Category: News

  • Some Old SPB Theme But Looks GREAT

    image

    How many of you run SPB Mobile Shell? Now how would like the Touch Flow look for it? Well I do. Today while looking for a new UI due to Sense being very slow on my HD2, I came across this old good looking theme at XDA. The theme while old, is one of the best looking theme you can have for SPB (other than the Windows Phone 7 theme by MSKip).

    The theme is pretty simple. It changes the look of the bottom controls, the design and background, while adding some Sense like icons/widgets. This is all added with a simple CAB installation, and boom, your device has a sleek, fresh as life look.

    If you want to join me in the “Good looking Home Screen” group then download this, install and maybe comment your screen shot or something. 

    Current Group limits: Infinity


  • Juveniles in Custody

    Reverend the Hon. Dr GORDON MOYES: My question without notice is directed to the Minister for Small Business, representing the Minister for Juvenile Justice. Is the Minister aware that an alarming number of children, approximately 5,000, in New South Wales are being held on remand in the State’s juvenile justice centres? Is the Minister aware that the consequences of a high remand rate include unnecessary detention, and increases the challenges that children and young people face, which can potentially create further social problems, and that the high incarceration rate of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders is damaging indigenous communities? In particular, is the Minister aware that many young people remanded into custody are either homeless or in need of care when charged with a criminal offence? Will the New South Wales Government fund a comprehensive program of residential bail support services across the State to prevent children and young people who are granted bail from being remanded into custody?

  • Turns Out People Really Like It When The Press Fact Checks, Rather Than Just Reporting What Everyone Said

    This really shouldn’t surprise anyone, but hopefully this means that more folks in the press will realize a simple point: their job isn’t just to report on what both sides said, but to say directly when someone is lying or being misleading. The AP, which has had some issues in this department in the past, has started aggressively fact checking politicians and now claims that those fact check pieces are the most popular pieces they do. They’re the most clicked and the most linked to stories. This is good news. One of the major frustrations with the press is how they seem to just reprint press releases and talking points, rather than challenging questionable claims. If they start to realize that people really do look to the press to tell them who’s being truthful, perhaps some of these publications wouldn’t be struggling quite so much.

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  • Casino Control Amendment Bill 2010 – Text of speech from Hansard

    Reverend the Hon. Dr GORDON MOYES [8.59 p.m.]: On behalf of Family First I speak briefly to the Casino Control Amendment Bill; most of what I had wanted to say has been said by previous speakers. My concern about these issues goes back a long time—not just with regard to a prohibition on gambling but also with regard to setting up Gamblers Anonymous groups, working through Lifeline with gambling counselling services, and the establishment of gambling counsellors who later went on to serve literally throughout Australia.

    Members may recall that in the early 1980s Mr Justice Street headed an important commission of inquiry. I presented a major paper at that inquiry. Among the measures put forward to Mr Justice Street were a number of measures to reduce the possibility of criminal control over the new casino, to reduce compulsive gambling, and to set up rehabilitation programs for gamblers, for exclusion benefits which would be overseen by the police commissioner. One of the measures we put forward to Mr Justice Street was the setting up of the Casino Community Benefit Trust, whereby a portion of the casino profits would be ploughed back into the community. For many years—probably 15 years—I served as a government appointee on the Casino Community Benefit Trust and as a result was part of a group of people responsible for deploying many tens of millions of dollars back into the community.

    We always recognised that this was only really a token effort in terms of what a casino costs the community, particularly the impact on personal lives and disappointments experienced by so many families. I understand the overview of the bill and its objects, and I will support it. However, in the back of my mind I have grave reservations about it. It is a matter of agreeing to it with one’s fingers crossed, hoping that the best will come out. I place on record that Family First is opposed to all major extensions of gambling in the community as being unhelpful to families in general; we believe too much family money is spent by unwise gamblers. Nevertheless, I recognise that this is a legitimate and legal activity and we must continue to improve the controls. So, with my fingers crossed, I will vote in support of the bill.

