Category: News

  • Toyota Acquires $50M Stake in Tesla Motors

    Japanese auto maker  Toyota announced today that it’s investing $50 million in electric-car maker Tesla Motors. As part of the deal Tesla  gets its hands on a factory in California, where it will build its Model S car and other vehicles.

    With Tesla, Toyota gets a platform that will allow it to compete head on with General Motors and Nissan selling electric cars in North America — see full press release.

    Besides a fresh batch of capital, for Tesla the transaction brings a substantive distribution network to sell its cars.

    Tesla has 2,000 reservations for the Model S sedan and intends to scale production in 2012 when it expects to produce as much as 20,000 a year, reports Bloomberg.

    Since its inception in 2004 Tesla has not posted a profit, loosing more than $230 million. The car company plans to use proceeds from an upcoming $100 million share sale and a $465 million government loan-guarantee and the Toyota investment, to finance construction of a manufacturing line for its Model S.

  • Toyota and Tesla partner to produce electric-vehicles, Tesla buys NUMMI

    Tesla Model S

    Toyota Motor Corporation and Tesla Motors have announced that they intend to cooperate on the production of electric-vehicles, parts and production system and engineering support. Toyota will purchase a $50 million of Tesla’s common stock issued in a private placement to close immediately subsequent to the closing of Tesla’s currently planned IPO.

    Both companies intend to form a team of specialists to further those efforts.

    “I sensed the great potential of Tesla’s technology and was impressed by its dedication to monozukuri (Toyota’s approach to manufacturing),” said TMC President Akio Toyoda.

    “Toyota is a company founded on innovation, quality, and commitment to sustainable mobility. It is an honor and a powerful endorsement of our technology that Toyota would choose to invest in and partner with Tesla,” said Tesla CEO and cofounder Elon Musk. “We look forward to learning and benefiting from Toyota’s legendary engineering, manufacturing, and production expertise.”

    Tesla also announced that it has purchased the former NUMMI factory in Fremont, California, where it will build the Model S sedan and future Tesla vehicles.

    “The Tesla Factory effectively leverages an ideal combination of hardcore Silicon Valley engineering talent, traditional automotive engineering talent and the proven Toyota production system,” said Musk. “The new Tesla Factory will give us plenty of room to grow.”

    The Tesla Model S, said to be the first pure electric premium sedan, is design from the ground up. The Model S sedan will start at $49,900 (including a federal tax credit) and will get a range of 160 miles. With an optional extended-range battery pack, the Model S can travel over 300 miles per charge. 0 to 60 comes in just 5.6 seconds with a top speed that is limited to 130 mph.

    Production of the Tesla Model S is expected to start in 2012.

    Tesla Model S:

    – By: Omar Rana


  • Toyota and Tesla Announces their Partnership in building Electric Cars

    The two companies of the auto world, Tesla Motors Inc. and Toyota Motors Corp, declared their partnership on Thursday at an auto plant in the San Francisco Bay area. They will join as partners in developing and building electric cars. Toyota’s CEO, Akio Toyoda announced that his company will invest $ 50 million in Tesla, while the CEO of Tesla, Elon Musk stated that his company will purchase Nummi, a New United Motor Manufacturing Inc. in Fremont. It is in Fremont where the Model S electric sedan will be built.

    “We’re going to create electric cars together,” Musk told a news conference at Tesla’s office in Palo Alto. “It’s a great honor to work with a company like Toyota, one of the automobile leaders of the world and one I’ve personally long admired.”



    Tesla, which is currently making electric sports car costing about $ 109,000, stated that its goal is to make affordable electric cars which are good for the consumers out there. As Nissan released the electric car Leaf, many consumers knew how electric cars are environment friendly and it will not cost much because it does not need fuel anymore. Good for Toyota and Tesla, they had joined as partners in creating electric cars that are affordable.

    How ever, the news about that partnership shocked city officials from Downey. Downey spent months courting Tesla to locate its factory there and officials said they were certain of settling a deal after meeting with Musk recently.

    Downey Councilman Mario Guerra said “Tesla has been extremely disingenuous in their dealing with Downey, and I now have new appreciation as to why America is fed up with many large corporations,” She further stated, “This last-minute betrayal is even more shocking because (Downey) was hours away from signing the lease with Tesla that would have been an economic boon for the city.”

