Category: News

  • Watch England Mexico Friendly Match World Cup 2010 Highlights

    The England team won 3-1 to Mexico in the first friendly meeting in preparation for the World Cup 2010 in South Africa, and gave good signs of being one of the contenders for the title.

    It was the first defeat of Mexico in the year and the first meeting in Europe, en route to Johannesburg, where they will play in the opening match of the World Cup against the hosts of South Africa on 11 June.

    In the first part, left Mexico to go at least three scoring chances in the first 15 minutes. And at 17th minute, Ledley King opened the scoring in 17th minute with a headed goal.

    At 34 minutes English nailed the second goal by Peter Crouch’s header, while the Mexicans squandered several opportunities.



    Shortly before the break, Guillermo Franco scored a deserved goal for Mexico. But again the group led by Fabio Capello gained advantage to 3-1 by Glen Johnson. The Mexicans, under the orders of Javier Aguirre could not reverse this result.

    Highlights

    Related posts:

    1. FIFA Is Still Elusive For Mexico
    2. Englands won over Mexico, FIFA South Africa 2010
    3. Hockey World Cup 2010 Updates!

  • Regulators wince as video gambling bill advances

    Posted by David Kidwell and Ray Long at 6:31 p.m.

    A video gambling bill strongly opposed by state regulators advanced in a House committee today and now awaits a vote that could send it to the governor.

    The state’s top gambling regulator predicted House lawmakers would pass the legislation, which he said would give amnesty to operators who have illegally operated video poker machines in bars for years.

    “It’s a disaster,” said Aaron Jaffe, chairman of the Illinois Gaming Board. “I have no idea all the power plays that are going on down there (Springfield) right now, but I can tell you that they are all listening to the wrong people.”

    House Bill 4927, which passed quietly through the Senate earlier this month, would require a felony conviction on gambling charges before the gaming board could deny a license to operate video gambling machines in Illinois. Until last year gambling for money on the machines was illegal, but critics say few people were ever convicted of felony gambling charges for operating them.

    Jaffe’s board adopted a new rule in January to require applicants to attest under oath that they never operated such a machine illegally in the past. The measure’s House sponsor said today Jaffe’s rule goes too far.

    “It’s not the Gaming Board’s province to go back in time and find out who those people are, especially the way they drafted the rule. So because the rule was vague,” said state. Rep Lou Lang, D-Skokie, “we decided there needed to be some definition in the rule. Otherwise, who would go out and invest in these machines.”

    The House Executive Committee voted 9-2 to send the bill to the full House.

    The bill is being shepherded by the same lobbyists for the Illinois Coin Machine Operators Association who last year persuaded lawmakers to legalize the machines. Among them is Joe Berrios, who is the chairman of the Cook County Democratic Party and a candidate to become Cook County assessor.

  • The BBC hits another milestone

    Late last night, The Buckeye Battle Cry reached a big milestone, and we’d like to take a moment to celebrate it.

    A few minutes after Midnight, when most of us were coming down off our “Lost” high, tBBC was visited by our 500,000th Buckeye fan*.

    Half a million visits may not be a big number for our amazing friends at 11 Warriors and Bucknuts, but we’re all raising a glass at this corner of the world.

    You know the story of this site.  Less than four years ago, it was just a tiny little place for one guy to spout an opinion and make videos.  Now it’s home to some of the best damn writers in Ohio (and beyond….see MaliBuckeye), and clearly it’s home to a lot of you scarlet and gray fans.

    While the credit goes to you, the loyal fans of tBBC, I will again state that this website would not be at all relevant without Jim, Eric, Rob Harley and the aforementioned Californian.  Nearly half of our total hits came since we expanded the staff 10 months ago.

    They’ll be running the show throughout football season this year, since Fox Sports Ohio hired this site’s fifth-best writer. I know that my baby will continue to grow and prosper, and your visits are the proof.

    Thank you VERY much, Buckeye fans!  I propose a toast to all of you!  Grab a drink and take a swig of it.  It’s on me.  Let’s drink to old Ohio til we wobble in our shoes!

