Category: News

  • Report: Toyota FT-86 delayed until 2013, hybrid under consideration

    Filed under: , , , ,

    Toyota FT-86 Concept – Click above for high-res image galllery

    If a report from Japan’s Best Car is to be believed, Toyota will delay the release of the FT-86 from 2011 to 2013.

    The reasons behind the delay are varied, and include a different design direction, the economic slowdown and possibly a revised powertrain strategy that could include some kind of hybrid motivation.

    As reported previously, the original FT-86 concept was just that – a design study – and Toyota is apparently second-guessing the styling of the coupe before it reaches production. Additionally, ToMoCo is reportedly gauging the success of the Honda CR-Z, which could influence the final drivetrain specs of the FT-86. If that means a hybrid powerplant is in the cards, we’re not totally heartbroken, but if Toyota decides to remake the coupe as a front-driver, consider our dreams officially dashed. Regardless, the next iteration of the FT-86 is slated to debut at the Tokyo Motor Show at the end of 2011.

    [Source: Best Car via 7Tune]

    Report: Toyota FT-86 delayed until 2013, hybrid under consideration originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 26 May 2010 13:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Young People Actually More Likely To Be Savvy About Internet Privacy

    The prevailing wisdom about young people is that they are not savvy when it comes to managing their on-line reputations — but a new study by the Pew Internet and American Life project says that the opposite is true. Young people are actually much more likely to actively restrict what information they share and with whom they share it.

    “Contrary to the popular perception that younger users embrace a laissez-faire attitude about their online reputations, young adults are often more vigilant than older adults when it comes to managing their online identities,” said Mary Madden, Senior Research Specialist and lead author of the report.

    This, of course, simply confirms what everyone already knows — that your mom is more likely to post something embarrassing on your wall than you are.

    Reputation Management and Social Media [Pew Internet]

  • Nobody Panic: Wearing Sunscreen Is Unlikely to Be a Cancer Risk | 80beats

    sunscreenRemember the sunscreen speech? The Chicago Tribune column, which became an urban legend and then a bizarre spoken word hit for Baz Luhrmann, began

    Wear sunscreen.

    If I could offer you only one tip for the future, sunscreen would be it. The long-term benefits of sunscreen have been proved by scientists, whereas the rest of my advice has no basis more reliable than my own meandering experience.

    But is even this sage advice subject to the “it’ll cause cancer, no wait, it’ll cure cancer” back-and-forth that plagues medical studies? Reading some headlines today, you might think so. Don’t toss out your tube of Banana Boat just yet, though.

    The non-profit Environmental Working Group released another of its reports on the sunscreen industry, coming down hard on the chemicals it uses and the claims it makes in its advertising. Some stories about the report drew headlines like “Sunscreen May Hurt, Not Help;” “Your Sunscreen May Give You Cancer: Study;” and “Study: Many Sunscreens May Be Accelerating Cancer.”

    EWG’s report claims that a Vitamin A compound called retinyl palmitate, used in some 40 percent of sunscreens, breaks down and causes skin damage under exposure to sunlight. The report cites research done under the Food and Drug Administration. But, according to dermatologist Henry W. Lim of Henry Ford Hospital:

    These claims, says Lim, are based on a study in mice, which are far more susceptible to skin cancer than humans. “It’s dangerous to apply a finding in mice to humans, and I’ve spoken with a number of my colleagues about this and we all agree that it’s very premature to even cast doubt about the safety of this chemical.” The EWG also flagged products with oxybenzone, which it calls a “hormone-disrupting” compound. This, too, is based on mice data, says Lim; the animals were fed significantly greater amounts of the chemical than what’s commonly applied in sunscreen. Other research found no significant changes in blood hormone levels in human volunteers who were told to apply sunscreens containing oxybenzone every day for two weeks [U.S. News & World Report].

    I called up dermatologist Darrell Rigel at New York University, who argues that since Vitamin A is used in skin cancer treatment, the claim that it’s a cancer-causer is a dubious one. As the old graduation speech notes, the benefits of sunscreen have been shown for the millions of people who’ve used it to protect their skin for the last quarter-century. Rigel’s worry is that cancer fear-mongering would lead people to go without sunscreen this weekend and throughout the summer, subjecting themselves to damaging burns. “That’s what the real danger is,” he says.