  • Google just shot cable’s Franz Ferdinand


    One could be forgiven for writing off Google TV. After all, there are precedents for web TV failures (Apple TV) and precedents for ostentatious Google windmill-tilting (Wave, Buzz, a dozen others), so I don’t blame the doubters. I’d be one but for the fact that this is too big to be an experiment; it’s a declaration of war. The question is: against whom?

    Against Apple? Yes, to some extent. Against set-top boxes? In a way. But primarily, I think it’s against the TV providers. Not in a direct way: as many have noted, Google TV, being a delivery system, relies entirely on others for its content. No, Google is leaning on Comcast and DirecTV and all them indirectly. Like the music industry and Napster, or the mobile phone industry and the iPhone, it’s less a direct assault and more an ultimatum: “Change or die.”

    Let’s just address the Apple and set-top box issues first. Is Google sucker-punching Apple? Kind of — with the Froyo announcement, they clearly have Cupertino in their sights. But Apple TV isn’t really a vital target. When was the last time you saw one? Does anyone know what it even does? There are external hard drives with more functionality. Google’s not attacking them, but it may be attacking the iTunes hegemony. Google TV will be pulling its shows from the your cable or from web sources, whichever is more convenient. I guarantee they’re going to make it unbelievably easy — easier than iTunes — to watch, buy, and so on. But iTunes is dug in and isn’t going anywhere anytime soon. Google can bide their time there — and flank them.

    As for set-top boxes: it’s unclear just how much functionality the Logitech hardware will have, and whether Google TV will allow for mods and apps that provide Popcorn Hour or Boxee-level media management. Boxee has said they see Google TV as complementary rather than competition, but that kind of soft-pedaling is expected on announcement day. Set-top boxes, DVRs, and in-TV web stuff is a real muddle right now; the average TV buyer will almost certainly be bewildered by the options and mystified by the arbitrary limitations. Think of Google TV as being for TVs what Google Maps is for location. There’s a lot of stuff you can do with it, but they don’t do nearly everything themselves: they provide a foundation. I’m thinking (hoping) that Google TV will be similar. There’s more to ask when it comes to home theater PCs: are HTPCs, like Brontosaurus, simply too big to live? I suspect they’ll remain as the hardcore collector’s delivery method of choice. Offline, as hi-def as you want, and under your control. They just won’t be big time.

    So it’s a holding action against Apple and an encouraging shoulder-punch to the set-top box community. What’s the main objective? Force the cable and satellite giants’ hands. The providers have fought channels a la carte and other seemingly obvious advances in TV-watching for years now because they’re a threat to the 20-year-old money tree called basic cable. They’ve been dragging their feet for a decade, adding internet functionality piece by piece, but now that Google has thrown their hat into the ring, they have to get serious. They may have inertia, but Google has momentum. But don’t get any romantic notions about this being a David versus Goliath moment. This is just New and Improved Goliath versus Goliath Classic.

    Not that Google TV is going to be any great shakes when it actually hits. TVs are already semi-web-connected, and competitors like Yahoo! have plenty of time to craft a credible competitor. Google will just be another brand for a while, but like Android, it will be cheap and plentiful, and always improving. Whenever anyone leaves Yahoo’s system or Vizio’s built-in web widgets, they’ll go to Google, the way feature phone upgraders and WinMo refugees are adopting Android in herds. Like other Google products, it’ll launch incomplete and pick up steam as it goes.

    So why is it a threat to cable providers? Simple. Who wants to pay for two pipes? When I went to Comcast’s site to browse for alternative services, the option of getting internet through them was frustratingly obscured behind package deals and cable TV. What if I don’t want TV? Unpossible! Customers are led to believe that there are two distinct pipes running side by side into their house: TV and internet. Sure, that once was the case (and may still be in some areas, admittedly (though not for long)), but it sure as hell isn’t any more, and Comcast is terrified that the subscribing population at large will find out. That’s why they don’t want to give out a la carte: in order to offer options, you must first admit that options exist. If it were up to them, we’d all buy one magical pipe that gives us 100 channels (say for $60) and another pipe that gives us high-speed internet ($50), and never know that in fact, it’s all a big stream of 1s and 0s coming from the big digital content provider in the sky.