    * – It was probably Ian who pushed us over half a million.  He’s all over the Buckeye Blogosphere.  You have school in the morning, young man!  Get some sleep!

  • Rumormill: Audi A2 could be electric only, or not

    Filed under: , , ,

    Audi A1 e-tron concept – Click above for high-res image gallery

    The original, all-aluminum Audi A2 was a unique beast, which Heinrich Timm, Audi’s head of lightweight design, maintains was ahead of its time. However, the rumored 2012 A2 is likely to utilize a steel unibody platform, and the latest reports indicate that Audi’s mini-lux will have a new reason for being special.

    Autocar quotes anonymous sources who say the next A2 could be Audi’s first electric-only vehicle. While the UK rag doesn’t go into detail, Audi has dropped hints that a variant of the A2 could utilize the extended-range EV hardware under the hood of the A1 e-tron concept shown at the Geneva Motor Show. The e-tron utilized a 60 horsepower electric motor paired to a 330-pound lithium ion battery pack. The “extended range” part of the A1 e-tron concept comes courtesy of a small, powerful rotary engine that would work as a generator whenever the battery pack was depleted. Audi quotes the EV range of the A1 e-tron concept at about 33 miles per charge.

    Do we think the A2 will be electric-only? Our magic eight-ball says “ask again later,” so we’re thinking the earliest we’ll know anything is this September at the Paris Motor Show.

    [Source: Autocar]

    Rumormill: Audi A2 could be electric only, or not originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 24 May 2010 18:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Android Has Won — Time for Chrome OS to Move Along?

    Google with its annual developer conference, Google I/O, dominated the technology conversation last week. Whether it was taking jabs at Apple, launching a competitor to H.264 video technology or simply offering its own version of Amazon S3, the Big G didn’t disappoint its fans (though some remain skeptical of certain initiatives, such as Google TV).

    All that hoopla aside, the focus of the conference was Google’s Android OS and the mobile ecosystem it’s spawned. Add Google TV to the mix and it’s safe to say that Google devoted nearly a quarter of its stage and talk time to Android. CEO Eric Schmidt, VP of Engineering Vic Gundotra and the co-founder of the Android movement himself, Andy Rubin — all waxed eloquent about the OS. Chrome, meanwhile, appeared to have become little more than an afterthought for the company.

    Android’s Adaptability

    Yes Google held a press conference where co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin talked up the Chrome Web Store, but that was pretty much it. That’s because while Chrome is still waiting for its day in the sun, Android has taken on a life of its own. By the time the Chrome OS becomes available via devices on store shelves, who knows where Android will be.

    Just look at some of the most recent Android-specific stats:

    • 100,000 Android-based phones are activated every day.
    • It’s on 60 devices from 21 OEM makers on 59 carriers in 48 countries.
    • There are 50,000 apps in the Android Market Place.
    • In the first quarter of the year, it was the second-best selling smartphone OS after RIM’s BlackBerry.

    “I am delighted to see Android in places I didn’t expect to see it in,” Rubin said at Google I/O. A good example is Google TV — which is comprised of Android running off an Intel x86 processor with a browser on top of it. Indeed, as I wrote at the time of Android’s launch, what makes Android special is its adaptability. From e-readers to set-top boxes to cars to even refrigerators, the OS has shown tremendous adaptability. By offering it for free (with some strings attached), Google has made it possible for all sorts of hardware makers to tinker with it.

    And as such it makes perfect sense for Google to marshal all its resources behind Android the way Apple has done with the iPhone OS. But what of Chrome?

    Chrome’s Tablet Future?

    “Android has evolved over the past four years and Chrome OS hasn’t launched just yet, so it’s an unfair comparison,” Rubin said in response to a question at last week’s conference in which he was asked to do just that. I took his comment to mean that Google was purposefully following a dual strategy, and when I asked why, Gundotra candidly admitted it’s a strategy the company may adjust down the road — specifically, that there may be a way for the two technologies to converge.