    Besides, the Vitamin A compound isn’t the whole story. Back to Dr. Lim:

    Interestingly, the EWG gave its green or favorable rating only to products that contain zinc oxide or titanium dioxide, two blockers that don’t get absorbed into the skin and are considered pretty innocuous. But Lim says that some dermatologists have expressed concerns about the use of these compounds in people who have inflammatory skin conditions like eczema. Tiny cracks in the skin of people with eczema could allow these compounds to enter the bloodstream [U.S. News & World Report].

    So do pay attention to the ingredients if you have skin conditions. And if you’d prefer find a sunscreen without the Vitamin A ingredient anyway, the EWG’s database can give you a hand with that.

    Just don’t stop wearing sunscreen, please. In fact, use more: The EWG reinforces some helpful points we already knew, including that high SPF numbers can lead people into a false sense of security so they don’t use enough sunscreen, or don’t reapply it when necessary. In addition, they argue, sunscreens should come with more information about their ability to block UVA radiation, and not just UVB.

    This is partially the fault of the FDA, which has promised–and failed to deliver on–regulations for sunscreen. The organization claims that regulations might be issued as soon as next October, but manufacturers will have at least a year to comply [Fast Company].

    Finally, the EWG reminds the public that sunscreen shouldn’t be a primary protector—that is, don’t stay out shirtless all day in the blazing heat because you slathered on some SPF 45 in the morning.

    Related Content:
    DISCOVER: The Biology of Sunscreen
    DISCOVER: Outrunning Melanoma
    Discoblog: Sunscreen: Healthy Habit for You, Bringer of Death for Coral Reefs
    Discoblog: Lather Up: New Sunscreen Could Be Inspired By Hippo Sweat

    Image: flickr / Indexorama


  • Why Carbon Dioxide is Not a Greenhouse Gas by William Pinn, Published August 2008

    Article Tags: Blast From the Past, William Pinn

    “On a warm day CO2 will heat up faster than the other air molecules, but on a cold day it will cool faster and lose its heat. So how exactly is CO2 supposed to warm the planet if it loses its heat?

    HERE is how science is supposed to be done, with research, empirical verification, and a healthy dose of native intelligence and humor. Citing Specific Heats and Thermodynamics, Pinn follows a simple yet sound approach. Indeed, if the key to an atmospheric greenhouse effect is just the ability of certain gases to hold onto heat, thus yielding up the warmth they’ve stored when the earth rotates into night, Pinn’s conclusions are very solid. The most important hint the earth offers us is that it is cooler than predicted by day and warmer at night. With only minor quibbles here and there (for instance, the confusion between the specific heats of water vs water vapor) I’d call this essay quite a gem.

    Surrounded by a vacuum, the earth can only lose heat by radiation. And what are ‘greenhouse gases’ famous for? Radiating. AS.

    Why Carbon Dioxide is Not a Greenhouse Gas
    Published August 26, 2008 by: William Pinn

    I’m sitting here typing on my computer and basking in the coolness of another summer day here in Roseville, California. Did I say coolness? Yes I did. You see, we folks in Roseville are experiencing a summer with record cool temperatures.

    Source: associatedcontent.com

    Read in full with comments »   


  • Audio Interview: Gowalla CEO Searches For A Place In Location Sharing Rush


    Josh Williams, Gowalla

    With the big web companies taking a keen interest and rival startups all competing, there’s plenty of jostling amongst mobile social location sharing hopefuls.

    Yahoo (NSDQ: YHOO) has bought Koprol, Facebook, Google (NSDQ: GOOG) and Twitter are all planning their own location add-ons and rival Foursquare is growing in popularity.

    Gowalla seems to want to keep its cards in the game by being as open as possible until things shake out. So is there really a differentiator, and what is it… ?

    Listen!

    At the Open Mobile Summit in London, CEO Josh Williams told me: “The Googles, Facebooks and Twitters of the world… location’s going to become a platform that is ubquitous across the web and mobile web. We want to provide a valuable service that sits on top of that – so, ultimately, we’re agnostic about where you choose to share your location.