    Furthermore, the traditional advertising models, pretty much set down in the early days of radio (content, more content after these messages, ads, more content) are all kinds of fun to cling to. I don’t blame them. A million dollars for 30 viewer seconds that will probably be skipped past? Sure, sign here, and we have a nice bridge for sale, too.

    DVRs (and eventually Hulu) have done some damage to this concept, but it’s easier for people to think of them as magic VCRs with a tape you never have to rewind. By taking the familiar Google concepts and brands traditionally associated with the internet and putting them on your TV, practically unaltered, Google is rubbing the viewer’s nose in it: It’s all data! Can’t you see?! Data coming through the pipe! Don’t be a fool!

    It takes a certain confluence of circumstances to make a new technology or delivery method seem legit to consumers, even though the tech may have been around for years. AOL legitimized “the internet.” iTunes legitimized digital media downloads (Apple is good at this; they’ve legitimized several things). Google is in the process of legitimizing internet-connected TV, even though Yahoo and Samsung and all the others have been kicking it around for a year and a half now. They were doing it at their own rate. Now they’ll have to do it at Google’s rate.

    But we already have weather widgets and on-demand and Boxee and TiVo! Yeah, and we already had Nomads and ball mice and candy bar phones — until we had something else. Google’s taking an extant concept and making it simpler and better, or so we hope — it’s kind of what they do. Unfortunately for cable providers, that concept is analogous to net neutrality in your TV — let’s call it “pipe parity,” in which viewers know that it’s all just data coming from some datacenter somewhere and being turned into video by a box in their home. The more prevalent Google TV and nascent pipe parity is (having it in Sony TVs is, no doubt, only the beginning), the more cable and satellite providers will have to provide for it. As the insensibility of their double-dipping becomes more and more evident to viewers, they’ll have to accommodate, though it’ll be a while before any serious changes take place. Satellite, for instance, may not have much of a place in the hierarchy in a couple years outside of getting content to the savage prairies where cable hath spread not its high-bandwidth tentacles.

    And of course Google will have to accommodate the providers, as well: after all, it’s NBC or CBS or FOX that creates, licenses, and owns the content every Google TV viewer will want. It goes both ways — but it’s been a long time since it’s gone any way but the networks’. People have been clicking between channels by hitting the up and down buttons for a good 60 years now: it’s practically inborn. TV providers have been capitalizing on it for exactly as long, but now as bandwidth and accessibility catch up to television and movies as they caught up to music seven or eight years ago, they’ll have to switch their game up if they want to stay afloat. Otherwise they’ll end up like the music industry: a criminally obstinate, publicly mocked pariah, with their asses hanging in the wind, suing the customers they chiseled for half a century, and whining all the way to the poorhouse. Christ, good riddance! Let’s hope Comcast doesn’t end up the same way. Actually, on second thought, I’d pay good money to see that.

    It’ll take some time, and I’m guessing there are things Google isn’t telling us. Other big players like Netflix, iTunes, TiVo, and so on will have a say in the new order — no sense pretending they’re going to disappear. But I don’t think this is a lark on Google’s part. Like they said, they want a piece of the 4-billion strong TV market, and they’re going to get it one way or another. What remains to be seen is who will ride shotgun — and who will get thrown under the bus.


