Category: News

  • ZuneHD gets software updates

    zune_hearts

    WMExperts report that the ZuneHD has seen some minor software updates, with the Facebook client moving to version 1.1, and the twitter client to 1.2. 

    The changes are not appeared in the Facebook client, but the twitter app gets a landscape keyboard option under its settings, which improves typing speed.

    There is also a new game, Hearts and Spaces, available in the Marketplace.

    More screenshots at WMExperts here.


  • Squishy batteries that fit A through D – probably not going to happen


    We have to give concept designers points for trying, but I don’t think this resizable battery is going to fly. For one thing, the actual core is tiny, and batteries derive their power from packing as many volatile chemicals into their little bodies as possible. Imagine putting six of these, at D size, into a boom box — the thing would die in like 15 minutes.

    There’s also a question of heat. That memory foam is, I’m guessing, rather a good insulator. Batteries generate heat when they’re in use and rechargeables really hot up when they’re plugged in. I’d be concerned that these suckers would catch fire.

    That said, though, it’s good to see thought being applied to battery design. Unlike wall outlets, which are surprisingly hard to improve on, batteries are pretty much a blank slate. Sure, we’ve got AAs and stuff, but there’s a lot of room to play in as a designer. This particular concept just doesn’t seem to have legs.

    [via Gajitz and Treehugger]


  • First Impressions: Motorola i890 (Sprint)

    Motorola i890

    What’s Good: Finally, an iDEN device (along with the i9) that doesn’t look like something out of a bad 80’s television show.

    What’s Bad: Battery life is rather poor.

    Verdict: If you need Direct Connect and want a stylish phone, the i890 is for you.

    Every time I use a new Nextel phone, the first thought that crosses my mind is “wow, they’re actually stylish now.”  Though one can still pick up a rugged (and hefty) iDEN device, it seems like Sprint is finally realizing that it is possible to mesh style and Direct Connect.  To that end, the Motorola i890 is a svelte, RAZR-esque device with a spring-loaded hinge that can be purchased at Sprint stores and online for $129.99 after a $50 mail-in rebate and two-year agreement.

    Motorola i890 2

    The phone ships in a box complete with the phone, battery, AC adapter, and instruction manuals.  Overall, it feels good in the hand, and isn’t bulky (even when the flip is opened).  At 4.2 ounces, the i890 is perfect for a pocket, purse, or briefcase.  In an age of minimalism in regards to phone design, the Motorola i890 is loaded with buttons.  The volume rocker and Direct Connect button can be found on the left side of the device, while the hinge release and lock button can be found on the right side.  The speaker and menu buttons can be found on the top of the unit, and the 2.0-megapixel camera is located on the hinge.  The phone sports a large external display with four touch buttons (three under the display, one above it).  Once opened, you’re greeted with a 2.2-inch display with 65,536 colors and 240 x 320 pixels.  One of the neat features on the i890 is the ability to navigate through select parts of the phone’s menu from the external display.  Using the touch buttons, I was able to access many of the media functions on the device.

    The Motorola i890 offers a numeric keypad.  I found myself missing a QWERTY layout, but the large buttons on the device made it easy to get used to it.  The menu structure is similar to what we’ve seen on Nextel devices in the past, and after a few days of working with it, I was able to navigate with ease.

    Motorola i890 3

    I’ve been testing the Motorola i890 in the Charlotte area, and call quality has been strong.  When I took the device to a known Nextel trouble spot, I was able to hold the call, despite choppiness here and there.  During calls, users told me that they could hear me fine, and I had no trouble on my end.  I paired the Plantronics Voyager Pro Bluetooth headset to the device, and used it without trouble.  As with any device equipped with Direct Connect, the speaker on the i890 is next to phenomenal.

    The i890 is an iDEN device, so data connectivity isn’t its best feature.  That being said, CNN’s mobile page loaded in about seven seconds, while the PhoneDog page loaded in about 42 seconds.  It’s not the device for the data-hungry consumer, but for occasional web browsing, it gets the job done.  While estimated talk time rolls in at about 3.4 hours, I have only been able to obtain about two before the low battery indicator flashes.  I’m still conducting battery tests, but with moderate use encompassing calling, text messaging, occasional web browsing, and Direct Connect usage, I was barely able to make it over a day before the unit powered down.  It’s a close call, so if you’re interested in it, be sure to purchase a car charger before you leave the store.

    Stay tuned for my full review of the device!

     


  • GM pickups to adopt active grille louvers for fuel economy?

