Category: News

  • Bono undergone emergency neurosurgery

    Bono undergone emergency neurosurgery

    Within two weeks of starting the tour in North America of its ‘360 Degree World TourBono has been in an accident during a preliminary test which forced him to be admitted to a Munich hospital to undergo emergency neurosurgery, as confirmed by a spokesman for U2.

    According to the spokesman of the Irish band, Bono, 50, suffered an accident during a test for North America’s ‘360 Degree World Tour‘, which begins on June 3 in Salt Lake City, Utah. U2 went through Europe over the last year, breaking sales records wherever they played.

    Bono has undergone an emergency surgery on his back caused by an injury during training tour preparation,” the representative, who added that the singer was taken over by Dr. Jorg Tonn and Dr. Muller Wohlfahrt “specialist neurosurgeons a hospital” in the German city of Munich.

    When the doctors will determine Bono’s health status there will be issued a statement which will lead to how it’s going to affect the development of the tour. It is known as the first appearance in Salt Lake City, has been suspended.

    After touring the United States and Canada, the Irish band is scheduled to return to Europe, with a first concert on August 6 in Turin, Italy. Then tour the old continent to anchor the end of September in San Sebastián and Sevill, Spain.

    Related posts:

    1. U2’s Lead Singer Undergoes Emergency Back Surgery
    2. Chaz Bono Became a Man Today
    3. Chaz Bono: Cher’s daughter is now a man! No More Chastity Bono

  • Roy Oswalt requests trade from Houston Astros

    http://a323.yahoofs.com/ymg/ept_sports_fantasy_experts__28/ept_sports_fantasy_experts-751826144-1274482540.jpg?ymsNKLDD3yU3IFDj

    Roy Oswalt(notes) has pitched brilliantly this season, like the 2001-02 version of himself. He’s delivered a 2.66 ERA, a 1.07 WHIP and 60 Ks in 61.0 innings. He’s completed at least six frames in every start and hasn’t allowed more than three runs — earned or unearned — in any game.

    Nonetheless, he has a record of 2-6, because he pitches for the lowest-scoring team in baseball.

    In fact, the Astros currently rank dead-last in runs scored (2.98 per game), batting average (.228), on-base percentage (.274), slugging (.321), hits (305), doubles (53) and homers (21). They were shutout by Colorado’s Ubaldo Jimenez(notes) on Thursday, as Oswalt lost again. In his last four decisions (all losses), these were the final scores: 0-4, 1-2, 0-1, 2-4.

    So it’s tough to blame him for today’s news. The Chicago Tribune’s Mark Gonzales reports that Oswalt has requested a trade.

    The July 31 trading deadline is more than two months away, but one of baseball’s best pitchers has asked to be put on the market.

    Houston Astros ace Roy Oswalt, a three-time National League All-Star, has asked owner Drayton McLane Jr. to be traded, a source said Friday.

    Oswalt is under contract for $15 million this year and $16 million in 2011. The following season he has a $16 million team option or a $2 million buyout. Despite the 32-year-old’s stellar track record (3.21 career ERA), his pricetag will obviously scare off a few teams. 

    According to an earlier report from ESPN’s Jayson Stark, the potential trade destinations that interest Oswalt are St. Louis, Texas and Atlanta. But if he’s requesting/demanding a move, then presumably he’s open to other options. Considering the abysmal run-support situation in Houston, Oswalt’s fantasy value is almost certain to increase (though if he heads to the Rangers, the league change and home park will complicate things).  

    Ed Wade was born for this moment, Astros fans, so you’re in good hands. Let’s deal.

    Photo via US Presswire 

  • PayPal Wants to Be in Your TV, Your DVD Player and Your Car

    PayPal doesn’t just want to be in your mobile phone, or behind the transfer of virtual goods in social networks such as Facebook, where it’s one of the options for the new Facebook Credit payment system, according to President Scott Thompson. He told me during an interview in Toronto recently that he sees the company becoming the default payment engine for your television, your car, your DVD player and even your fridge. Thompson also said that the online payment business is exploding with new competitors in a way he has never seen before, but that PayPal is confident it can retain its edge as more and more transactions move online.

    Thompson took issue with critics who have suggested that the company hasn’t been as nimble or as aggressive in the mobile space as it should have been. “We’ve been investing in mobile since 2005, and we continue to invest and improve,” Thompson said. “We fundamentally believe that mobile is a big wave, and one we want to be a part of and take advantage of.” However, he added that PayPal doesn’t want to simply focus on the iPhone or Android devices, that its vision is much larger. “Anything that is at the end of a network should have payment ability,” he said, including portable devices but also more prosaic products such as your TV, your DVD player — even your car.

    At some point in the future, Thompson suggested during a keynote interview at this week’s mesh conference (disclosure: I am one of the organizers of the conference), cars will have the intelligence to be able to handle encryption and security, and therefore be able to do payments as well. “Companies are building automation into cars, so that when you pull into a parking spot and you park for 62 minutes, you pay for that 62 minutes,” he said. “Why can’t the car authenticate you when you’re dispensing fuel? Why can’t it authenticate you when you go through a toll booth?” All that is required is a secure payment and authentication system, said Thompson, and that is what PayPal aims to provide.