  • Darpa Is Looking to SMITE Internet Interlopers [Security]

    Darpa is going at securing cyberspace again, and this time they’ve got an open call to everyone to help them devise a program that will flag threats through irregular activity. More »










    DarpaSecurityConsultantsGeneral and FreelanceUnited States

  • One Cousin’s Meat Is Another Cousin’s Poison

    Another thoughtful piece, from my friend, and fellow businessman, Tom Fiske:

    Thomas FiskeEvery family has members that no one talks about. In my case it was my great-grandfather Adam Sebastian. He worked hard, succeeded, and died young. The problem was that he was a low class emigrant from Bavaria. People like that just did not fit into Southern society, so everyone kept quiet about Adam as though he had been a bank robber. To this day he is not a popular topic in my family’s circle of friends and cousins.

    But Adam always had a certain appeal for me. I am a B (Business) school graduate, and he was a heck of an entrepreneurial businessman. With hardly any English at all, Adam emigrated from Whoknowswhere, Bavaria to Louisville, KY about 1856. I am sure that the Ohio River Valley area reminded him and many other Germans of the Rhine River Valley. That’s why there were so many of them in an area that stretched from Cincinnati, Ohio down to Paducah, Kentucky along the Ohio River.

    After doing his market research (he looked around and saw a huge horde of hungry and homesick German-speaking people) the twenty-six year-old Adam saw a great business opportunity. He found productive land on the outskirts of Louisville and set up a farm. On the edge of the farm beside a large road, Adam purchased a house whose lower floor could be used for a retail store. He set up a supply line from existing farms and went into the grocery business. Business license information shows that Adam obtained a permit to sell alcoholic beverages. He supplied German-speaking people with food and other items they wanted, with a warm German touch. Adam was a full-fledged entrepreneur in the finest of American traditions.

    He quickly became an American citizen, which meant he had a good grasp of the English language.

    All this time Adam was raising a family of four children with his wife, Teresa. Then tragedy struck. Teresa died. But Adam labored on, working night and day to make his small business succeed. He was successful until a few days before Christmas, 1874. Having worked too hard, a massive stroke took his life at age forty-four. This could also be in the American tradition.

    Adam Sebastian was my hero. Coming from another country, he went into business and made a success of it. But some of my family would rather not discuss this low born immigrant who did not fit into the social scale, even at the bottom. Truly, one cousin’s meat is another cousin’s poison.

  • A call from the White House, a new quote from the Stamford Advocate and a man who works “24/7”

    By tomorrow night at this time, Democrat Richard Blumenthal may already be crowned his party’s U.S. Senate nominee. It’s a moment he’s been waiting for all of his political life, but only time will tell if this week’s revelations that the he misrepresented his military service will destroy his ambition. 

    New quotes unearthed by Hearst Newspapers’ Neil Vigdor from the Stamford Advocate’s archives are adding fresh fuel to questions about Blumenthal’s credibility on the matter. (“I wore the uniform in Vietnam and many came back to all kinds of disrespect. Whatever we think of war, we owe the men and women of the armed forces our unconditional support,” Blumenthal was quoted as saying at the 2008 Stamford Veterans Day parade.)


    Even before the crisis erupted, the campaign had brought in two experienced Democratic political consultants: Marla Romash, a former television reporter and senior advisor to Al Gore and John Kerry, among others, and Mandy Grunwald,  who helped engineer Bill Clinton’s 1992 presidential victory. 

    Since the New York Times broke the story about Blumenthal’s misstatements, he’s also heard from White House political director Patrick Gaspard, a member of President Obama’s inner circle.


    The White House “reached out to us to see how they could be helpful,” campaign manager Mindy Myers said today.


    Meanwhile, the man in the eye of the storm hasn’t taken a leave from his day job as the state’s attorney general.

    “He’s working as attorney general,” Myers said. “He’s working on the campaign, he’s working hard. He’s been at a number of different events. He’s at the attorney general’s office, he’s at campaign headquarters, he’s been all around.”

    “Anyone who knows Dick Blumenthal knows he works 24/7,  all the time,” Myers added.