    “Hopefully, we can play friendly with everybody.” Williams told a summit panel session: “We dont care if you want to take (your location) to Gowalla and share it with your friends there or take it out to your Twitter friends.”

    Williams says the location sharing space will mature in the next six months by the cluster of counterparts differentiating. He wants Gowalla to add media, not just location, sharing.

    Ultimately, one wonders whether there’s a window of opportunity before the big guns switch on to the phenomenon – and that could mean either acquisition, as in Koprol’s case, or sticking to a start-up’s guns.

    So is there a standalone business model? Gowalla’s trying “two or three different angles”, including promoting brands’ locations, Williams said. Is Gowalla an acquisition target? “It’s too early to say,” Williams added, noting he’s “very happy to be swimming in that (Austin start-up) pond”.


  • AT&T allegedly tells employees of iPhone 4 coming in June

    Two of the three iPhones released thus far have been launched in June. WWDC, where Apple generally announces iPhones 2-3 weeks before they’re shipping, starts on June 7th. If you had to guess, when would you wager that the new iPhone was coming?

    If you said “June”, awesome — you’re probably right, and click on after the jump to find out more. If you said “October”… well, I’m not quite sure what to say to that.

    According to BGR, AT&T HQ has internally confirmed to certain employees that there will be an iPhone launch next month, with the device hitting the shelves before the month is out. According to their tipster, “it won’t even be late June.”

    Sure, it’s vague. Sure, you probably could have guessed as much, or thrown a dart in the dark and nailed it. But this is the good word of a random, unidentifiable AT&T employee who could very well be talking out of their arse, dammit — and we respect that word in this house.


  • Sony Develops a “Rollable” OLED Display

    Sony has developed a super-flexible 80 μm-thick 4.1-inch 121 ppi OTFT-driven full color OLED display (16 million colors) which can be wrapped around a thin cylinder. To create the display, Sony developed OTFTs with an original organic semiconductor material (a PXX derivative) with eight times the current modulation of conventional OTFTs. This was achieved due to the development of integration technologies of OTFTs and OLEDs on an ultra-thin 20 μm thick flexible substrate (a flexible on-panel gate-driver circuit with OTFTs which is able to get rid of conventional rigid driver IC chips interfering roll-up of a display) and soft organic insulators for all the insulators in the integration circuit. By combining these technologies, Sony successfully demonstrated the world’s first OLED panel which is capable of reproducing moving images while being repeatedly rolled-up – around a cylinder with a radius of 4 mm – and stretched.

    Sony will unveil the results of this development on May 27 at “SID (Society for Information Display) 2010 International Symposium” in Seattle, WA (May 23-28).

    Sony will proceed with the development of the solution / print based process which manufactures display devices from organic materials that are easily dissolved in common solvents. This process requires fewer steps, and consumes materials and energy more efficiently – thus has a smaller environmental footprint – compared to the conventional high temperature vacuum semiconductor process which use inorganic, silicon materials.

    Sony will continue to improve the performance and reliability of its flexible organic displays because the application of these developments are expected to yield thin, light-weight, durable and mobile devices with enhanced form-factor.

    So how did Sony do it?

    An OTFT (Organic Thin-Film Transistor) is a thin-film transistor with organic (carbon-based compound) semiconductor. The OTFT can be directly made on a flexible substrate at low temperature below typically 180°C. It has high mechanical flexibility and therefore it is expected to realize thin, light-weight, mechanical-shock resistant and form-factor enhanced electronic devices, such as flexible display, e-paper and RF-ID tag. Because organic materials can be easily dissolved in common solvents, development of electronic circuits in a large area with solution/printed process has been attractive much attention.

    Sony has developed organic semiconductor material, peri-Xanthenoxanthene (PXX) derivative, which is stable under exposure to oxygen, moisture, light and heat and improved current modulation of eight-times that of conventional OTFT with organic semiconductor of pentacene. Improvement of this OTFT achieved the world’s highest-resolution OTFT-driven OLED display with resolution of 121 ppi and 432 x 240 x RGB (FWQVGA) pixels.

    This is the world’s first demonstration of an OLED display with an integrated gate-driver circuit with OTFTs. The improvement of the OTFT described above enables integration of a flexible gate-driver circuit with OTFTs on a display panel. The roll-up capability is possible because the rigid driver IC chips has been removed from the display.