    And what about competitors like Square — the mobile payment startup from Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey — or Zong, which recently raised $15 million? Thompson said that Square is “a neat little piece of technology that I’m not sure is going to solve a big problem going forward,” but that he likes the company and has “a good relationship” with Dorsey. The PayPal president also said that the competition in the payment sector “is like nothing I’ve ever seen — it’s really intense,” but that it was a sign of the market potential and that it wasn’t likely to be a “winner-take-all kind of game.”

    In the short video clip embedded below, Thompson talks about the company’s strategy and its vision of a future with multiple devices handling payments:

    Related content from GigaOM Pro (sub req’d): Mobile Market Overview Q1 2010

    Feature image courtesy of Flickr user Andres Rueda



    Alcatel-Lucent NextGen Communications Spotlight — Learn More »

  • NCBI ROFL: Kinky quails fertilize more eggs. | Discoblog

    Sexual fetishism in a quail (Coturnix japonica) model system: test of reproductive success.
    “In the present study, the authors explored the reproductive consequences of fetishistic behavior in a previously developed animal model of sexual fetishism (F. Köksal et al., 2004). Male domesticated quail (Coturnix japonica) received sexual conditioning trials in which a terrycloth object (the conditioned stimulus [CS]) was paired with the opportunity to copulate with a female quail (the unconditioned stimulus). Approximately half of the male quail came to copulate with the CS object and were considered to have developed fetishistic behavior. Each of the male quail was then tested with a female quail, whose eggs were incubated to determine rates of fertilization. The CS object was present for 30 s before and during the copulation test. Fetishistic male quail were slower to achieve cloacal contact with the female quail and showed less efficient copulatory behavior. However, they fertilized a greater proportion of eggs than nonfetishistic male quail. These results are unexpected from previous studies of the relationship between reproductive success and copulatory behavior and are discussed in terms of how fetishistic behavior directed toward an inanimate object may modify male-female interactions.” Photo: flickr/ingridtaylar Related content:
    Discoblog: NCBI ROFL: Geese: the pack animals …


  • Rendered Speculation: Suzuki SX4-based VW ‘Rocktan’ conjured up

    Filed under: , , , ,

    According to Mibz.com, the Suzuki SX4 won’t be pimped to just Fiat anymore (see: Sedici), Volkswagen is getting in on the act. Going after the small end of the market, VW is reportedly set to take advantage of its new 19.9 percent share of Suzuki and swiping the lovable little SX4 as the basis of a new model tentatively dubbed Rocktan.

    Positioned as a city-sized crossover, the Rocktan theoretically slots in between the similarly tiny CrossPolo and Tiguan, though this is all unconfirmed at this point. Power will apparently not be from Suzuki, but rather from VW, likely the 1.4-liter TSI gasoline engine and 1.6- and 2.0-liter TDI diesels. This could be mere grist for the rumormill, or we could soon see a Nissan Juke-sized VolkZuki. For now, all we’ve got are dreams of another flavor of the friendly SX4.

    [Source: Mibz.com]

    Rendered Speculation: Suzuki SX4-based VW ‘Rocktan’ conjured up originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 21 May 2010 17:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Friday music blogging: Fang Island

    by David Roberts

    Imagine you’re 15 years old. You and your best friend have just gotten stoned for the first time, you’re laying around his rec room. Your shoes are off, the sun is shining through the windows,  you’re listening to metal albums. You start to notice that in every song there’s that one part: The Awesome Part. The music accelerates, or crescendos, or shifts suddenly, and you look at each other and say, “That. Was. Awesome.” Then, because you’re stoned, you vow to some day make an album of all awesome parts. Just awesome parts, strung together by mad kickassology scientists into a tapestry of pure ***ing awesomeness! Then you go back to munching on Cheez-Its.

    Except these five guys from Rhode Island went and did it. Fang Island’s eponymous debut is an album of all awesome parts, a sound they hilariously describe as “everyone high-fiving everyone.” I would call it joyous metal, and I won’t lie: it’s an acquired taste. It can be overwhelming, like doing keg stands with Gatorade. But I can’t get enough.

    Consider this song, “Sidewinder.” It starts as a speedmetal chug. About 1:35 in, it becomes a triumphant chant. Then at around 2:15 it becomes a melodic riff, and then at 3:00 … the harmonized twin-guitar attack! To top things off, around 3:45, a towering metal squeal. All awesome parts. Turn it up.

    Related Links:

    Hardcore hip-hop for vegans

    Friday music blogging: Band of Horses again

    Friday music blogging: Dr. Dog again






  • Tighter Government Grip On Bank Policies Assures Investors

    It might take a month to wrap up any amendments on the financial bill for U.S. major banks but mere act of the Senate to start lobbying on it has triggered an increase in the financial stocks as seen on Friday’s trend.