  • Google TV Announced At Google I/O

    Found under: Google, Google TV, Android, Google I/O, DVR, Remote,

    Google TV weve been hearing about this for a while now today it got officially announced at Google IO and I must say I am very impressed with everything that I saw. The whole Google TV talk was hindered by Wi-Fi congestion and just downright bad hardware first the Google guys couldnt get a good connection so they told everyone in the audience to turn off Wi-Fi on their smartphones then they had to also turn off Bluetooth because it was causing problems with the device Bluetooth keybo

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  • BREAKING: Toyota and Tesla to partner on EV production in California

    Filed under: , , , ,

    Tesla Model S – Click above for high-res image

    California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, Tesla CEO Elon Musk and Toyota CEO Akio Toyoda held a joint press in Palo Alto, California to announce that the two companies would be collaborating on electric vehicle development and production, with Tesla will taking over the recently closed NUMMI factory in Fremont, CA to produce the Model S sedan.

    Toyota will invest $50 million for a private placement of Tesla common stock and the state of California will provide a sales tax abatement to Tesla for capital equipment expenditures to tool up the plant. Musk estimated that the abatement will amount to about $20 million over the next several years.

    According to Musk, production of the Model S will bring about 1,000 employees back to the NUMMI plant to produce about 20,000 cars a year at first, and as the facility expands – possibly to include the production of more models – it could employ up to 10,000 workers. Musk revealed that some employees have already been rehired, but was non-committal on the subject of union representation. NUMMI was the only Toyota plant in North America that was unionized.

    An additional benefit to Tesla from this deal is that it will be able to take advantage of the Toyota production system and possibly some of Toyota’s suppliers. That’s sure to help Tesla avoid many of the logistical problems that hampered early Roadster production and costs.

    Production of the Model S is still planned to start in 2012 and Musk said more advanced prototypes would be revealed later this year. No decisions have been made yet about additional vehicles to be produced at the plant which previously had a capacity of more than 300,000 vehicles a year.

    The deal for the NUMMI plant leaves Downey, CA jilted at the altar with the city’s mayor “feeling stabbed in the back by Tesla.” The Toyota deal apparently came together very quickly and Musk acknowledged that he would still like to work with Downey, perhaps for a future Space-X facility. Hit the jump for all the details.

    [Source: Toyota]

    Continue reading BREAKING: Toyota and Tesla to partner on EV production in California

    BREAKING: Toyota and Tesla to partner on EV production in California originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 20 May 2010 20:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • President Obama Replaces Resigned Dennis Blair

    President Barack Obama will replace the former Director of National Intelligence Admiral Dennis Blair whose resignation will come as soon as tomorrow.  President Obama had a discussion with Blair this afternoon on a secure phone line about the best way forward. Blair offered to resign and the president said that he accepted his resignation. There were a number of intelligence failures during Blair’s tenure, these involved the Fort Hood shooter, Failed Christmas Day Bomber Umar Farouq Abdulmuttalab and Failed Times Square BomberFaisal Shahzad. There were reports that President Obama sought Blair’s resignation earlier this week, however Blair pushed back and hoped to convince the president to change his mind. The ultimate reason for Blair gone is due to the dissatisfaction of President Obama and the National Security Staff with Blair’s ability to share intelligence in a tight, coherent timely way.

    Blair has had battles which made it clear to the White House that they would have more confidence in others such as counterterrorism and homeland security adviser John Brennan. Blair attempted to pick the chief US intelligence officer in each country despite the CIA Director Leon Panetta’s wish. The White House sided with Panetta. After a mocking report on intelligent failures and Abdulmuttalab was made by the Senate Intelligence Committee, Blair answered in a statement “institutional and technological barriers remain that prevent seamless sharing of information.”

    Several Candidates have been interviewed for the national intelligence director’s job which is to oversee the nation’s 16 intelligence agencies. A US official confirmed that Lt. Gen. James Clapper, currently the undersecretary of defense for intelligence and a former director of the Defense Intelligence Agency and the National Geospatial Intelligence Agency, is the leading Candidate.