    In order to enhance flexibility of the display, Sony has developed organic insulators for all the insulators in the OTFT and OLED integration circuit. These organic insulators can be formed with the solution process in the atmosphere which is requires fewer steps, and consumes materials and energy more efficiently – thus has a smaller environmental footprint – compared to the conventional high temperature vacuum semiconductor process which use inorganic/silicon materials.

    The OTFT-driven OLED display with the aforementioned technologies (1-3) can reproduce moving images while rolled-up around a cylinder with a radius of 4 mm. Even after 1000 cycles of repeatedly rolling-up and stretching the display, there was no clear degradation in the display’s ability to reproduce moving images.

  • Rahm Emanuel invites Israeli P.M. Netanyahu to White House to discuss security, peace. Transcript

    WASHINGTON—Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was invited Wednesday to the White House by Obama Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel in Jerusalem. Netanyahu arrives in June. Palestinian Authority leader Mahmoud Abbas will also soon be meeting with Obama.

    “The President looks forward to a visit from President Abbas in the near future. We’re just working out timing,” Tommy Vietor, a White House spokesman said Wednesday.

    In speaking to Netanyahu, Emanuel said, “Mr. Prime Minster, on behalf of the President, you will be in Canada, and he has asked me to extend an invitation to you to come visit him at the White House for a work meeting to discuss both our shared security interests as well as our close cooperation in seeking peace between Israel and its neighbors,” Emanuel said.

    “And also on a personal matter, on behalf of the Emanuel family, I want to say that this trip has been a wonderful trip for the entire Emanuel family, most importantly for me to show my children, given so much as you know of my childhood was here, to show them the country, expose them to the history in a very intimate way and most importantly the most important thing about Israel, to its people who have been exceptionally warm and genuine in their affection to both all the family in general, but particularly to Zach on his Bar Mitzvah in wishing him a Mazal Tov.

    “And so it has been heartfelt and nothing more than a father could wish his son on his Bar Mitzvah the way the Israeli people have treated him – now if we just get him to do his homework that will make me happy,” Emanuel said.

    Netanyahu replied, “This sounds like an impossible task, but we have shown we can do the impossible.’

    Emanuel said, “It’s been a great trip. The entire administration, the President, particularly is looking forward to the visit June first. Thank you.”

    Netanyahu “I gladly accept. I think we have a good invitation, I gladly accept and look forward to the meeting.”

  • Unrest in Jamaica

    12.46pm

    The toughest hurdle while attempting to reaching Jamaica’s many trouble spots is getting in, as airports shut down. American Airlines canceled flights into Kingston so you must fly into Montego Bay on the North side of the island, where most tourists go. A flight attendant said crews could not get to downtown Kingston because of the gunfire. No taxis from the hotel would make the drive which is about 120 miles. Air Jamaica is still flying in, so we so we got on a 9am flight into Kingston, found a driver, Mr Powell, and drove in toward the center of the violence, Tivoli Gardens.

    The atmosphere was eerie with deserted streets, looted stores, and shot-up police stations, some of which were burned down.

    For 4 days the government has tried and failed to capture a drug lord, Christopher Coke. Sending the Army in led to barricades in the streets and gunbattles which have killed almost 50 civilians. A section of the capital city is out of government control.

    We set up near a soldiers’ road block. By the time I had Qik streaming video up on an iphone cameraman Chris Pontius already had a stronger signal from a bgan, a transmitter the size of a laptop computer. He set up his gear right on the sidewalk- laptop and cables on the pavement, all charged the night before.

    The soldiers did not like being filmed, nor did the civilians. There is a sense of shame in the world looking at the looted stores and street violence. One young man in a red shirt made his hand into an imaginary gun and walked up behind me yelling “Blam blam blam.”

    There were crowds on foot around a gas station. Security felt dicey. Pontius and I stood out.

    The military and private security and police wear a maze of uniforms and masks and often travel in civilian cars or pickups with guns sticking out the windows. That makes it tough to tell the good guys from the bad guys.

    The battle also has shifted from different parts of the city. Foot traffic is heavy today on some streets where there were pitched battles yesterday. So it is hard to tell where the front line is.