    Filed under: , , , ,

    Chevrolet Silverado – Click above for high-res image gallery


    General Motors’ full-size pickup trucks may be next in line to get thermostatically controlled louvers behind the grille to improve aerodynamics. SRG Global, which produces a variety of components for numerous manufacturers, is developing just such a system for GM’s trucks. Similar systems will debut later this year on the Chevrolet Cruze and later on the new Ford Focus.

    One of the biggest sources of aerodynamic drag and turbulence comes from the air flowing through a vehicle’s engine compartment. Closing off the grille to limit this airflow can drastically reduce this issue, however, the engine still needs air for cooling – especially at lower speeds. At higher speeds, the increased air velocity means less open area is required for adequate cooling.

    Thermostatically controlled slats monitor coolant temperatures and then open or close as needed, giving the best of both worlds at the expense of a bit of added cost and complexity. That said, SRG’s new designs will integrate the slats into the grille structure reducing the cost of the system and making assembly simpler. Theoretically, such technology could also be used to improve cold-weather warm-ups by keeping the grille’s slats closed.

    [Source: Ward’s Auto World]

    GM pickups to adopt active grille louvers for fuel economy? originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 19 May 2010 17:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Interior Dept. Divides Offshore Drilling Agency

    Interior Department Secretary Ken Salazar announced today that he’ll be splitting the Mineral Management Service into three pieces in response to charges that officials there dropped the ball leading up to the current oil spill disaster in the Gulf.

    The move is designed to eliminate conflicts of interest between the various functions of the agency amid heavy criticism that MMS officials have grown overly chummy with the companies they’re charged with monitoring.

    “The Minerals Management Service has three distinct and conflicting missions that — for the benefit of effective enforcement, energy development, and revenue collection — must be divided,” Salazar said in a statement announcing the overhaul.

    A more detailed breakdown of those divisions is here:

    • Bureau of Ocean Energy Management: A new bureau under the supervision of the Assistant Secretary for Land and Minerals Management will be responsible for the sustainable development of the Outer Continental Shelf’s conventional and renewable energy resources, including resource evaluation, planning, and other activities related to leasing.
    • Office of Natural Resources Revenue: An office under the supervision of the Assistant Secretary for Policy, Management, and Budget that will be responsible for the royalty and revenue management function including the collection and distribution of revenue, auditing and compliance, and asset management.
    • Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement: A bureau under the supervision of the Assistant Secretary for Land and Minerals Management that will be responsible for ensuring comprehensive oversight, safety, and environmental protection in all offshore energy activities.

    This looks great on paper — and doing nothing was never an option in the wake of the Deepwater Horizon tragedy. But there’s a precedent for such a split that should serve as a cautionary tale for federal officials aiming to prevent the next big energy disaster.

    In 1977, the Mining Enforcement and Safety Administration — then a branch of the Interior Department — was overhauled to become the Mine Safety and Health Administration under the Labor Department. The move was made to eliminate conflicts of interest between safety enforcement and energy development. Many would argue that it didn’t work so well.

  • Steinmetz: Novo kit para o Opel Astra

    kit personalização

    É isso mesmo, a Opel acabou de lançar o novo Astra a poucos dias e já lança novo kit de personalização.

    O kit inclui spoiler dianteiro, grande dianteira sem logotipo da Opel e rodas de liga leve de 19 polegadas.

    No seu interior o modelo recebe apenas um aparelho que exibe relatórios do cambio manual. Seu motor também não é alterado, mas com certeza vai ser no futuro.

    Fonte: Auto Blog . it

    Opel Astra


  • Rolling back the forest canopy

    Forests are declining in all six New England states for the first time in 150 years, threatened by urban sprawl in the south and by recreational development and forest ownership fragmentation in the north, according to a new report released by researchers at the Harvard Forest.

    The report, “Wildlands & Woodlands: A Vision for the New England Landscape,” was authored by 20 researchers at a dozen institutions. Released Wednesday (May 19), the report calls for renewed conservation efforts with the goal of protecting 70 percent of the region’s forests from development over the next 50 years, mainly through voluntary conservation easements given by private landowners.

    The report’s authors, including eight from Harvard, said New England’s forests began to rebound from their original clear-cutting in the mid-1800s, as agricultural production moved west and the region industrialized. After a century and a half of expansion, the forests today represent an amazing success story, covering 80 percent of the region’s landscape.

    Though today’s forests are predominantly second growth and different in character from the region’s original forests, researchers said area residents have a second chance to decide their forests’ fate. The first Colonial-era settlers decided to cut them down, but now that the forests have re-grown, it’s our turn to make a similar choice.