    Obama’s Government will take a dip on long standing financial policies which seemingly shield major banks for quite a while. As the country checks back on the 2008 recession and also see the Euro plunge at current times, financing banks poses as the backdrop of the pictures.  There haven’t been enough securities for consumers and investors from these elite banks where mortgages interest rate and terms left U.S. economy in shambles.

    Not long after Obama calls for an overhaul, Greek PM made it well-known last week that Wall Street banks will be under thorough probing whether it contributed to the worst debt crisis of Greece.

    In the vote of 59-39, the Senate’s task is to come up with changes that will strike more balance between financing banks and consumer rights which will eventually influence national or even global economy.

    For the meantime, several arguments on the specifics are not yet settled in the Senate such as the suggestion to create a $150 billion collection from leader banks to be used in salvaging closure of financial institutions.

    Related posts:

    1. Fake risk levels, US banks should be monitored highly.
    2. U.S. Banks Get Linked To Greece Debt Crisis
    3. Obama calls for Wall Street reform

  • Mazda CX-7 2.2 CRTD 173 CV, prueba (Parte I)

    Mazda_CX-7

    Regresamos con una prueba del un SUV, ya hemos probado varios modelos 4×4 desde un atípico Chevrolet Captiva de GLP hasta el Citroën C-Crosser, pero esta vez me voy a un modelo que se sitúa más cerca de los premiums que de los SUV generalistas, y que acaba de incorporar un nuevo motor diesel.

    Se trata del Mazda CX-7 que hasta ahora sólo lo teníamos disponible en el mercado con un propulsor gasolina, (el 2.3 de 260 CV) algo que lastraba las ventas de este SUV. Con la llegada del nuevo motor 2.2 CRTD de 175 CV, tenemos un SUV con una estética muy cuidada, unas buenas prestaciones y sobretodo un motor diesel con lo que ello conlleva en cuanto a consumos.

    La llegada de este motor, se suma a una serie de cambios que llegan con la versión que se puso a la venta a finales de 2009, entre los que podemos destacar cambios exteriores o un nuevo sistema para reducir gases, el denominado Sistema de Reducción Catalítica Selectiva (SCR). Por tanto vamos a centrarnos en el motor de este CX-7, su comportamiento y sus consumos y emisiones.

    Motor y prestaciones

    Mazda_CX-7

    Como comentamos antes, la novedad mecánica principal es este motor de 2,2 litros (2.184 cc) que entrega una potencia de 173 CV, es un motor conocido dentro de la marca japonesa, también disponible en otros modelos con una variante de 185 CV. Lo mejor de este motor es la fuerza con la que empuja a este CX-7, puesto que sus 400 Nm de par, se notan y hacen que en el comportamiento del SUV no se note ni su peso ni sus medidas.

    El motor empieza a responder desde las 1.700 r.p.m., pero sin duda donde mejor se mueve es entre las 2.000 y 2.500 r.p.m., y el empuje se mantiene con fuerza hasta las 3.500 r.p.m., pero tiene poca respuesta a bajas vueltas. Este motor va asociado a un cambio manual de seis relaciones, un cambio muy preciso y con una palanca corta que se encuentra en una posición muy cómoda para engranar las marchas y es bastante elástico (sobretodo la sexta), contando con una primera que se hace muy practica para su uso off-road, si bien es cierto, que el uso fuera del asfalto no es una de sus virtudes.

    Comportamiento

    Mazda_CX-7

    En comportamiento es cercano al de una berlina, me ha sorprendido que si tenemos en cuenta el tamaño del CX-7, en el momento que te pones al volante sorprende por el aplomo del vehículo, al contar con un chasis muy bien calibrado y cuyo punto fuerte son las carreteras.

    Incluso, lo hemos metido por zonas de curvas bastante rápidas y constantes cambios de apoyo y la respuesta ha sido muy buena para tratarse de un SUV de 1,8 toneladas de peso.

    En comportamiento por ciudad, se comporta bastante bien, tenemos una buena visibilidad y sobretodo un punto elevado de visión y su motor hace que se mueva de forma bastante ágil, quizás sus medidas no son lo más indicado pero la cámara de visión trasera facilita las cosas al aparcar, eso sí, debería de contar con un sensor delantero que sería muy útil para maniobrar.

    Mazda_CX-7

    La dirección también ayuda a ese comportamiento, con tacto preciso pero bastante asistida. Y sin duda otra de las características donde destaca es en confort de marcha, puesto que es un vehículo pensado para la carretera que mima a los ocupantes y el confort abordo es muy bueno, siendo un vehículo práctico para realizar viajes, puesto que en el interior del habitáculo apenas tendremos rumorosidad, pese a que su motor suena a diesel y se nota, pero cuenta con una buena insonorización interior.

    Para frenar este Mazda CX-7, cuenta con cuatro frenos de disco de prácticamente el mismo diámetro para las cuatro ruedas, siendo ligeramente mayores los delanteros, estos frenos detienen sin problemas a este SUV.

