that the challenges people already face, like making good decisions about saving for retirement and educating children, and I think it’s hard to do much more than muddle minds.

    Just as marketers associate cars with love, green labels foster the paradoxical conclusion that some consumption benefits the environment. That may be true for a few goods, but for the most part, it’s not. We should be using green information to examine our broad patterns of consumption, more than to choose what to put in the shopping cart. That might mean non-consumptive tradeoffs, like having more leisure time and less stuff.

    Green labeling is great in many cases today, where prices and other incentives are blatantly misaligned with public goods, but ultimately fixing the incentives will get us a lot farther than labeling. That means pricing resources we value upstream, so that value percolates through supply chains as a price signal. In my ideal world, the price tag itself would be a green label.

    For green labeling to actually work, there must be a “green information” system parallel to the money economy, and people must pay attention to it. Optimistically assuming that all end users have the insight and altruism needed to make the correct green-money tradeoff, that creates tremendous evolutionary pressure on the production system to evade the intent of the labeling by using cheaper not-so-green alternatives in hidden upstream locations. The evasive response need not be cynical, it simply requires incomplete information, i.e. sourcing products where measurement systems are incomplete. I really rather doubt that we’ll ever have life cycle analysis for every product performed with the same stringency now enforced by money auditing systems. Green labeling is great in many cases today, where prices and other incentives are blatantly misaligned with social goals, but ultimately fixing the incentives will get us a lot farther than labeling.

  • Ural Patrol T Motorcycle

    Motorcycles with sidecars today just look odd and funny. But when you look back at the classic military versions, you might even say that some were quite menacing and even perfect for the various war terrains it rode on. The Ural Patrol T Motorcycle is just one of those classic military bikes. It features an OHV air-cooled 4 cycle opposed twin cylinder engine, Brembo brakes, true reverse gear, Herzog gears, a massive sidecar storage, and more. Visit IMZ-URAL for more information.

    Continue reading for more images.










  • 50 Hottest Cougars: 40-31

    40. Mariah Carey

    Age: 40


    39. Lisa Kudrow

    Age: 46

    38. Cindy Crawford

    Age: 46

    37. Madonna

    Age: 51

    36. Julianna Marguiles

    Age: 43

    35. Sandra Bullock

    Age: 45

    34. Helen Mirren

    Age: 64

    33. Catherine Zeta-Jones

    Age: 40

    32. Martina McBride

    Age: 43

    31. Diane Lane

    Age: 45

    Click here for the 50 hottest cougars 30-21!


  • Pineapple Muffins

    Pineapple Muffins

    Pineapple doesn’t make it into my baked goods very often. This is partially because it is a little bit inconvenient to chop up a whole pineapple for just a cup or so of chopped fruit and partially because I just don’t have that many recipes for it. But this is a shame because pineapple is a fruit that cooks very well. Roasted pineapple, a great summertime dessert, is sweet and tender, and pineapple baked into a muffin, bread or cake turns out the same way.

    Since I had some leftover pineapple in my fridge (from a time I was feeling motivated to cut up a whole, spiny fruit), I decided to take my own advice and bake it into something for a snack. The result was pineapple muffins. These muffins are moist and tender, and the small chunks of fresh pineapple seem to triple in sweetness as the muffins bake, giving the finished treats a great tropical taste.

    I added a little bit of shredded coconut and a little bit of orange zest to these muffins to highlight the pineapple flavor. The coconut adds a little bit of texture to the muffins and definitely brings out the tropical-ness of the pineapple. The orange zest brings out the citrusy notes of the pineapple, making the whole muffin taste brighter. Lemon or lime zest would make a great substitution, too.

    Serve these muffins while they’re still slightly warm with a little bit of butter. They make a great snack in the afternoon, but are easy enough to make (as long as you have some pineapple on hand) that they are well worth the effort of getting up a few minutes early so you can bake a batch for breakfast.