    Related posts:

    1. Toyota Recalls Lexus Vehicles
    2. Toyota’s Crippling Bill and Plummeting Sales
    3. GM Recalls 1.3 Million Cars

  • The Great (Low-Tech) $100 Million Art Heist [Heists]

    Last night, a thief walked out of the Paris Museum of Modern Art with some $127 million in paintings by Picasso, Matisse, and Braque. There were no lasers and no temperature-sensitive security systems. Hell, there wasn’t even an alarm. More »










    Pablo PicassoHenri MatisseParisMuseumAmedeo Modigliani

  • Watch: Media Molecule talks level design and themes for LittleBigPlanet 2

    All eyes seems to focus on Media Molecule again these days with the upcoming release LittleBigPlanet 2. Checkout this brand new video interview as the team reveals more details on the new dimensions of level design and

  • Google TV, Flash, iPhone and Curated Computing – it’s all about the DRM

    Imagine that Drexler’sengines of creation were real. Imagine we all had devices that could make diamonds, phones, cars and the like on demand. All we needed were some raw materials and energy.

    This would be disruptive. DeBeers wouldn’t last the day. Economies would collapse. Hellfire would rain down.

    Eventually, however, I suspect our complex adaptive world would return to a balance. A new generation of improved replicators would replace the old ones. The new ones would come with controls that made it, for example, impossible to replicate currency. Civilization wants to survive.

    We saw this with VCRs. The first recorders were amazing at capturing movies, but later generation devices incorporated “macrovision” copy protection. Recording features became less common, VCRs became largely playback devices. The rebel was subverted.

    We’re seeing it now with the digital replicators of our era. First generation devices made perfect copies of CDs and even DVDs. Slowly, however, the market is moving from general purpose computers with computers that won’t replicate some DRMd video to iPad-style “curated computing“. Surprise — the iPad won’t rip a DVD. It won’t even rip a CD. (If record companies aren’t buying 2nd hand CDs and destroying them they deserve to perish.)

    In 20 years, it will be fairly hard to replicate many things. In a world with limited local storage, you may find your purloined media won’t survive long in the cloud. The system is strong, It wants to live.

    If you think about DRM, a lot of things make sense. Why are Apple so virulently opposed to Flash [1]? Why is Adobe dissembling when they say Flash is open (they published the specs)? Because the video codecs in Flash are not nearly as important as the DRM (Digital Rights Management) technology in Flash. That is most assuredly not open; it’s as closed as Apple’s FairPlay. What’s Google up to with Google TV and their app stores? Check out the DRM to understand. Why are Hulu and Netflix reluctant to sign on the iPad? Because they’d have to substitute FlashDRM for FairPlay. That means Apple would own them.

    This battle will rage for a time, but in 20 years it will be largely forgotten — and the digital replicators will have been tamed. Resistance is futile.

    See also:

    [1] Personally, like virtually all Mac geeks, I despise Flash and consider Adobe to be as decrepit as Microsoft. I agreed with pretty much everything Jobs wrote about Flash in his open letter. I think, however, that even if none of those things were true Apple would be at war with Adobe. Part of Jobs evil genius is that he’s a master magician — he distracts with one hand while he moves with the other.

    My Google Reader Shared items (feed)

  • Lindsay Lohan Isn’t Going To Jail After All; Warrant Recalled

    Lindsay Lohan has narrowly escaped an extended stay in the Los Angeles County Jail.

    Things had looked pretty grim for Lindsay, who went to the Cannes Film Festival this week instead of an important court hearing in LA. The actress missed her mandatory DUI progress hearing Thursday, prompting a cranky judge to respond by issuing a warrant for her immediate arrest when she arrived back in the States. Luckily for the scandal-scarred star, she won’t be taken into custody when she lands at LAX on Friday.

    Lohan’s bail is set at $100,000, and TMZ.com has learned that her reps paid the standard 10% to secure the bond. Judge Marsha Revel then recalled the bench warrant.

    We’re not sure whether this is a good thing or a bad thing….


  • Don’t get caught drinking pop without a mustache ever again!


    Here in Seattle these wouldn’t sell well, because pretty much everybody already has a mustache. Seriously, almost everybody. I guess the ladies might enjoy these novelty bottle-toppers — the ladies who can’t grow a decent ’stache, anyway.