    Related posts:

    1. Dennis Blair resigns as director of U.S. National Intelligence
    2. New Security Rules for Fliers
    3. Google And NSA Alliance

  • CBC murder mystery ends its run May 22

    Published May 20, 2010
    By the Tri-City Herald staff

    Communicating Doors, a Columbia Basin College production, continues May 21-22 in the Theatre on CBC’s Pasco campus. Admission is $10 for adults, $8 for students and senior citizens. Tickets are available at the door

    Additional news stories can be accessed online at the Tri-City Herald.

  • College Bound Day

    Published May 20, 2010
    By Tu Decides

    [SPANISH] MESA Day se llevará a cabo en Microsoft

    College representatives and students will be on hand to motivate middle and high school students to further their education beyond high school.

    A free event for middle and high school students and families to sign up for the College Bound Scholarship, participate in college readiness workshops, and attend a youth services and college fair.

    Students who already signed up for the College Bound Scholarship will have the opportunity to participate in other workshops and the college and youth services fair.

    The College Bound Scholarship is a statewide program that offers the promise of a full tuition scholarship at a Washington public or private college and university, community college, or technical college for up to four years. This scholarship program offers hope and incentive for students and families who otherwise might not consider college as an option because of its cost.

    Staff and volunteers from Washington State University, Tri-Cities, Columbia Basin College and the College Success Foundation will be available to help families with the application process. 

    WHO: “College Bound Day” is sponsored by the College Success Foundation, Columbia Basin College, and WSU Tri-Cities.

    WHERE: Columbia Basin College
    H Building/Gjerde Center, 2600 N. 20th Avenue, Pasco, WA 99301

    WHEN: Saturday, May 22, 2010, 2:30-5:30 p.m.

    CONTACTS: Janie Morales-Castro at (509) 840-9202
    [email protected]
    Imelda Collop at (509) 372-7298
    [email protected]

    For more information on the College Bound Scholarship program or eligibility, call 888.535.0747.

    Families can also sign up online for the scholarship at www.hecb.wa.gov/collegebound.

  • Journalist to give lecture on injustice for literary festival

    Published May 20, 2010
    By Loretto J. Hulse, Tri-City Herald staff writer

    Learn how a history-making struggle between truth and justice changed the lives of dozens black soldiers at a free lecture tonight in Pasco.

    Investigative journalist and author Jack Hamann of Seattle will present “Speaking Truth To Power: Modern Lessons from an Historic Injustice” at 7 p.m. on the HUB main stage at Columbia Basin College. His talk is part of the annual Mid-Columbia Literary Festival series.

    Hamann will be talking about 43 soldiers, charged with rioting and the lynching of an Italian prisoner of war at Washington’s Fort Lawton, who endured the largest and longest Army court-martial of World War II.

    The case — which received worldwide attention in 1944 — was prosecuted by Leon Jaworski, later to gain fame as the Watergate special prosecutor.

    More than six decades later, Hamann and his wife, Leslie, found the previously top secret court-martial documents in the National Archives.

    Their research led to a reversal of the convictions and an apology from the U.S. government to the soldiers who still were alive and their relatives.

    The story is told in Hamann’s book, On American Soil: How Justice Became a Tragedy of WWII.

    “It’s a very intriguing story,” said Maria Allan with CBC. “It was actually his wife who found the report which was key to the book.”

    Allan serves on the selection committee for the Inquiring Minds Program of Humanities Washington.

    “He spoke to (the committee) for just 20 minutes, and he had me then. I wanted to know more, I had to hear the rest of the story,” she said.

    Hamann was chosen to be a speaker for the Inquiring Minds Program but also is coming for LitFest.

    “I was still so fired up over hearing Hamann speak they said they just had to have him come,” she said.

    On American Soil was Investigative Reporters & Editors’ book of the year in 2005.

    The final speakers in the Community Lecture series are Bruce and Susan Mattley, who live near Walla Walla.