    Now that would make sense in a touch-centric, tablet-based world. Imagine Android running the Chrome browser in order to offer a panoply of web apps via the web-based app store that co-founder Sergey Brin described at Google I/O. Though when veteran scribe Dan Gillmor asked about an Android Tablet, both Rubin and Gundotra dodged the question.

    Our own Kevin Tofel thinks one of the reasons Chrome OS is taking a back seat to Android may be hardware-related. After all, Chrome OS was initially introduced as a platform for the netbook form factor, but if the market is shifting to tablets, Google will have to make some significant changes to it in order to make it finger-friendly.

    Folks in the know tell me that Google bought Canadian user interface innovator BumpTop so that it can build a unique user interface on top of Android for Google’s GPad, which could offered to hardware makers as reference design. That could be just what Android needs in order to compete with Apple and its iPad in the tablet space.

    I’ve long been wary of Chrome OS because I think it would suffer from Google-itis in that its underpinning would be the company’s identification system and would always prefer Google web apps. And given that Google doesn’t have a presence in the social web, it would lack social sense and sensibility.

    For comparison, look at the JoliCloud OS, which is completely socially aware and uses Facebook Connect as a way to bridge various components with a user’s social graph. That’s what a modern OS for cloud clients should look like.

    Now don’t get me wrong — I don’t want to hate on Chrome OS. I just think Google needs to pick a winning horse. And the winner here is clearly Android.



    Atimi: Software Development, On Time. Learn more about Atimi »

  • Pano Logic’s minimalist business networking solution

    All the software available to the user is generated from a virtual desktop on the server(s...

    Instead of looking to upgrade a network of computers with the familiar PC-server setup, Pano Logic offers a solution where users still benefit from a Windows-like experience but the desktop PC is gone. The PC is replaced by the Pano Device, a small silver or black box which connects to a virtual computer hosted at a data center. It’s said to require little or no maintenance thanks to there being “no processor, no operating system, no memory, no drivers, no software and no moving parts.”..
    Continue Reading Pano Logic’s minimalist business networking solution

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  • Other bathtubs – capital

    China is rapidly eliminating old coal generating capacity, according to Technology Review.

    Draining Bathtub

    Coal still meets 70 percent of China’s energy needs, but the country claims to have shut down 60 gigawatts’ worth of inefficient coal-fired plants since 2005. Among them is the one shown above, which was demolished in Henan province last year. China is also poised to take the lead in deploying carbon capture and storage (CCS) technology on a large scale. The gasifiers that China uses to turn coal into chemicals and fuel emit a pure stream of carbon dioxide that is cheap to capture, providing “an excellent opportunity to move CCS forward globally,” says Sarah Forbes of the World Resources Institute in Washington, DC.

    That’s laudable. However, the inflow of new coal capacity must be even greater. Here’s the latest on China’s coal output:

    ChinaCoalOutput

    China Statistical Yearbook 2009 & 2009 main statistical data update

    That’s just a hair short of 3 billion tons in 2009, with 8%/yr growth from ‘07-’09, in spite of the recession. On a per capita basis, US output and consumption is still higher, but at those staggering growth rates, it won’t take China long to catch up.

    A simple model of capital turnover involves two parallel bathtubs, a “coflow” in SD lingo:

    CapitalTurnover

    Every time you build some capital, you also commit to the energy needed to run it (unless you don’t run it, in which case why build it?). If you get fancy, you can consider 3rd order vintaging and retrofits, as here:

    Capital Turnover 3o

    To get fancier still, see the structure in John Sterman’s thesis, which provides for limited retrofit potential (that Gremlin just isn’t going to be a Prius, no matter what you do to the carburetor).

    The basic challenge is that, while it helps to retire old dirty capital quickly (increasing the outflow from the energy requirements bathtub), energy requirements will go up as long as the inflow of new requirements is larger, which is likely when capital itself is growing and the energy intensity of new capital is well above zero. In addition, when capital is growing rapidly, there just isn’t much old stuff around (proportionally) to throw away, because the age structure of capital will be biased toward new vintages.