    I’ve read about parallels between this man Coke and Pablo Escobar – figures romanticized as Robin Hoods who help the poor from their neighborhoods. That might explain some of the support Coke has gotten from his section of the city. Other reports say his gang – the Shower Posse – got its name from the amount of bullets it sprayed into victims. Some estimates say the Shower Posse is responsible for 40 percent of the crack cocaine trade in the U.S.

    Some places you can feel the violence. A couple of weeks ago in Greece I saw demonstrators in white face masks holding scrolls of protest like some elaborate theatre put together by graduate students. I did not feel there would be much violence. Here you can see the pock marks in the central police station. Yesterday men took automatic rifles and blazed away at the police HQ. I thought about the men holding the rifles. That is violence.

    The bigger concern for the U.S. is not just about extraditing one drug lord. It is the close connection between a drug lord who supplies 40 percent of crack to the U.S. and a country’s Prime Minister. Coke and Jamaican PM Golding are from the same district, allies. Political parties have used street gangs here to get out the vote since the 1970s, but now these gangs have developed into international drug rings. The money and the firepower and the opportunity for corruption has magnified to the point where a state is at threat, at risk of becoming a narco-state. So now we will see if a drug lord’s ally can bring him to justice by the use of the military inside a crowded capital without igniting further unrest.

  • The Human Scientist Infected With a Computer Virus [Mad Science]

    This is Dr. Mark Gasson. He’s a human being who’s managed to contract a nasty computer virus. Don’t feel too bad for him, though: he did it to himself. More »










    Computer virusSecurityMalicious SoftwareVirusesDetection and Removal Tools

  • A Rare Mental Disorder: The Deep Conviction That You Smell Bad | Discoblog

    laundryThey change their clothes frequently. They shower repeatedly, sometimes using a whole bar of soap in one go. Some even swallow perfume.

    They think they smell bad, but they don’t.

    Olfactory reference syndrome is a rare psychiatric disorder, but it can lead to isolation, depression, and suicide. It’s also a little-noticed, little-studied syndrome. But now a study to appear in Depression and Anxiety has looked at twenty sufferers and reviewed current literature on the disorder to determine its general characteristics.

    Psychiatrists have known about the disorder’s symptoms for over a century, but treatment and diagnosis are difficult, in part because the syndrome doesn’t currently have its own classification in Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM)–the handbook of mental health professionals. The manual combines the syndrome with other disorders, such as social phobia, delusional disorder, body dysmorphic disorder, and obsessive-compulsive disorder. The new study gives recommendations for updating the next version of the manual, and suggests adding this disorder to an appendix of conditions that need further research.

    As reported by HealthDay News, nineteen of the study’s twenty volunteers exhibited at least one compulsive behavior, like repeated self-sniffing or showering. On average, they spent eight hours a day thinking about their smell. Fearing social interactions, forty percent had been housebound for over a week.

    Many patients thought the smell came from their mouth, but they were also concerned with their armpits, genitalia, anus, feet, and skin, according to a MedPage Today article.

    Katharine Phillips, a coauthor of the study and a professor of psychiatry and human behavior at Brown University, presented these and other findings on Tuesday at the American Psychiatric Association annual meeting. She told Reuters Health:

    “I think it’s a very secret and hidden disorder, because these patients tend to be very ashamed of themselves…. I have been so struck by the intense suffering that the patients experience.”

    Related content:
    Discoblog: Bad Breath? Body Odor? Don’t Bother Applying to China’s Space Program
    Discoblog: Doctor, Is My Diabetes Medicine Supposed to Smell Like Gym Socks?
    DISCOVER: Finding the Right Word Odor
    DISCOVER: The Brain: The First Yardstick for Measuring Smells

    Image: flickr / mysza831


  • Superchips ECU remap gives BMW 135i a total 360-hp

    BMW 135i 360-hp ECU remap by Superchips

    The upcoming BMW M version of the 1-Series (aka M1) is expected to make some 345-hp from an updated version of the N55 engine. However, while you wait for BMW to debut an M1 (if they ever do), a company by the name of Superchips is offering a performance boosting ECU remap for the 135i model.

    “Careful optimization of ignition, fuelling and turbo boost settings via combination of extensive chassis dyno testing and road validation has produced a Superchips remap that elevates the performance of the 135i onto a different plane,” Superchips says.