    Consumos

    Mazda_CX-7

    En el apartado de consumos, sigue la tónica dominante en el segmento. Este motor 2.2 CRTD de 173 CV no destaca por un consumo excesivamente bajo, pero es lo suficientemente racional para un SUV de estas características. El consumo medio que homologa es de 7,5 litros a los 100 km, nosotros de media en autopista a velocidad legal rondamos los 6,5 l/100 km. El consumo medio durante la prueba en recorrido por ciudad (30 %) y carretera (70%) rondo los 8,5 litros a los 100 km.

    En el apartado de emsiones, destaca la incorporación del Sistema de Reducción Catalítica Selectiva (SCR), que se encarga de reducir las emisiones en un 40% de óxidos de nitrógeno (NOx), quizás os suene menos conocido que el CO2, pero que son también emisiones nocivas para la atmósfera. Estas reducciones se hacen gracias al uso de un spray, (AdBlue) a base de urea acuosa, que genera una reacción química reduciendo de esa manera las emisiones contaminantes.

    Comportamiento Off-road

    cX7

    Antes de hablaros del comportamiento off-road, tenemos que dejar claro que, como la mayoria de los SUV del mercado, no está orientado cara un uso campero, al CX-7 le gustan las carreteras y es donde mejor se defiende. Si salimos del asfalto nos vamos a topar con varios problemas, lo primero son las ruedas con llantas de 19″ y neumáticos orientados hacía el uso en carretera.

    Por otra parte, tenemos que recordar que no tiene reductora, sino un sistema de reparto de tracción automático que envía la tracción al tren trasero en caso de falta de agarre. Esto es una pena, porque el CX-7 cuenta con una buena altura libre del suelo y con unos buenos ángulos, por tanto donde mejor se va a defender es por pistas no asfaltadas o zonas de difícil agarre, (no hemos podido probarlo por nieve, -demasiado buen tiempo- ).

    Pero esto pasa en la mayoría de los SUV, porque muchos de ellos ni siquiera llegan a pisar zonas complicadas más allá de zonas o caminos sin asfaltar, por tanto para la mayoría de los usos el Mazda CX-7 responderá bastante bien, también podrían haberlo dotado de un control de descensos que es un elemento que si incorporan otros modelos de la competencia y que siempre es una ayuda.

    Después de hablaros del comportamiento del CX-7, y del motor diesel de 173 CV, en la segunda parte de la prueba hablaremos del diseño tanto exterior (muy propio de Mazda) como del diseño y habitabilidad interior, así como la calidad de los acabados.

    Mazda_CX-7

    Fotos | David Taboada
    Agradecimientos a Borja por la colaboración en la prueba



  • Pac-Man 30th Anniversary! Insert Coin to Play Pacman Game Before…

    Pac-man 30th Anniversary is commemorated today, May 22! Can you still recall the early years of Pacman game where you have to insert coin on the slot machine to start playing the Pacman game?  Insert coin is one of the earlier means to play Pacman game. Now, we can enjoy Pacman free online… that’s how Pacman game reached its Pac-Man 30th anniversary! As a matter of fact, as the technology advances and in the existence of internet, enjoying Pacman free online is one of the trends. To cite, “Google Pacman” is a Google logo that allows one to play pacman in remembrance of Pac-Man 30th anniversary. Try visiting a Google site.

    From insert coin-Pacman game to Pacman free online, isn’t it  a real evolution? Pac-man 30th anniversary is more than remembering the evolution of the Pacman game, it also means for everyone to enjoy and play Pacman!

    Pacman game is an arcade game developed by Namco. It was first released in Japan on May 22, 1980. Pacman game was widely accepted in the United States from its original release to the present day, Pacman game is considered to be one of the classics of the medium, virtually synonymous with video games, and an icon of the 1980s popular culture… from insert coin method to playing Pacman free online!

    Know more of Pac-man 30th anniversary. After the conventional insert coin method, enjoy now the pacman free online or you may try the “Google Pacman”.

    Related posts:

    1. PacMan 30th anniversary: Google PacMan game
    2. Pac Man 30th Anniversary: ‘Insert coin’ for two player pacman free online game
    3. Pac-Man 30th Anniversary: Play Pacman Free Online in “Google Pacman”

  • Google doodle celebrates Pac-Man 30th anniversary

    does a great job paying homage to holidays and other special events with their Google doodles, but this one may take the cake. In celebration of the 30th anniversay of Pac-Man, the Google logo has been transformed into a fully-playable game of Pac-Man. Seriously, just hit up the main Google Search page and wait for it to load up!


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    Google doodle celebrates Pac-Man 30th anniversary originally appeared on Gear Live on Fri, May 21, 2010 – 2:50:54


  • Stellar DSLR Time Lapse of a Space Shuttle Launch [Photography]

    Six weeks, and over 100 hours of footage shot on several Canon EOS 5D Mark IIs culminates in this remarkable, 4-minute time lapse of a Space Shuttle launch. [Air&Space via Planet5D] More »







  • Mercedes-Benz now offering oopsie insurance against paint, fabric blemishes

    Filed under: , ,

    2010 Mercedes-Benz E63 AMG – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Since the beginning of autodom, there have always been uptight car owners wincing at every swirl mark and paint chip. Blemishes in the leather upholstery cause heartburn, and spilled milk is definitely grounds for weeping. Couple that tightly-wound protectiveness with high-end conveyances from Mercedes-Benz and you’ve got a bout of steam emanating from owner’s ears.