    Hat tip: Travis Franck

  • Motorola Milestone ready for overclocking

    Before today, overclocking a Motorola Milestone was mostly just a dream, because of the way the boot partition is locked up. But no more. Thanks to some pure genius (something we’re getting used to when talking Android), you can now rev up your RPMs (erm, or clock cycles) on the Milestone, and all you need is to make sure your phone is rooted. Additionally, you’ll be able to overclock the Milestone to 1.2GHz, just like the Droid, which should provide a significant speed boost. This method works by actually changing the structures in the kernel’s memory runtime via an injected kernel module, which means you could turn up your CPU before playing a game, or turn it down to save battery life; all without having to reboot the system. Be sure to check out the in-depth instructions. [Milestone Overclock code page via XDA Developers] Thanks, Tiago!

    This is a post by Android Central. It is sponsored by the Android Central Accessories Store

  • Interact With 12 Scientific Game Changers [Science]

    Scientific American put together an interactive piece on 12 events that could drastically change the world, from nuclear exchange to cold fusion to the discovery of other dimensions. Pretty much all the stuff Lost totally prepared us for. More »







  • Joe Jonas Dumped Demi Lovato Over Phone!

    Some people use their cellphones to keep in touch for friends and family — Joe Jonas uses his to ditch dead weight. The Jonas Brothers singer, who split from Taylor Swift in a 37-second phonecall two years ago, reportedly used the same method to end his romance with Demi Lovato just days ago.

    Despite an early report claiming Jonas called it quits with Lovato in a face-to-face confrontation over her media-friendly chats about their relationship, Us Weekly tattles claim Joe actually ditched Demi via mobile because he “didn’t have the heart to do it in person.”

    “He thought it wasn’t a good idea for them to be dating and working together all time and was afraid it was ruining the friendship.”

    Jonas, 20, and Lovato, 17, met in 2007 while filming The Disney Channel Original Movie Camp Rock. They confirmed their romance in a radio interview with Ryan Seacrest in March.

    Neither Jonas nor Lovato has commented. The pair is set to tour together this summer.

    A little food for thought: If you’re not mature enough to sever ties with someone respectfully — and face-to-face — perhaps you’re not mature enough to be dating at all.


  • Discover Your Inner Godwit | The Loom

    scottOn March 29, 1912, Robert Scott and two fellow explorers huddled in a tent during a fierce Antarctic blizzard. They had landed on the edge of Antarctica five months earlier, hoping to be the first people in history to reach the South Pole. They succeeded in reaching the Pole, but it was a bitter success. They discovered that another team, led by Roald Amundsen, had gotten there first. So Scott and his team turned back and began the 800-mile journey back to the sea. They hauled sledges themselves, without the help of dogs. The plunging temperatures increased the friction of the snow, so that they had to put in as much effort as they would to haul the sledges through sand. On February 4, Edgar Evans dropped dead. On March 16, Laurence Oates, barely able to walk, simply left the camp and never came back. A blizzard on March 20 left them unable to leave their tent.

    “I do not think we can hope for any better things now,” Scott wrote in his diary nine days later. “We shall stick it out to the end, but we are getting weaker, of course, and the end cannot be far.” And indeed he likely died that day. Scott and his crew were finally discovered eight months later.

    Scott may not have been the first person to reach the South Pole, but he did earn a different kind of distinction: “the greatest human performances of sustained physical endurance of all time,” in the words of University of Cape Town sports scientist Timothy Noakes. All told, Scott probably burned about million calories. Each day he and his fellow explorers burned around 7,000 calories, about four times the rate of a man at rest.

    Scott’s accomplishment was exceptional not just for a human, but for any animal. Animals rarely push their metabolism beyond about four times their resting rate for any length of time. A cheetah may explode into a sixty-mile-an-hour sprint, but for only a few seconds. Most animals that push themselves hard–birds racing around to find food for their chicks for days on end, for example–only push themselves about four times above their resting metabolic rate.

    godwit440In 2007, however, a small bird left Scott in the dust. Scientists discovered that bar-tailed godwits could fly from Alaska to New Zealand, non-stop. Their metabolism, scientists found, rose to about eight times their resting rate. And it stayed there, 24 hours a day, for nine days. And while Scott could refuel on his journey by eating horse meat and pemmican, the bar-tailed godwits fasted for their entire 7,000 miles journey.