    Click here for prices on the 2010 BMW 135i.

    What kind of a different plane? An increase of 49-hp and a boost of 52 lb-ft of torque. That brings the total output of a BMW 135i to 360-hp and a maximum torque of 336 lb-ft. While Superchips has only dyno tested the car at its own headquarters, it has yet to confirm any performance figures. Either way, we expect it to be much better than the 135i’s 0-60 mph time of 5.3 seconds (top speed of 155 mph is left untouched).

    Those interested in the upgrade can head over to Superchips at its UK dealer network with a total of £445.00 ($640 USD) in their pocket. Not a bad deal at all.

    2010 BMW 135i (Coupe and Convertible):

    – By: Omar Rana


  • Sony: 3D will really shine once the games start hitting it off

    “Not a fan of 3D movies? Wait till you play 3D games, that’s when the technology will really shine.” Not an exact quote, but that’s the spirit of what Sony Computer Entertainment Europe President Andrew House said in a recent interview. The idea is that, OK, 3D movies may be just sorta there, but it’s sitting there and playing something like WipeOut HD in 3D where you’ll really gain an appreciation for the medium.

    Having played several games in 3D at various events over the past few months, allow me to say this: meh. At no point did I play a game in 3D where I reacted like Homer’s mother seeing Joe Namath’s sideburns. That is, at no point did I go, “HOLY SMOKES THIS IS LIFE-CHANGING.” Neat? Sure, it’s neat, but if I never play another 3D game it won’t be so big a deal.

    Then again, we’re still pretty early in the transition 3D. Perhaps in a few years developers will have figured out how to make the most of the technology. First-gen graphics are always a little wonky.

    Specific to the PS3, well, we still have to wait for 3D TVs to be affordable enough to start showing up in your local Wal-Mart. We’re a little while away from that yet.

    I keep seeing the stat that HDTVs are still only in something like 50 percent of homes in the U.S. Considering that unemployment is still quite high, I don’t know if now is the time to depend on people to shell out $2,000 for a TV when they just bought a TV a few years ago…

    via Bit-Tech


  • Did We Just Learn Disney's Selling ABC Through Ex-Employee's Arrest?

    Who knew federal prosecutors were so good at breaking news? A former Disney administrative assistant and her friend have been arrested for attempting to sell non-public information to investors — but that may not be the big news. In the complaint (.pdf) that the government released today regarding the action, prosecutors may have inadvertently revealed that Disney may be on the verge of selling its broadcast network ABC.

    According to the complaint, the ex-employee — Bonnie Hoxie — sent e-mails to several investors saying that she would sell them non-public information before the company’s earnings announcement. She was the administrative assistant of Disney’s Head of Corporate Communications. But the FBI got wind of this and had an undercover agent posing as an interested investor contact Hoxie. In an attempt to show her insider credentials, Hoxie sent the following e-mail after learning that the fake investor wanted to make a deal:

    I only have access to the earnings report that is delivered to us three days before its official release date. Until then i will not be able to get you any other documents but here is a piece of information i can give away to show good faith and build trust. Bob Iger is in serious and advanced negotiations with two private equity firms to sell them the ABC network but no price has been determined yet. I will keep aware of any relevant information that could move the stock price in the future.

    (The letter above is presented as is, not corrected for grammar or punctuation.)

    Bob Iger is Disney’s CEO. A few months later, Hoxie accurately provided Disney’s quarterly earnings-per-share as $0.48 to the FBI agent a few hours before the information was publicly released.

    It’s not a huge surprise that Disney is humoring an ABC sale, but it hasn’t been reported that it was in “serious and advanced” negotiations. On Monday, for example, the New York Post speculated that Disney might be considering looking for buyers:

    Meanwhile, ABC’s future in the Mouse House is also not guaranteed, with Disney chief Bob Iger said to be taking a hard look at the network.

    “There are no guarantees,” he said recently about ABC’s future at Disney. A source said the issue is what to do with the accompanying stations.

    Being in “serious and advanced” negotiations with private equity investors for a sale isn’t “taking a “hard look” — it’s being on the verge of a sale. If this ex-employee had her facts right — and she did about EPS — then this is significant news. Did federal prosecutors realize that they were releasing this potential bombshell by unsealing the complaint?