    Here’s the thing. These aren’t actually on the market yet, they’re a prospective product that NEEDS YOUR HELP to get out there. And why shouldn’t you? Go pledge a buck or ten for these poor sons of guns. They went through design school and this is the only thing they could come up with, so they’re trying to make money to go to a different design school. It’s a vicious cycle, I know, but what else are we supposed to do with art and design majors?

    Now there are green ones, too. Haven’t seen that before.

    And yeah, I say “pop.” That going to be a problem?


  • PHOTO: Beautiful shot of Frank Lloyd Wright with

    flw-apprentices.jpg

    Beautiful shot of Frank Lloyd Wright with his apprentices at Taliesen. Photo by Ken Hedrich, 1933.

  • Governo quer dar início à incentivos fiscais para carro elétrico

    O governo federal deve anunciar na próxima semana medidas para incentivar a introdução do carro elétrico no mercado nacional.
    O plano do governo vai conferir incentivos fiscais para carros elétricos, desenvolvimento e pesquisa de tecnologia na área, geração de demanda através de frota pública e introdução da tecnologia no setor energético do país.
    Além disso, o governo pode lançar um novo sistema de etiquetagem para tributação de automóveis conforme sua eficiência energética.
    Também serão desenvolvidos programas para a instalação de estações de carga rápida para carros elétricos, item necessário para maior difusão do conceito.
  • Microsoft joins with Foxtel to provide pay TV over Xbox LIVE

    Microsoft joins with Foxtel to provide pay TV over Xbox LIVE

    Microsoft has signed an agreement with Australia’s dominant pay TV provider, Foxtel, to stream over 30 channels to Xbox 360 consoles through Xbox LIVE. The Foxtel by Xbox LIVE service will allow Xbox 360 owners in Australia to access Foxtel channels without the expense of a Foxtel installation and set-top box. Instead, to access the subscription service users will need an Xbox 360 console, Xbox LIVE Gold subscription, broadband connection and a Foxtel by Xbox LIVE subscription…
    Continue Reading Microsoft joins with Foxtel to provide pay TV over Xbox LIVE

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  • Katherine Heigl And Her Baby Naleigh

    “Dude, I try, but I’m not nailing the baby fashion. It’s intimidating,” Katherine Heigl says Harper’s Bazarr. “I get beautiful outfits form Gap and baby Juicy, but I’m not layering it or putting her in Prada flats. It’s really stressing me out.” Heigl who appears on the cover of US Harper’s Bazaar said that Naleigh’s no fashionista yet.

    Naleigh, 18 month old adopted daughter of Katherine Heigl and Josh Kelly, was repaired with open heart surgery due to a congenital defect before she left Korea. Heigl states, “Her heart is 100 percent fine now. She has a scar, so she won’t be wearing bikinis, which is fine by us. A lot of children don’t find forever homes because they’re on that special-needs list, even if it’s because of something as simple as her mother smoked cigarettes for a month, not knowing she was pregnant. That’s not so huge that you couldn’t handle it.”

    “If parent time interferes with sexy time, that’s that,” she added as she was referring to an incident when Naleigh spit up all over her lingerie. And one more thing, Heigl says that she does not want to spoil Naleigh. “I want her privilege to afford her to seek many different things that might fulfill her. I don’t want her to have a Beemer on her 16th birthday or spend the summer at a beach house with friends. Nope. You want a beach house, you pay for it.”

    Related posts:

    1. Sandra Bullock is pregnant
    2. Katherine Jackson says Grandchildren to Move Out
    3. Wardrobe Malfunction: Heigl’s almost exposed breast

  • Google TV is all about blood sucking television ad spending

    By Joe Wilcox, Betanews

    Did you hear the news? The Internet is coming to your TV. It’s going to be this big platform for which developers create applications. Pundits are saying the strategy is really impressive. Get this: Major television set manufacturers are going to support the platform, so you get the best of TV and the Internet. Oh you did hear about it. Google TV, right? Wrong! I just described variations of Microsoft’s television strategy as announced over the years: Web TV, Windows Media Center, Mediaroom and Mediaroom for Xbox.

    Did Google execs not hear about Microsoft’s mostly failed living room strategy, which Google TV shockingly sounds like? Several former Microsofties are now Googlers. Surely somebody knew about Microsoft’s past TV bungles. If Microsoft couldn’t make Internet TV work, why should Google do any better? Google’s strategy sounds so similar that I’m stunned by some pundit’s early cooing over the strategy.