    Pineapple Muffins
    2 1/2 cups all purpose flour
    2 tsp baking powder
    1/4 tsp salt
    1 cup sugar
    1/2 cup shredded coconut
    1 cup buttermilk
    6 tbsp butter, melted and cooled
    1 large egg
    2 tsp orange zest
    1 cup chopped pineapple
    coarse sugar, for topping

    Preheat the oven to 375F. Line a 12-cup muffin tin with paper liners.
    In a large bowl, whisk together flour, baking powder, salt, sugar and shredded coconut.
    In a medium bowl, whisk together buttermilk, melted butter egg and orange zest. Add to flour mixture and stir to combine, mixing only until no streaks of dry ingredients remain. Stir in chopped pineapple.
    Divide batter evenly into prepared muffin cups (cups will be very full) and sprinkle generously with coarse sugar.
    Bake for 16-19 minutes, until a toothpick inserted into the center of a muffin comes out clean.
    Cook muffins on a wire rack for at least 15 minutes before serving.

    Makes 12 muffins.

  • What Google’s WebM Looks Like to Video Digerati in San Diego and Boston

    TV on the Internet
    Bruce V. Bigelow wrote:

    It’s been a week since Google announced a new open-source video project called WebM at its I/O Developers Conference in San Francisco, with the online media giant arguing that streaming video—like nearly everything else on the Internet—just wants to be free. So it seemed like a good time to see how some digital video technology companies are reacting to the move.

    In announcing its WebM project, Google (which owns YouTube) said it was joining forces with roughly 40 other companies, including Japan’s Sony, Intel, Adobe, and Logitech to promote the use of WebM under a permissive free software license. Conspicuously missing from the list were Microsoft and Apple. In its statement, the Mountain View, CA, company said, “With Google TV, consumers will now be able to search and watch an expanded universe of content available from a variety of sources including TV providers, the web, their personal content libraries, and mobile applications.”

    The WebM technology includes the VP8 video codec, which Google acquired as part of its $140 million buyout of On2 Technologies earlier this year, and Ogg Vorbis, an open source audio codec that’s already widely implemented. A wrinkle that drew much media attention, however, is that Google’s plans to freely license WebM technology could run afoul of MPEG LA—the licensing body for the rival H.264 video codec.

    So what was the reaction among digital video leaders from coast to coast?

    —At Qualcomm, the vice president of product management in CDMA Technologies, Rag Talluri, writes in a blog post that the San Diego wireless giant is “a strong supporter” of WebM and openly available standards. “This is why we are excited that the company behind the biggest online video portal is enabling the VP8 initiative,” Talluri says. “We thus continue to collaborate with On2/Google’s engineering teams to support VP8 codec on our mobile platforms and deliver a rich video experience on Qualcomm-powered mobile devices. “

    —In Cambridge, MA, Brightcove marketing vice …Next Page »

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  • The 50 Hottest Cougars

    Older women have been getting a lot of press in recent years, from fictional shows like “Cougar Town” to reality shows like “Real Housewives …”. With (quite frankly) available plastic surgery and better knowledge of how to take care of our bodies women are staying hot much farther into life. Read on for our list of the 50 hottest women over 40 and prepare to be amazed!

    50. Sela Ward

    Age: 53


    49. Olivia Newton-John

    Age: 61

    48. Tea Leoni

    Age: 44

    47. Gina Gershon

    Age: 47

    46. Christie Brinkley

    Age: 56

    45. Kim Cattrall

    Age: 53

    44. Pamela Anderson

    Age: 42

    43. Terri Hatcher

    Age: 45

    42. Marcia Cross

    Age: 48

    41. Marisa Tomei

    Age: 45

    Click here for the 50 hottest cougars 40-31!


  • These $1700 Ultrasone Edition 8s Could Be Your First Audiophile Headphones [Headphones]

    Audiophile. That’d be a nice distinction to have. But what makes an audiophile, really? An obsession with high fidelity audio, for one thing. But also the ownership of incredible-sounding, incredibly-expensive gear, like these $1700 Ultrasone Edition 8 headphones. More »










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