    Disney was contacted about the validity of Hoxie’s claim about its intent to sell ABC, but has not yet responded. (I will update this post if they do.)

    Update: Thanks to a commenter who pointed out that, even though it isn’t on their own website’s press releases, Disney has issued a statement saying:

    The reference in the complaint to conversations regarding the ABC Network were and are false.

    Now we can only wonder why Hoxie would have used a false claim to attempt to ‘built trust’. Usually, you’d want to use a fact to do that. What if the investor had attempted to verify this information by asking around if his friends at any private equity firms are bidding on major networks? It might have also been nice to see the DOJ state that this purported fact was false in the complaint, rather than get the market wondering if it might be true.





    Email this Article
    Add to digg
    Add to Reddit
    Add to Twitter
    Add to del.icio.us
    Add to StumbleUpon
    Add to Facebook






    DisneyWalt Disney CompanyNew York PostABCAmerican Broadcasting Company

  • Travel tips that save time and money

    luggage

    Checked bags often trigger a fee from the airline, especially if the bag is over 50 pounds. Checking bags may add a long wait on the check-in line and then again upon landing.

    Often, after you collect your bags, the thought of taking an inexpensive bus to your destination can be overwhelming. It’s a scenario that may well entice you to pop for a cab or town car, where lines may be long and rates a bit high.

    Less baggage means more freedom: Freedom to move quickly and effortlessly, and freedom from long lines and too many clothing decisions.  Economy of scale can also free you from the extra time and expense of packing and unpacking unworn clothing as well as wasted resources to get needlessly crushed surplus clothing dry-cleaned.

    Tips to pack your bags light and smart:

    • Lay out pants, jeans, skirts, tops, swimsuits, shorts, and a really warm sweater stacked by category in their full open position on your bed. Fold in any sleeves and then roll each stack into a tight bundle.  This will prevent wrinkles and save space in the suitcase.
    • Select a couple pairs of shoes and place any underwear or small items inside each shoe and wedge them between the rolls of clothing.
    • Pack toiletries in small containers in clear, quart-sized bags inside your tote.  Your laptop, chargers, and other electronics should also be packed in this way to comply with TSA security inspection.
    • If your destination is somewhere cold, wear your coat and boots onto the plane to save room in the suitcase.   Gloves, a warm hat, scarf, and an umbrella are best placed in the suitcase outer pockets for easy access upon landing.
    • More than one destination? If you are touring many cities, pack all your hanging clothes on lightweight plastic hangars. Grab the hangers at the top and accordion-fold this set of clothing into the suitcase right before you zip it closed.  At each destination, you will save precious time because you can hang your clothing in one motion, rather that placing them on and off each hotel hangar, which can be tedious.
    • In your tote, pack an empty water bottle and fill it at a water fountain near the departure gate after you have cleared security.  You can feel good about not paying top dollar for bottled water. You will also reduce plastic refuse from bottles and from those ubiquitous plastic cups onboard the flight.
    • Pack fresh fruit, an avocado, crackers, trail mix, or any of your favorite non-liquid snacks in your tote.  Bringing your own set of headphones for the in-flight movie is another resource-saver (and can be more comfortable than the headphones airlines provide!).
    • You might want to invest in one of the new TSA-accessible locks. You can lock the suitcase to deter theft when your bag must be checked on a full flight or when leaving your things unattended in your hotel room.

    Relax and enjoy the flight. Once you try this drama-free system of packing, which works equally well for car travel, you will be hooked, especially now that airlines are charging baggage fees.

    Sherry Brooks is a healthy, happy, and trim “frugalista” living the lean and green life near Malibu in sunny southern California.

    More from ecomii:

  • Analyst: Lost iPhone Has Stolen Thunder From Apple’s June Event


    iPhone 4

    When Apple’s CEO Steve Jobs takes the stage on June 7 in San Francisco, we pretty much know what we are going to get. Between the infamous misplacing of what is believed to be the next-generation iPhone in a Palo Alto bar, and a more obscure incident in Vietnam, Gene Munster with Piper Jaffray said Apple (NSDQ: AAPL) has “little room for surprise” at the Worldwide Developer Conference. Separately, Boy Genius reports that AT&T (NYSE: T) has confirmed to employees that a new iPhone launching in early June.