    Early Google TV partners include Intel and Sony. Google claims that Google TV won’t replace but augment cable or telco services. But that’s really a load of bull. As I will better explain in a few paragraphs, Google is really launching a TV advertising platform — and that sure as hell will compete with ads carried on cable and network television.

    Google TV will run on Android 2.1, bringing along supporting apps and the Chrome browser, too. Much of the rest of the strategy — the program guide, the DVR, the developer opportunity, the Web-meets-the-living-room mumbo jumbo — is tried and tired. Companies from Dell to Microsoft to TiVo — hell, even Apple — have talked up that big settop box augmenting but not really replacing the programming experience consumers get today. Each strategy is stamped with a big “Fail.” From software, services or platform development perspectives, Google isn’t saying much new. Even the marketing tagline has a familiar ring: “TV meets Web. Web meets TV.” Yeah, I’m just blowing my brains out with enthusiasm for this same old failed thing.

    It’s All About Advertising

    What Google wants from the living room is very different from Microsoft, although the fundamental concept is the same: To extend and preserve the existing monopoly — Windows for Microsoft and search/online advertising for Google. But Google is looking to cash in on a market with major players, who are likely to resist the informational giant’s embrace. For all the buzz in recent years about the decline of newspaper, magazines and radio, TV has remained largely immune to declining ad dollars — or at least massive shift online.

    For years, television has been Google’s holy grail. Company executives have talked, often privately, about the importance of TV ad dollars shifting online. Google had its search and ad platform bucket out to catch those dollars, but they never really came. Google scooped up some advertising moving from print or radio to online, while waiting for TV advertising to do the same. It came only in trickles. So if the ad dollars won’t come to Google then, holy hell, the company will go get them. That’s really what Google TV is all about, scooping up television advertising.

    In January, Forrester Research forecast that US TV advertising spending would rise slightly in 2010 to $69.5 billion. A month later, the analyst firm warned that, based on a survey of 100 national advertisers, media buyers were showing increasing dissatisfaction with television:

    • Sixty-two percent of advertisers complain there is too much clutter; they want fewer ads, and there is renewed interest in 30-second spots.
    • Seventy-eight percent of advertisers want targeted ads, but only 59 percent want to pay for them.
    • The majority of advertisers want new metrics; reach and frequency aren’t enough.

    Forrester’s report might as well be a blueprint for Google TV. Google’s advertising business is all about targeting and metrics and delivered for low cost. Google could offer national advertisers what they want and something more: Better flexibility integrating ad campaigns across media categories. Microsoft talks about a three-screen strategy. Google has one, too — delivering search and advertising to mobile phones, PCs and TVs.

    Who Will Give Up the Living Room to Google?

    For comparison, US advertisers spent $22.7 billion online in 2009, down 3.4 percent year over year, according to IAB and PricewaterhouseCoopers. Online ad spending accounted for 17 percent of all US advertising in 2009. For this year, eMarketer forecasts US online spending will reach $25.1 billion — while an 11 percent increase, revenue falls far behind TV.

    To push into the living room, Google is going to have to push somebody out. As Microsoft learned — and even TiVo — that’s not so easy. Cable and telco providers covet their subscription fees and local advertising revenues. Surely the big networks will fight against Google’s free economy, which could reduce the value of their ad space. Why pay networks big bucks when Google will sell ad space for much less?

    Networks and cable and teleco providers have reason to worry, given YouTube’s popularity and some surprising data from the IAB and PricewaterhouseCoopers report. US online video ad revenues rose 39 percent to about $1 billion last year. YouTube may yet be a big revenue generator for Google, which already offers rental content.

    Would you stop paying big bucks to a cable or telco provider if Google TV could bundle up a tidy subscription price for good programming? Say 30 bucks a month? I would, but Google will have to get Hollywood to cough up the content against network and cable and telco provider resistance. That all circles back to Microsoft’s mostly failed attempts to conquer the living room, against less resistance. Can Google really do better? You tell me, please, in comments.

    Copyright Betanews, Inc. 2010



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  • The Simple Props of LOST [Image Cache]

    LOST may be full of insanely twisted plots, crazy tech, and supernatural mystery, but an exhibition of some props from the show appears to be full of simple, low-tech goodies—the important bits. More »










    GamesBusinessTools and EquipmentImage CacheArt

  • “Down with Gordon Gekko:” Financial reform bill passes the U.S. Senate

    Sen. Chris Dodd, chairman of the Senate Banking Committee and one of the measure’s chief proponents, said it marks a “major step towards creating a sound economic foundation for the American people we represent. This is their victory.”