    “Cowboys and Cowgirls in Story and Song,” sponsored by the Three Rivers Folk Life Society, will be at 7 p.m. June 17 at Mid-Columbia Library, 1620 S. Union St., Kennewick. Admission is free.

    For more information on the series, go to www.columbiabasin.edu/litfest.

    For more information on Hamann, go to www.jackhamann.com/books.

    Additional news stories can be accessed online at the Tri-City Herald.

  • Tonight’s Litfest event adds historical perspective

    Published May 20, 2010
    By the Tri-City Herald editorial staff

    “Not only riveting, On American Soil is also essential reading for anyone concerned about the delicate balance between national security and individual rights.”

    That’s what James Bradley, author of Flags of Our Fathers, had to say about Seattle journalist Jack Hamann’s account of a little-known chapter in military history.

    How we manage that balancing act in post-911 America will define us as a nation. Everyone ought to be concerned.

    Hamann talks about his book tonight at Columbia Basin College. The lecture, “Speaking Truth to Power: Modern Lessons from an Historic Injustice,” is at 7 p.m. on the HUB mainstage.

    Herald reporter Loretto Hulse’s story inside today’s Mid-Columbia section provides more details about Hamann’s investigation into the court-martial of 43 African American soldiers at Seattle’s Fort Lewis during World War II.

    Hamann’s book won critical acclaim. More importantly, it won a belated verdict reversal for a group of Americans charged with rioting and lynching an Italian prisoner of war.

    Consider this a nudge toward the Pasco campus for tonight’s talk, part of the Mid-Columbia Literary Festival. Hamann’s impressive historical work offers important lessons for today.

    Additional news stories can be accessed online at the Tri-City Herald.

  • Civilization is stronger than we think: Structural deficits and complex adaptive systems

    The more humans you know, the harder it is to imagine that civilization can endure. Billions of consumers. Environmental collapse. Climate change. Peak Oil. China’s gender wars. The falling cost of havoc. The GOP. Skynet, sooner or later.

    It looks hopeless, but on the other hand it’s been 58 years since the first fusion weapon was detonated – and we’re still here. That’s surprising.

    It’s not just technology that we’ve survived. It seems impossible that democracies can manage their finances, but they do …

    Adam Smith’s Money World – Onc is not Enough

    … Greece has its debt bail-out, or appears to have, but there’s still that riot-inducing issue of government budget cuts. Is it even feasible for a government to cut its budget by as much as the International Monetary Fund has demanded of Greece? Yes it is very possible — all too possible, in fact — according to the IMF’s own study. In the past three decades there have been at least nine instances in which developed nations have cut their structural deficits by at least 10 percent of GDP…

    It’s true that some nations do better than others, but it’s impressive that, faced with doom, even troubled nations like Greece and the US draw back. For example, to our great shame we reelected George W Bush and Richard Cheney. We did not, however, elect John McCain (now sadly demented) and Sarah Palin.

    How does reason emerge from chaos?

    We don’t know, but many suspect it has something to do with the properties of a complex adaptive system. In our case it’s a system built of economics and politics and the noise of the disconnected and, perhaps, the cumulative influence of the rational individual. It’s a system that is self-sustaining, a system that “wants to live”.

    The system is hard to measure, but it’s strong. It’s also a fractal response — just as civilization is surprisingly robust, so too are its components. Consider the digital economy. Perfect, near zero cost replication was very disruptive — but the systems is responding. The iPad, the Flash wars, Google TV, “curated computing” — it’s all about the system responding to the disruption. It’s all about the Digital Rights Management (DRM). Of which I will say more …

    My Google Reader Shared items (feed)

  • Flagra: Novo Audi S7

    mercado

    Até antes desse flagra, o modelo S7 não passava de rumor, mas agora dá pra ver que a Audi não está brincando em serviço e que modelo já está quase pronto.