    Mercedes-Benz thinks it has a solution in its new First Class Exterior and Interior insurance. DuPont is providing the rejuvenation service, and it means that you can grit your teeth a little less when ‘lil Johnny scrapes the side of your W212 with his handlebars. BMW is offering the same kind of coverage, and Mercedes expects it to be a popular up-sell, just as extended service contracts are.

    Photos by Drew Phillips / Copyright (C)2010 Weblogs, Inc.

    [Source: Automotive News – sub. req.]

    Mercedes-Benz now offering oopsie insurance against paint, fabric blemishes originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 21 May 2010 17:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • LG Ally may be delayed until May 27th

    LG Ally

    Hopefully none of you have been waiting in line outside of your local Verizon store for the LG Ally, because you’re in for a long wait.  MobileCrunch has posted an email allegedly received by someone who pre-ordered the Ally that states that the release date for LG’s new device’s availability is slated to be “on or around May 27th.”  There’s no reason given for the delay, so we’re not sure what’s up.  All we know is it’s good that the delay is only a week and not anything longer, otherwise users may start considering jumping ship to Sprint for their new superphone, the EVO 4G.  Have any of you pre-ordered the Ally and received a similar e-mail?  Tell us!

     


  • Will Satellite Mean Sea Levels Continue to Rise? by Jonathan Drake

    Article Tags: Jonathan Drake, Sea Level Gate

    article image

    Click source to read FULL report from Jonathan Drake, you can also download PDF here and Sea level trends for NOAA tide gauges and satellite data here:

    Regards

    Jonathan

    Source: trevoole.co.uk

    Read in full with comments »   


  • Details Of The Rapidshare Decision: No Search Engine, Plus Efforts To Takedown Copyright Material Helped

    Earlier, we wrote about the ruling against Perfect 10 in its attempt to get a temporary restraining order on Rapidshare. As we mentioned at the time, the only details we had were based on Rapidshare’s press release, that obviously presented it in the best possible light to Rapidshare. Thankfully, Christopher Harbin alerted us in the comments that he’s posted a copy of the ruling and written up his own analysis. First, here’s the ruling:




    From the initial statements about the ruling from Rapidshare, saying that it could not be infringing since it was just the host, I had naturally assumed that the court found that Rapidshare was protected by the DMCA’s safe harbors. But that is not the case. In fact, the court basically tosses out Rapidshare’s safe harbor claim, because Rapidshare (bizarrely) has never set up an official DMCA agent — which is necessary to qualify for the safe harbors. I would guess that Rapidshare’s excuse for not doing so is that it’s not based in the US, but if it’s going to deal with lawsuits in the US, it’s crazy not to have set up a DMCA agent (a very simple process).

    That said, there are some interesting things (not all good) in the ruling. There were a few things that helped Rapidshare here. First, is that it does do things to takedown content it believes to be infringing. Second (and perhaps most interesting) is the fact that it does not index or promote the content stored on its service by itself. Since most file sharing services include a search engine aspect, the court concludes that this is a key element of suggesting that Rapidshare is not liable for direct infringement. That’s an interesting ruling that could answer the question I’ve asked before about whether or not it actually is possible to create a site that allows for sharing of files that does not run afoul of the Grokster inducement rules.

    The other thing that helps Rapidshare is that, despite being involved in a whole bunch of copyright cases, it still appears that Perfect 10 is somewhat incompetent in understanding copyright law and availing itself of tools to deal with infringement. In this case, Perfect 10 didn’t send Rapidshare the specific links where infringing content existed. It just sent the company a bunch of files, but Rapidshare had no way to match those files to ones hosted in users’ lockers. Even then Rapidshare still did try to find as many of the images as possible, even going so far as to do Google searches, and delete them. On top of that, Rapidshare has a tool that lets content owners indicate if certain files are infringing. Perfect 10 chose not to use that.

    The one part of the ruling that I found troubling, however, is that the court did say that, even without being alerted to what’s infringing, Rapidshare did have “specific knowledge” of infringing works on the site. This is a key point of dispute in the Viacom/YouTube case, where Google makes the argument that there’s no way for it to know which works are really infringing and which are there on purpose. Yet, in this case, the court says that the service provider does have specific knowledge:


    Thus, it appears that specific knowledge of direct infringement may exist even where an operator does
    not have information that would allow it to search its contents and distinguish infringing from
    non-infringing materials. Here, RapidShare received notice of hundreds of copyrighted Perfect
    10 images that were found on its servers. The Court therefore concludes that RapidShare had
    actual, specific knowledge of direct infringement.