     

    The bill, says Dodd, includes a Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, provides for greater transparency of the derivatives market and puts into place new regulations on large companies that fail.


    And, Dodd said, “for the first time ever, we will have an advance warning system, so somebody is on the lookout for the next big problem in the economy before it’s too late to do anything about it.


    The measure must now be reconciled with the financial reform bill passed by the House. “I look forward to working with my colleagues in the House to produce a strong bill that will protect consumers, protect our economy, and hold Wall Street accountable,” Dodd said.

      

                                                                                    


    In Connecticut, the Working Families Party was quick to respond with a statement of support and gratitude for Dodd’s work.

    Connecticut voters have been understandably distracted this week, but someone has to say it: Well done, Senator Dodd,” Working Families Executive Director Jon Green said in the statement. 
    “It’s not often that the voices of families and consumers prevails over Wall Street’s lobbying juggernaut, but that’s what just happened. Down with Gordon Gekko. Long live George Bailey. Let’s strengthen the bill in Conference Committee and get it signed by the President.”

  • Sonic 4 confirmed for iPhone, delayed

    Seems like Sonic’s ride to the top hit a little development snag today as Sega has announced that they are pushing back the release of Sonic the Hedgehog 4: Episode 1 from the original summer release to

  • Delonte West–Gloria James Affair Confirmed!Calvin Murphy Proved “LeBron James’ Mom’s Affair”

    Calvin Murphy have confirmed and even proved that the rumor between Lebron James’s mother Gloria James and Delonte West affair is existing. The story of Gloria James-Delonte West affair has been a pancake issue in the web. A rumor has spread stating LeBron James’s mother is having a relationship with Delonte West. It has been reported that this rumored affair has affected the performance of Lebron James in his games.



    The rumor came out to be true as Calvin Murphy proved the issue. Calvin Murphy could be a reliable source for this issue. Calvin Murphy is a former American professional basketball player, playing as a guard for the NBA’s Houston Rockets from 1970-1983. He has been elected as a Basketball Hall of Famer and he has also been member of the Rockets’ broadcast team. He hosted ESPN Radio’s The Calvin Murphy Show.

    Stay tune for more updates of Gloria James-Delonte West affair. How this confirmation of Calvin Murphy will affect LeBron James? Let’s wait and see!

    Related posts:

    1. Gloria James–Deltone West Affair Confirmed!Calvin Murphy proved LeBron James’ Mom’s Affair!
    2. Calvin Murphy Proves the Lebron James’s Mother, Delonte West Affair Video
    3. Delonte West – Gloria James Affair? A Lebron James’ Mom’s Affair

  • Lance Armstrong accident in Amgen Tour of California

    Lance Armstrong accident in Amgen Tour of California American Lance Armstrong, seven time Tour de France, left Thursday’s Amgen Tour of California after an accident in the fifth stage of the cycling test, said his team’s sporting director RadioShack, Johan Bruyneel.

    “I am sorry to report that there was a great fall and Chechu (Rubiera) and Lance (Armstrong) were involved. Lance was forced to leave and went to the hospital to take X-rays”, Bruyneel said in a message via Twitter.

    Armstrong, the defending champion of the test and his teammate Levi Leipheimer, as well as Stuart O’Grady estadouidense also were involved in the crash, which occurred near the game in the town of Visalia.

    Armstrong had started the day denying the allegations of doping former teammate Floyd Landis, who was stripped of his title of Tour de France 2006 after failing a doping test. Armstrong said “not worth even commenting” Landis’s accusations. ”I will not waste my time or yours,” he said.

    “I have nothing to hide,” Armstrong said before the start of the fifth stage of the Californian twist, accompanied by Johan Bruyneel, general manager of his team, RadioShack, and Landis was also charged with being involved in doping maneuvers .

    At the time of the accident, Armstrong marched in the sixteenth place, 27 seconds behind the leader and compatriot David Zabriskie.

    Armstrong served test preparation for the Tour de France (July 3-25). In March last year, in another accident at the Tour of Castilla-León, Spain, he suffered a broken collarbone that disrupted his training for the big French turn, but he recover in time and participate.