    As I report in the lead story of the Science Times in tomorrow’s New York Times, research now shows that the bar-tailed godwit has some company. Using sophisticated new location-tracking devices, scientists have discovered other species several travel several thousand miles without a break.

    I also write about the deeper significance of these new results. How do these birds achieve these awesome treks. And why? In a new paper, the Swedish biologist Anders Hederstrom argues that birds like bar-tailed godwits aren’t all that unusual. Lots of birds that go on much shorter migrations have many of the same adaptations as the champions–the ability to store up fat, an ability to navigate long distances, an efficient body shape, and so on.

    Theunis Piersma, a Dutch biologist, offered up a provocative idea for the evolution of ultramarathoning birds. Their migrations may be able to shift quickly from short to long. Birds have a huge potential to work hard, without the need for long-term physical evolutionary changes coming first. All they need is a change in behavior, and their bodies will meet the challenge. Once they shift their behavior, natural selection may well favor physical changes that help them go long distances. (Piersma will write about this at length in his upcoming book, The Flexible Phenotype.)

    For Piersma, what’s really interesting is why godwits and some other birds push so hard, while most other animals don’t. Piersma thinks that laziness is, for the most part, adaptive. If animals push themselves beyond about four times their resting metabolic rate, they usually have to pay dearly. They become vulnerable to predators and disease, for example. When scientists have added extra chicks to the nests of kestrel hawks, for example, the parents have to work harder to feed them. As a result, the scientists found, the parents became more likely to die. When scientists add little weights to bees that are buzzing around gathering nectar, the bees are also more likely to die. And Scott himself is a grisly illustration of Piersma’s tradeoff. His foot became infected so badly, he wrote, that “amputation is the best I can hope for.”

    Flying over open seas, however, may allow some birds to escape this trade-off. Predators and parasites can’t catch them when they’re hundreds of miles from the nearest land. When bar-tailed godwits land after flying 7,000 miles, they can just take a long nap without worrying about being eaten. The very things that might make exhaustion more dangerous are missing from their migration.

    For more, check out my story.

    Update: And be sure to check out the great interactive maps.

    [Images: Scott, Wikipedia/Godwits, Robert E. Gill]


  • Social Bits: The Physical Visualization of Urban Social Data

    social_bits.jpg
    Social Bits [socialbits.org] is a research design project focused on putting digital information in a physical context. A collection of small interventions located at Istanbul aim to explore the physical display of urban data.

    “Collective Data Maps” allow visitors to pinpoint the most liked and most disliked locations of İstanbul. “Fluid Data” is a spatial projection that shows real-time Twitter posts from İstanbul by highlighting and flowing past architectural elements in a fluid way. “kazamidori” is an interactive object resembling a weather vane to indicate the direction of where visitors in a website are coming from in real-time. “News Leak” is a physical printer located in the city which instantly prints a summary of the latest news and culture from around the world. “Urban Mood” visualizes the real-time mood of the citizens of İstanbul through a simple keyword projection and sound installation. Lastly “Urbansphere Wearables” is a collection of beautiful T-shirts that reflect the daily keywords of the city by utilizing the data streams of social networks as a source of fashion design.

    See also Newsknitter.

  • T-Mobile expands HSPA+ network to northeast U.S.