    Basically, it says that because Perfect 10 alerted Rapidshare to infringing content, then Rapidshare has “specific knowledge.” That wasn’t enough to meet the full inducement standard, so isn’t a huge issue here, but that logic seems wrong to me. If that’s all it takes to create “specific knowledge,” then lots of user-generated content sites could be in trouble. So, if you want to cause trouble for any UGC site, you just upload content, and then alert the site that there is infringing content on the site, but don’t tell them where it is or how to find it. I don’t see how that’s “specific knowledge” at all, but the court felt otherwise.

    Finally, while I appreciate Christopher’s analysis of the ruling, I have to disagree with his first two points. He doesn’t understand why not having a search engine matters:


    Although Rapidshare does not index its files, it basically punts indexing to third-party websites. It’s trivial to find infringing material hosted on Rapidshare and other file-hosting sites and I’m not sure why dicing up storage and indexing into separate entities which obviously have a symbiotic relationship should be able to avoid liability.

    I think that’s a slight misread of the ruling. It’s not saying that Rapidshare gets to avoid all liability. It’s just that it takes away Rapidshare’s direct infringement liability, because it is not, in fact, setup to make it easy for people to find that content. The fact that others have made it easier to find that content should not be blamed on Rapidshare.

    Second, Christopher notes:


    I’m not at all convinced that in all cases plaintiffs should be forced to ferret out all infringement on a defendant’s website. As the law stands right now, copyright holders have to employ an army of people to constantly monitor defendant’s site for infringement.

    To which the obvious response is, why should that burden fall on the defendants? If it takes plaintiffs “an army of people,” it would actually take the defendants significantly more than that, complicated by the fact that the defendant has no way of knowing if the content has been uploaded legitimately or is an infringing copy.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Peanut Butter Oatmeal Cookies

    Peanut Butter Oatmeal Cookies

    The key to a good peanut butter cookie is to make sure that it has a lot of peanut butter flavor. You can achieve this in a number of ways. One is by simply using a good, flavorful brand of peanut butter (always a good idea, actually). Another is to stuff the cookie with a peanut butter filling, or sandwich two cookies together with a smear of peanut butter. Adding peanuts will add crunch and highlight the nuttiness in the peanut butter, too. Yet another way is to use a peanut butter glaze, which is how I gave these tasty Peanut Butter Oatmeal Cookies a peanut buttery boost.

    The cookies themselves are sweet and chewy, with a good peanut butter flavor to them. The oatmeal mixes very well with the flavor of the peanut butter. You might not know there was oatmeal in the cookies if no one mentioned it, but it does add a subtle oaty flavor that makes the cookies a little more addictive than a plainer cookie. The quick cooking oats keep the cookies tender and chewy.

    But as I said before, the icing on the cookie is what takes these from good to great – for fans of peanut butter cookies, anyway! It’s a simple glaze of peanut butter mixed with a little bit of milk to make it drizzle-able. It couldn’t be any easier to make. Once it’s on, it is like doubling the peanut butter flavor in every bite. I used a plastic bag with the corner snipped off to pipe on my peanut butter glaze, but you could also just drizzle it on with the tines of a fork after dipping them in a small bowl of the glaze.

    Don’t forget to serve these cookies with a big glass of milk.

    (more…)

  • Big companies help do something right in Canadian forest deal

    by Todd Paglia

    Boreal forest in Canada—safe from chainsaws for now.Photo: ForestEthicsMy first
    job in the social change movement was working for Ralph Nader.  I was a
    lawyer, one of Nader’s Raiders.  Not in the ‘70s when it was cool and
    people actually knew what that was, but in the ‘90s, when it was decidedly not
    cool and my mother was sure I had lost my mind.  I left my high-paying K
    Street law firm to make less than half as much, traded my fancy office for a
    dingy cubical with walls made from boxes of books and stacks of old newspapers.
     What other evidence of my insanity did my mother, who grew up poor in
    upstate New York, need?

    Like many Americans, I am not fond of large concentrations of unaccountable
    power. And in my work as a young lawyer, I was out to get The Man.  For
    me, that meant big companies.  They exert far too much control over our
    government, gamble our money (the “free market”), expect our tax dollars to
    bail them out (“too big to fail”), deceive us about the effects their products
    have on our health (are cell phones the new tobacco?), and mislead us with
    greenwash.  I could go on …

    All of which makes it more surprising that my work now, while still challenging
    big companies, involves an awful lot of collaborations with those same beasts.

    This week ForestEthics, Canopy,
    Greenpeace Canada, and our
    allies, along with some of the biggest logging companies in the boreal forests
    of Canada, announced
    the largest conservation initiative in history
    .  The stats are
    mind-boggling: nearly 70 million acres of woodland caribou habitat, an area the
    size of Colorado, off limits to logging for three years, while 175 million
    acres, an area the size of Texas, go into a comprehensive land-use planning
    process. That’s a fancy term meaning a process that determines which areas must
    be permanently protected, and which areas can be logged in a selective and
    sustainable manner.

    This matters for a lot more than just caribou.  These forests are so
    immense that the clean air and pure water they produce keep millions of people
    healthy and provide tens of thousands of jobs.  Beyond that, the 186
    billion tons of carbon stored in Canada’s boreal forests is equivalent to 27
    years’ worth of global carbon emissions from the burning of fossil fuels.
     We need to keep as much of these forests standing as possible—for all
    of us.