    O modelo foi flagrado fazendo testes no famoso circuito de Nurburgring, onde o modelo se encontrava fazendo testes de velocidade e equilíbrio.

    O S7 deve ser apresentado no fim de 2010 e começo de 2011, e vem para bater de frente com a BMW M5 e a Mercedes E63 AMG.

    Segundo fontes, o modelo será equipado com um motor de 4.2 litros V8 que rende 444 cavalos de potencia. Esse super sedan promete bastante, agora só nos resta esperar.

    Novo Audi S7

    Fonte: Car Blog


  • Is the Next Prius Going To Be A Tesla?


    Toyota and Tesla announced a new partnership at Tesla’s headquarters in Palo Alto today, the auto makers will collaborate on technology, the development of new electric vehicles and Toyota will purchase $50 million of Tesla’s common stock. The press conference featured the Governor of California, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Tesla CEO, Elon Musk and TMC President, Akio Toyoda.

    Calling it an “explosion” for California (I think he meant this in the positive sense, not the Terminator sense) Schwarzenegger framed it as a victory for California’s environmental agenda and the economy. He predicts it will create 1,000 jobs for the state’s embattled economy.


  • Gloria James–Deltone West Affair Confirmed!Calvin Murphy proved LeBron James’ Mom’s Affair!

    Calvin Murphy just confirmed and proved that the rumor between Lebron James’ mother Gloria James and Deltone West affair is true. The story of Gloria James-Deltone West affair has been the talk of the town. The news has spread stating LeBron James’s mother is having a relationship with Deltone West. It has been speculated that this rumored affair has affected the performance of Lebron James’ in his games.

    The rumor came out to be true as Calvin Murphy unfold the stories. Calvin Murphy is a reliable source! Calvin Murphy is a former American professional basketball player who played as a guard for the NBA’s Houston Rockets from 1970-1983. He has been nominated as Basketball Hall of Famer and a former member of the Rockets’ broadcast team. He is hosting ESPN Radio’s The Calvin Murphy Show.

    Watch out for more updates on Gloria James-Deltone West affair. How this confirmation of Calvin Murphy will affect LeBron James’ game performance in the future? Let’s find out…

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  • If This Is A Meltdown, Where’s Our Lehman?

    Jim Cramer Amanda Drury

    The world market panicked today, as everyone scrambled for liquidity. That you know.

    The question is: do we see a big disorderly crash from here? Clearly, a lot of folks right now think we do, and some have been saying so loudly.

    The question is: why?

    There’s no major discernible reversal in economic sentiment, and there’s no Lehman (yet).

    Indeed, as Mike O’Rourke of BTIG notes, in an evening note on “echo bubbles” and “echo panics,” this is definitely not 2008:

    The markets never cease to amaze.  A large portion of the 83% rally from March 2009 through April 2010 was referred to as an “Echo Bubble.”  An echo bubble is a smaller bubble that emerges during the bounce after a larger bubble has crashed.  Investors are comfortable participating in such moves because they see familiar signposts within the prices, news and market developments.  We have not been among those who believe the recovery rally was an echo bubble. 

    Quite the contrary, we believe the U.S. has had many of the same problems post-bust as we had pre-bust.  Early on, the re-pricing merited taking the risk and finally acknowledging the problems placed us on a path to repairing them.  The selling that is occurring in the equity market today is an “Echo Panic.”  Investors see many of the familiar signposts of 2008, such as over-leveraged entities, only today they are governments as opposed to banks.  Other occurrences are risk spreads widening, government bailouts, shorts being banned and anti-market political rhetoric.  Deflation fears are re-emerging as commodities collapse.  There is massive de-risking and a flight to quality.  The list goes on, but despite the similarities, this is not Credit Crunch 2.0. 

    Well, at least none yet. On Wednesday afternoon, Cramer said we should wait for 48 hours to see if a Lehman occurs. If not, we’re in the clear.

    By that measure, we’ve got about 15 hours to go…

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