    T-Mobile logo

    T-Mobile sent out a press release today announcing that they have continued to build out their HSPA+ network that provides download speeds up to 21 Mbps.  As of today, T-Mobile customers in the northeast United States have access to the super fast download and upload speeds, including everyone in Upstate New York (Buffalo, Albany, Rochester, Syracuse), Connecticut (Hartford, New Haven, Milford, and Stamford), and Providence, Rhode Island.  The new network expansion has also been lit up in Memphis, Tennessee and Las Vegas, Nevada.  In addition to all of these expansions, T-Mobile has continued to strengthen their high-speed HSPA+ network in the New York City metropolitan area.  Lastly, T-Mobile has stated that they have plans to continue to flip the high speed switch in Boston and Washington D.C. in the next few weeks, and they will continue to expand their HSPA+ footprint in the coming months to cover 100 major metropolitan areas in the U.S.  Are any of you in one of the areas that just received T-Mobile’s HSPA+ speeds?  Tell us your experiences below!


  • Halo Reach coming September 14th

     

    Today we announced that Halo: Reach will hit stores on Tuesday, September 14th 2010.

     

    Halo®: Reach

     

    As a reminder, on Sept 15th Halo: Reach will be available in standard, Limited and Legendary editions. Full details on the contents of the Limited and Legendary editions are below:

     

     

     

     

     

    Halo: Reach Limited Edition – $79.99 (USD)

    In addition to the game disc and manual, the Limited edition includes:

    • Game disc housed in recovered ONI ”black box”
    • An exclusive Elite armor set for use in multiplayer modes
    • Artifact bag containing Dr. Halsey’s personal journal and other classified documents and effects that unravel long held secrets from the “Halo” universe

    Pre-order the Limited Edition

     

    Halo: Reach Legendary Edition – $149.99 (USD)
    The complete “Halo: Reach” collection. In addition to the game disc, manual, and the complete contents of the Limited edition, the Legendary edition includes:

    • Noble Team statue expertly crafted by the artisans at McFarlane Toys. Individually molded, hand-painted and individually numbered, this statue is a must-have for any serious “Halo” fan
    • UNSC-themed custom packaging

    Pre-order the Legendary Edition

     

  • Study: 17% of Verizon Customers Want the iPhone

    Followers of smartphone technology are no doubt tired of hearing the seemingly endless rumors that the iPhone is going to appear on carriers other than AT&T in the U.S. There have been at least one rumor for each carrier, and even some speculation that all U.S. carriers would be seeing the iPhone this year. Why so much speculation about this? The answer is revealed in a study found by an analyst at Morgan Stanley (s ms)– big money.

    According to the study almost 17 percent of current Verizon customers have an “extreme interest” in getting an iPhone should the carrier offer the phone. That figure connotes a huge financial return for Big Red when you realize that Verizon has 90 million customers. When you carry the study results to a natural conclusion, there are 15.3 million customers that want a Verizon iPhone. That’s a lot of phones sold for Apple, and a huge annual return for Verizon on subscription fees.

    Verizon might rake in big fees with an iPhone, but Apple wouldn’t mind reaping its rewards, either. It could expect to sell 7 -8 million iPhones a year to Verizon customers. This is enough to help Apple’s smartphone growth to increase almost 10 percent a year over the 26 percent currently held. These numbers are big enough that there might be some behind-the-scenes discussions to bring that AT&T exclusivity to a close. Perhaps we’ll hear more on June 7th when Steve Jobs gives the keynote at the WWDC.

    Related research on GigaOM Pro (sub. req’d): Google Takes the Open Battle to Apple on Multiple Fronts



    Atimi: Software Development, On Time. Learn more about Atimi »

  • Tony Blair Joins Silicon Valley

    Britain’s former Prime Minister Tony Blair has joined a Silicon Valley business as a senior environmental adviser.

    Blair will be joining Khosla Ventures, a firm started by Sun Microsystems Inc., co-founder Vinod Khosla. The company has been investing in companies that are themselves pursuing alternative fuel strategies and other environmentally focused technologies.