    We have a truce with the logging industry, but neither side of this agreement
    makes the final decisions here: that is up to First Nations governments and
    provincial governments in Canada.  In other words, our truce is
    subservient to the aboriginal and provincial authorities that control the
    actual land base.  This is a key underpinning of the accord.

    How did we get to this point?  

    Many
    players have toiled away for many years to research the science, create the
    funding, and support seemingly endless negotiations that were often held
    together by just a thread.  Our part in creating this historic initiative
    has been bringing the power of the U.S. marketplace to the table. And we’ve
    done that side-by-side with Canopy and Greenpeace Canada.

    With half of Canada’s boreal forests being logged to make paper, and much of
    that going to feed the U.S.‘s insatiable demand, pressuring big paper consumers
    like Victoria’s Secret, Scholastic, and Kimberly-Clark to steer clear of the
    boreal and demand greener options was critical.  In fact, that pressure was one of the primary drivers of
    this agreement.

    Canopy, for example, has led a quiet revolution in book, magazine, and
    newspaper publishing by greening some of the largest-selling publishers and
    titles in the world, including the Harry Potter juggernaut. Greenpeace Canada
    waged a hard-hitting campaign against Kimberly-Clark for using old growth
    boreal trees to make toilet paper—and more importantly, they both forged a
    solution to their conflict with a better balance between environmental and
    financial matters.  At ForestEthics, we have been working not only to
    shift Victoria Secret’s massive paper purchases away from boreal caribou
    habitat, but also doing the same with some of the largest buyers of paper in
    the world: Staples, Office Depot, FedEx Office, and literally dozens of other
    Fortune 500 companies.  

    All of this pressure—hundreds of millions of dollars of purchasing power—over  the course of many years was aimed at creating a space for a real
    negotiation. And two years ago it started: The leader of the Forest Products
    Association of Canada basically asked then ForestEthics Campaign Director
    Tzeporah Berman what it would take for the market pressure to go away.
     Our reply:  A lot.  So it began.

    And still, even after this deal has been reached, we’re at the beginning, not
    the end. The boreal is not “saved,” but there is a framework in place that may
    just succeed in protecting some of the most critical areas of this globally
    important forest. While outreach began with First Nations and provincial
    governments months ago, a lot of work is needed to collaborate on land-use
    decisions for this agreement to move forward.

    Our work on this issue started in 2001.  Without some of the largest
    companies in the world lending their purchasing power toward a greener
    direction for the boreal, we would not be here today.  Quite a few of
    these companies had to be pressured into moving more quickly—but to their
    credit, they were able to move past their conflicts with activist groups toward
    real collaboration.   And many more companies wanted to be part of
    this change from the beginning, and used their market power to great effect.
     

    So here I am, 15 years after signing up as one of Nader’s Raiders, and I am
    still swimming in a sea of corporate power.  I have come to better
    understand the people at these companies.  It shouldn’t have been a
    shocking discovery, but I learned that we share some key core values.  I
    didn’t believe that back in 1995.  

    I know there will be challenges reaching our goals, and much of this depends
    upon decisions that will ultimately be made by aboriginal and provincial
    governments. And the pressure from big paper-buying companies wanting green
    products that helped get us to this point will be even more essential to
    getting this deal done.

    Corporate power is still all too often used to benefit the few at the expense
    of the rest of us. But it is nice to know that at times it can be applied
    toward the greater good.

    Related Links:

    Underground Green Economy Employing Millions

    Canadian forestry firms agree to curb boreal forest logging

    Reduce, Recycle, and Replant – Data Highlights on Restoring the World’s Forests






  • AT&T to raise two-year termination fee by 86% on iPhones, smartphones

    By Scott M. Fulton, III, Betanews

    In a cautiously worded notice to customers this afternoon, AT&T advised that it will be raising its early termination fee (ETF) for wireless service for smartphones and netbooks, evidently including Apple’s iPhone. Beginning June 1, the base rate for ETFs from two-year service agreements will be raised from $175 minus $5 per month of tenure, to $325 minus $10 per month.

    “One of the ways we do this is to offer you the industry’s leading wireless handsets below their full retail price when you sign a two-year service agreement,” reads AT&T’s notice. “In the event you wish to cancel service before your two-year agreement expires, you agree to pay a prorated early termination fee (ETF) as an alternative way to complete your agreement.”

    To help balance out the revenue stream, the ETF for basic phone and feature phone users will decrease after June 1 by $25, the company said, to $150 minus $4 per month of tenure.

    AT&T made its last adjustment to early termination fees on May 25, 2008, when it first adopted the “pro-rated” approach in what was seen at the time as response to pressure from Congress. A bill had been introduced before the floor — the Cell Phone Consumer Empowerment Act of 2007 — that would mandate pro-rating for ETFs, and possibly institute caps as well. The benchmark for ETFs that the bill’s author, Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D – Minn.), had set as being too high for most smartphone customers was $175. Soon after AT&T set its newly pro-rated fee to $175 and other carriers followed suit, action on the bill subsided, and it was never passed.