    AppleInsider writes that Munster believes the new phone will have a front-facing camera for video conferencing, better battery life, an improved rear camera and a thinner design. He’s not expecting Apple to announce an iPhone for Verizon or any other U.S. carrier. “Bottom line: WWDC will likely be in-line with expectations, and a non-event for the stock,” Munster wrote, “but the new iPhone will likely drive unit sales beyond Street expectations, providing a positive catalyst for shares of AAPL in the coming months.”

    Apple Sets Date For WWDC; Jobs To Also Appear A Week Before


  • ICC reports Sudan to UN for lack of cooperation with arrest warrants

    Photo source or description

    [JURIST] The International Criminal Court (ICC) [official website] on Wednesday reported [press release] Sudan to the UN Security Council [official website] for lack of cooperation in the pursuit of alleged war criminals [case materials] Ahmad Harun and Ali Kushayb [arrest warrants, PDF]. ICC Pre-Trial Chamber I released a decision [text, PDF] asking the Security Council to take any steps it deems appropriate to compel Sudan to comply with its obligation under Resolution 1593 [text, PDF], which provides that “the Government of Sudan and all other parties to the conflict in Darfur shall cooperate fully with and provide any necessary assistance to the Court and the Prosecutor pursuant to this resolution.” The three-judge panel stated that the ICC has taken all possible measures to ensure cooperation from Sudan, but the government has refused to provide any assistance or information in regards to the case of Harun and Kushayb. Since the ICC concluded that it has exhausted all its resources, the responsibility will now be shifted to the Security Council to take appropriate action. Sudan, which is not a permanent member of the ICC under the Rome Statute
    [text], refuses to recognize the court’s jurisdiction, stating that “the International Criminal Court has no place in this crisis at all.” Harun and Kushayb are wanted for 51 counts [case materials] of crimes against humanity and war crimes.

    The decision stemmed from a request filed [JURIST report] by ICC Chief Prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo [official profile] last month for a finding of non-cooperation pursuant to Article 87 of the Rome Statute for the government’s refusal to arrest Harun and Kushayb. The request stated that “[t]o the contrary, the [government of Sudan] continues to commit crimes, promotes and protects the persons sought by the Court; and harasses all persons who are considered to be in favor of justice.” The majority of the ICC caseload has come from Africa, causing tense relations with the governments in the region. On Monday, a collection of African civil society organizations issued a declaration urging greater cooperation [JURIST report] between the ICC and African nations in anticipation of the upcoming ICC Review Conference of the Rome Statute [official website]. The group of 124 organizations called on African governments to enhance their cooperation with the court and to make greater efforts in the execution of outstanding warrants. The review conference will take place in Kampala, Uganda from May 31 to June 11, 2010. During the conference, member states will consider proposed amendments [text] to the statute.

  • BP HAS BEGUN OPERATION TOP KILL, WATCH RIGHT HERE (BP, RIG, HAL, DRQ, TTI, CAM)

    UPDATE: Lots of motion and camera movement. Looks like The Abyss. A claw-like applicator is moving toward the BOP.

    Another camera angle clearly shows multiple gushers. This may confirm reports that 2-to-3 leaks have deteriorated to a chaotic leak pattern, with gas and oil breaking from the seabed floor.

    Remember, it might be two days before we know if TOP KILL is working.

    PREVIOUSLY:
    —–Did BP just kill the livestream? We’re seeing reports that BP was about to start inserting mud.
    —–Now we’re seeing a new camera angle that shows the blowout preventer. No sign of mud application yet.
    —–Operation Top Kill has commenced. You might not see much activity in the video, as BP is shooting cement at the blowout preventer, not the broken riser (pictured). But if it works…
    —–Operation Top Kill has been given the green light by Rear Admiral Mary Landry, and it could start any moment. Meanwhile: glug-glug-glug-glug-glug. If it looks like the oil is gushing like mad, you’re right. They took out the siphoning tube in preparation.

    Don’t Miss: 8 Incredible Things We Could Have Done With All That Oil

    Join the conversation about this story »