    “[Blair] is going to help us in many areas that technie nerds like us here in Silicon Valley don’t understand and tend to underestimate the importance of,” Khosla said. (more…)

  • Save Dave: Twitter campaign rallies around Sirius XM’s Ron and Fez producer

    There’s a campaign brewing on Twitter that really ought to be highlighted, if only because it shows the power (well, potential power) of the site. Dave McDonald, a producer on the Ron and Fez show on Sirius XM (and part-time inventor), needs a raise. He needs a raise because he has a growing family to support. But let’s not even bring up personal reasons. The man deserves a raise because he’s a fantastic asset to the Ron and Fez show and to Sirius XM as a whole. Without a raise, Dave will have to leave the show, which is incredibly disappointing. He’s a producer of the highest caliber—competent producers don’t grow on trees, otherwise terrestrial radio might not be as dead as it is today—and yet he earns little more than an intern. If this were 20 years ago we might see picket lines forming outside the Sirius XM studios in New York, but because this is 2010, fans have turned to Twitter to send Sirius XM management a very clear message: Save Dave, Pay The Man.

    The rallying symbol for the Twitter movement is the above illustration, created by the eminently talented dregman. It evokes memories of the iconic Hope poster of candidate Obama and the equally moving I’m With Coco campaign from earlier this year. While candidate Obama eventually became President Obama, Conan O’Brien can now look forward to a solid one-hour block of time on basic cable. There’s different degrees of success.

    The Save Dave campaign, after an initial period of waywardness and disorganization, seems to have found its footing under the superintendency of Mikey Boy, a longtime friend of the Ron and Fez show. Random, misguided tweets along the lines of “hey sirius, you jerks, pay dave or else!” gave way to standardized hashtags and work-friendly—and re-tweetable—slogans. These includes the titular tweet of the campaign in Save Dave as well as We Are Loud, We Are Proud, We Love ESD [for East Side Dave, his nickname].

    The role of the Davepound should not be discounted. The Davepound, for those unaware, refers to McDonald’s more vociferous fans—analogous to co-host Fez Whatley’s Whatley Posse. The Davepound has bombarded Twitter with messages of support. Distinguished Davepound member Opie, of the Opie and Anthony show, also on Sirius XM, tweeted the following two days ago:

    Completely agree with @DavePound :Sirius needs to give @eastsidedave a raise. He’s a valuable asset to the Ron & Fez Show. #savedaveless than a minute ago via web

    This tweet has been re-tweeted numerous since then. With any luck, Sirius XM brass will have noticed it, and others like it.

    #savedave #esd #sirius #siriusxm #davepound #paydave are all part of the Save Dave campaign.

    Is the campaign working? That’s something only Sirius XM management knows for sure, but the trends look promising. Early last week, when McDonald announced that Thursday, May 27, would be his final day unless his requests were met, the mood on the show and its affiliated online outposts could be described as bleak. When asked today where he put McDonald’s chances of being given a much deserved raise, fellow producer Pepper Hicks (and winner of the 2009 CrunchGear Satellite Radio Award for Personality of the Year) put the odds at 6.5 out of 10. Given Hicks’ generally glass-half-empty disposition, I think we should feel confident with that number.

    Twitter’s a fine tool to let the world know that you’re eating lunch, but can it affect people’s lives? Can it help ensure the continuation of excellent, excellent radio and the stabilization of one man’s situation tenuous? Here’s hoping.


  • NCBI ROFL: A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away, Jar Jar Binks had a fungal infection. | Discoblog

    It’s BMJ week (again) on NCBI ROFL! After the success of our first BMJ week, we decided to devote another week to fun articles from holiday issues of the British Medical Journal. Enjoy! Tokelau on Naboo “Tinea imbricata, a superficial fungal infection of man, has an ornate appearance composed of concentric circles and polycyclic or serpiginous scaly plaques. The condition is common in several humid tropical regions, especially in parts of Polynesia and Melanesia. It is also reported occasionally in the Amazon basin and other tropical areas in both hemispheres. The precise distribution of tinea imbricata, however, has been poorly defined ever since the disease was named by Sir Patrick Manson, the father of tropical medicine. I report the possible presence of tinea imbricata outside its previously known geographic and taxonomic distribution. Several Gungan inhabitants of Naboo, a planet of the Galactic Republic depicted in Star Wars Episode 1: The Phantom Menace, have skin with the distinctive annular and polycyclic pattern of tinea imbricata. Jar Jar Binks, a Gungan who figures prominently in this movie, shows this eruption in figure ​2. Manson wrote of the infection, “Again, tinea imbricata, if it has been in existence any length of time, involves a very large surface, as …