    Copyright Betanews, Inc. 2010



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  • Congeneration vs. monopoly electric utility service, circa 1909

    Michael Giberson

    The Isolated Plant magazine published “A letter from a New York Correspondent,” in their August 1909 edition:

    Mr. Editor:

    From the viewpoint of one of the “common people,” the recent issues of your magazine have been striking fire with every telling blow…  The following incident is mentioned as a bit of local history.

    Two downtown office buildings adjoining each other on the same side of the street, and carrying the same class of tenants, were not operating under sufficiently even costs.  One of them had its own electric power plant and the other used Edison service.  The man who operated his own plant even had a little power to spare and closed a two years’ contract with the other agent to supply the latter’s building with light at a rate considerably lower than the street service.  A contractor installed a 3 inch loricated conduit carrying three double braid conductors between the generator switchboard through the foundation wall to one side of a three-pole double-throw service switch previously installed.

    This switch had been used to supply Edison break down service when the building operated its own plant.  The wiring was installed in full accord with the National Code as adopted by the N. Y. Board of Fire Underwriters, and a certificate of approval was received from the city department.  The contractor received a “violation,” however, from the Fire Underwriters, and any attempt to secure a committed statement from the latter board as to the code rule violated was futile.  The was evidently somewhat peculiar, the contractor had performed his work according to the rules of the board as publicly printed and circulated, yet a certificate of approval was withheld, and he could not receive his payment for the work.  The inspector was called on, he was non-committal … the Chief Inspector was non-commital … [The] Superintendent … quite abrubtly stated that his board would not approve the running of an electric power service through a party line; this ruling being the result of an agreement between his board and the N. Y. Edison Co.

    Neither contractor nor agents could understand how any such mutual agreement could affect the fire risk….

    The N. Y. Edison Co. also got busy after the contractor and threatened to send him to jail for “interfering with their meters,” which of course was not the case and the contractor was not molested; threat was also made to discontinue the [Edison Co.] service to the elevators, but it also passed over.

    Both buildings secured independent insurance, the contractor got his money, and each agent fulfilled their two years’ agreement.

    C. J. H.

    At a time when cogeneration, smart grids, and decentralized energy resources are creating challenges around the fringe of standard regulated retail power service, it is interesting to see how the battled played out a century ago, when state regulation of monopoly regulated utilities was new and competition between central station power and the isolated plant was ongoing.

    The Isolated Plant magazine has been digitized by Google Books.  See also the related post of a week ago, “The central station and the isolated plant.”

  • New Porting Thread by Da_G

    image

    After the long week without any news on the WP7 port (mostly due to the stupid comments that is taking up the thread), Da_G has created a new thread to keep you updated. The new tread was created yesterday and has some words that I do not know, and really do not think I should know.

    One thing I do know is copy and paste: Thread

    HTC WP7 NBH Dump/Rebuild:
    NBHImageTool
    flash.store.bin Dump/Rebuild (dumped as os.nb in NBHImageTool):
    (tool creation pending)
    IMGFS Dump:
    Combine xidump with the attached cecompr_nt.dll supporting XPH
    IMGFS Build:
    Combine imgfsfromdump with the attached cecompr_nt.dll supporting XPH
    XIP/ULDR Dump:
    dumprom works well for this.
    XIP/ULDR Build:
    (tool creation pending)

    Warning Warning… Rant Coming

    If you are interested in the porting status, you can follow the thread daily. To many readers, you might not really know what the words are, or what is going on but here is something that is really annoying to me when trying to read the thread. “so…could somebody make a rom for all topaz devices with this and the mondrian rom now” and my favorite“Could someone make a rom for a titan (XV6800) ? heh… Yea, It’s about time I get a new phone…”. Really dude? I mean why would people care about your pursuit of a ROM for your device. The porting game, and ROM making game is not even close. Please for the life of the thread don’t post things like this:

    “Thanks guys, I want this one my device… any ETA?”
    ”Can A ROM be created for my HD2 NOW!!!!!!”
    ”When will the port come to the Touch Pro2, and Diamond 2? I want it?

    Okay I think I speak for everyone to say… we all want this, and you are not special that you need to post and mess up a whole thread just because you don’t want to wait and see what happens. If I worked the way most of those commenter’s worked, that thread would see at least 20 posts from me, but you know what, I know how to control my excitement.

    Also to help Da_G, here are some answers to your questions:
    ”Will this come to my device” Answer: Most likely know, if porting is successful, it seems only the HD2 will get it.
    ”When is the ETA” Answer: Have you ever tried porting something you know little about? no, well it is not easy, so don’t ask.
    ”Thank You” Answer: You are very welcome, and so is just about everyone that is reading the thread. So no need to say.

    Well from what I have seen those are the three most used responses, and the most annoying because it is killing the thread.

    Rant End

    I do not hope to offend anyone, just I thought it was best to add that little rant to the article because the newly created thread by Da_G has already seen some worthless post.