    Related posts:

    1. Greg LeMond’s Side on Landis vs Armstrong
    2. Landis Drags Armstrong On PED Confession
    3. Floyd Landis admitted doping and accuses Armstrong

  • Financial Regulatory Reform Bill Passes, 59-39

    Sen. Chris Dodd’s (D-Conn.) bill overhauling the regulation of banks and financial firms has passed, 59 to 39. In short, the bill makes the financial system stronger by giving the Federal Reserve and new regulatory agencies — including the Consumer Financial Protection Agency and a systemic oversight council — the ability to impose leverage and capital requirements as well as new rules against banks and non-banks alike.

    Sens. Robert Byrd (D-W.V.) and Arlen Specter (D-Pa.) did not vote. Republican Sens. Susan Collins (Maine), Olympia Snowe (Maine), Charles Grassley (Iowa) and Scott Brown (Mass.) voted for the proposal. Democratic Sens. Maria Cantwell (Wash.) and Russ Feingold (Wis.) did not, saying that the bill is too weak to reign in Wall Street firms. All other senators voted along party lines.

    The Senate did not vote on any amendments this evening — meaning that Sens. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) and Carl Levin’s (D-Mich.) strong version of the Volcker rule, barring proprietary trading at banks, will not be in the bill. The hard work of reconciling the House and Senate bills in conference committee starts soon.

  • Melanoma and Artificial Tanning

    Reverend the Hon. Dr GORDON MOYES [5.17 p.m.]: There was a great deal of media attention on solaria in the past year or two due to the death of some high profile young people from melanoma triggered by the cosmetic use of sun beds. Therefore, I was surprised when the Radiation Control Amendment (Sun-tanning Units) Regulation 2009 was drafted without what I considered to be sufficient safeguards in place. It was obvious to me that the health promotion campaigns highlighting the dangers of solaria were clearly not reaching those who needed to hear the message: That is, the young users who want to be more attractive and politicians who may be well past all that but who draft the legislation that should be designed to protect the public.

    It has already been thoroughly proven that the use of sun-tanning units increases the risk of skin cancer. Therefore, I do not understand why they have been allowed to even continue to operate. The Cancer Council of Australia in its book Dangers of Solariums—a major report in August 2008—outlines the risk of skin cancer. Solaria emit high levels of UVA in UVB radiation, which dramatically increases an individual’s risk of developing melanoma, and Australia already has the highest melanoma rates in the world because of our fierce sunlight. Without any exposure to solaria, two out of every three Australians will develop some sort of skin cancer before the age of 70. There are over 1,600 deaths from skin cancer every year—that is, 30 people dying from skin cancer every week—40 per annum attributable directly to sun beds.

    If you are under the age of 35, the exposure to radiation in solaria is even more harmful, as the young person’s skin is more vulnerable. The Cancer Council has long defined its stand as being against cosmetic tanning with radiation emitting solaria under any circumstances, for any person. These are legal killing machines, in the words of some who seem to know.

    Since they are allowed, it is surely incumbent upon the Government to protect the public by having clear safety standards; competency training and certification requirements for all operators; mechanisms in place for monitoring, with enforcement and penalties for those found in breach, including fines and revocation of licences; and the licensing of premises that have radiation equipment. In short, I believe that the radiation tanning industry needs to come under the control of a regulatory authority. I no longer believe that is the best option, because every industry that has been allowed to self-regulate over the past decade or so has failed to do so. That experiment reminds us again of human folly and greed, and why human beings needed laws in the first place.

    We cannot allow a cancer-causing industry to self-regulate because it will not. Would we have considered giving James Hardie the right to self-regulate the issues of asbestos? We cannot sit by and talk about choice when young people are fooled into thinking that solaria must be safe if the Government allows them. They are not safe. A large study in 2003 undertaken by the Centre for Health Research and Psycho-oncology showed there was a low level of compliance with the national standard across the tanning industry. Seven years later nothing has improved in that complacent, unregulated industry, which reports to no-one. Any spa, salon, beautician or any person wanting to rent a shop can have tanning beds and operate them on an unsuspecting public.

    I congratulate Lee Rhiannon on moving the motion, which Family First fully supports, to ban solaria outright. Radiation energy is not something that should be left in the hands of amateurs to inflict upon an unwary public for profit. If Mr Frank Sartor, who does such a good job as Minister Assisting the Minister for Health (Cancer) would only believe what the New South Wales Government advises on television, “There is nothing healthy about a tan”.