  • Moving to Mac: Software Choices

    Mac KeyboardWhen evaluating if a move to Mac was possible, I created a list of the software tools that I used on a day-to-day basis, and then looked for replacements on the Mac side of the fence. I knew that the hardware- and OS-specific differences between PC and Mac would be important, but it’s really the software that I use to do my work that determines my productivity.

    Thankfully, in many instances, I found I was able to start with a direct Mac version of the Windows software I was already comfortable with and using productively. For browsing purposes I’ve been using Google Chrome on the PC for months, so I jumped on to the Mac version and got to business as usual. I’ve installed Firefox and have briefly tested Safari, but I’m quite happy with Chrome, even if it still retains its beta status on the Mac.

    With the browser comes access to all of the web-based services I use that make up the bulk of my tools, including CRM, GmailGoogle CalendarGoogle Docs, as well as the help desk/ticketing systems that I use for my job. I use Thymer for task management, but Things and OmniFocus will probably get some evaluation time as I’ve always been quite curious about them.

    There are also quite a few programs where it was just a matter of installing the Mac version of my existing tools. I use Jing for screen grabs for blogging, tech support, jokes and even short screencasts for training or support. Functionally and visually it’s identical on the Mac. I know that Skitch and LittleSnapper are popular alternatives but I’ve always been quite pleased with Jing.

    Skype is a staple for IM and video chats for both work and personal use, so a switch to the Mac client was a requirement. Functionally it’s virtually identical but the interface is different enough that it required a bit of an adjustment period.

    I’ve long been a fan of Dropbox for syncing all sorts of things between my computers as well as quick file transfers between friends and clients. Again, the availability of a Mac client was a requirement and I’ve found it to work equally as well. I do miss the ability to just double-click on the Dropbox icon in my status bar but rather now needing to explicitly choose to open the folder. Once I settle on a program launcher though that will cease to be an issue.

    I spend a lot of time on Twitter and have been using TweetDeck for a long time to manage that service. I like the ability to create the custom searches I need to track as well as being able to post to Facebook as well as to some of the client accounts to which I contribute. I knew that the cross-platform nature of the Adobe AIR meant that a Mac version of TweetDeck was available. I briefly experimented with Tweetie as it’s one of those programs that Mac users have always raved about but quickly moved back to TweetDeck — if for no other reason than I was more comfortable with it.

    The nature of what I do, along with my natural curiosity, means I’ll probably continue to look for alternatives and to explore the Mac-only options that exist in these categories. But the availability of Mac versions of my favorite tools meant I was able to get myself up and running quickly.

    How much of what you use could be easily transferred to another platform?

    Image by stock.xchng user mab_design



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  • Stig gives a lesson on the Top Gear test track

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    It’s time to do your homework, kids. The blokes at Top Gear have built a virtual representation of the Stig’s personal playground. If you’ve got some time to kill, head on over to the site for a turn-by-turn breakdown of the UK show’s test track, including the elusive history of each corner’s name. The virtual track will even let you in on which gear you should be in for each section should you ever find yourself as a star in a reasonably priced car.

    Even if you don’t see your acting career thrusting you the public consciousness anytime soon, there’s still a chance you’ll be able to have your way with the track. A rumor dusted up last month that claimed Polyphony Digital now holds the rights to test ground’s in-game representation, which means that should Gran Turismo 5 ever decide to drop into stores, the PlayStation universe will be breathing down the Stig’s neck.

    TG‘s virtual track also features a couple of other neat tricks, including a “Stig’s Eye View” that allows you see what the perfect line should look like. You can even pick whether you want to view the track through the windshield of an econobox or a genuine supercar.

    [Source: Top Gear]

    Stig gives a lesson on the Top Gear test track originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 24 May 2010 17:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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