    The report’s findings and recommendations were presented at a press conference by David Foster, Harvard Forest director; Robert Lilieholm, associate professor of forest policy at the University of Maine; and James Levitt, director of the Harvard Forest’s Program on Conservation Innovation.

    Protecting 70 percent of the region’s forests will require doubling the current pace of conservation activity, Foster said. The report envisions two main types of conservation status. Most of the land — 90 percent, or 27 million acres — would be in what the report terms woodlands, which would maintain forest but allow timber harvesting, recreation, and other uses. The other 10 percent, totaling 3 million acres, or 7 percent of New England’s landscape, would be preserved as wildlands, free from human disturbance and management, and allowed to develop naturally.

    Roughly twice the property under development would be open to future development, Foster said. Though that’s a smaller percentage than the land that would be conserved as forest, there would be plenty left for development, especially since old mill towns and declining urban neighborhoods can be rebuilt as well.

    Forest threats today — houses and shopping malls — tend to be more permanent than past threats — pastures and fields, according to Lilieholm. In Connecticut, Rhode Island, and Massachusetts, forest threats mainly stem from urban sprawl, meaning residential development and building on the coastlines.

    In the northern states of Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont, the threat is from development for leisure purposes such as second homes on otherwise pristine lakefronts. Another looming threat is fragmentation of ownership of the large tracts of forest in the northern part of these states, particularly in Maine.

    As recently as the 1990s, Lilieholm said, large chunks of northern forest were owned by forestry companies, which periodically cut the trees and then let the forest regrow. Today, a significant portion of that land has been purchased by financial entities such as pension funds and real estate investment trusts, which hold onto them as investments to lower portfolio risk. These companies, Lilieholm said, only expect to hold onto the land for 10 to 15 years and then can sell it off as smaller parcels, possibly with the lakefront land sold separately to people seeking second homes.

    New England’s forests have value far beyond aesthetics and their use as wildlife habitat, the report’s authors said. Forests provide a range of services valuable to humans, such as ensuring clean water and, perhaps most pertinent in this age of global climate change, binding up carbon dioxide in wood and soil.

    The group called for cooperation across the region, in both the public and private sectors, to bring the report’s vision to reality. The Wildlands and Woodlands Partnership already has a network of about 60 conservation organizations. While cooperation is needed, increased public funding also will be important, since many property owners in rural areas are “land rich” but not wealthy and so can’t turn over land or development rights without compensation.

  • HulloMail 2.2 Goes Live on Android

    Today HulloMail announced the launch of its free visual voicemail product for Android devices in the U.S. and U.K. HulloMail 2.2 has the ability to replace the voicemail service that is provided by wireless network operators. When a voicemail is received, HulloMail converts the voicemail to an MP3 file and then emails the file to the user as an attachment. It can then be listened to, saved, and forwarded to others. Pretty neat.  I can see this being very convenient.

    Take a look at the video below to see how the app works. It is very cool.  It is definitely going to replace my carrier voicemail.

    Click here to view the embedded video.

    Source: Phone Scoop

    Might We Suggest…


  • Sun Glinting off Oil Spill

    NASA’s Aqua satellite has caught imagery of the sun glinting off the Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill.

    As it swept over the Gulf of Mexico the Aqua, using the onboard Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer instrument, the satellite took the above image showing three big bright sunglints.

    According to the May 18 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) web update of the Deepwater Horizon incident, “satellite imagery on May 17 indicated that the main bulk of the oil is dozens of miles away from the Loop Current, but that a tendril of light oil has been transported down close to the Loop Current.” (more…)

  • Senate Votes to Continue Debate on FinReg

    During health care reform, senators strengthened and hammered out the bill in committee before it hit the floor. This go-around, Sen. Chris Dodd (D-Conn.) decided to pass the bill through the Banking Committee on a party-line vote (the vote took all of 20 minutes) and to allow a substantive amendment process. Senators were nearing the end of that process today, but major provisions promised a vote remained without one — including Sens. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) and Carl Levin’s (D-Mich.) amendment banning proprietary trading at commercial banks and Sens. Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.) and John McCain’s (R-Ariz.) amendment reinstituting the Depression-era Glass-Steagall Act.

    Midday, Sen. Harry Reid (D-Nev.) called off a planned cloture vote. At 3:15, Democrats went into an emergency caucus meeting. When they emerged, Reid called the vote again, despite the number of major amendments still pending. The Senate rejected the measure, 57 to 42, with Cantwell and Sen. Russ Feingold (D-Wisc.) joining most Republicans to keep debate open.

    Of course, losing this vote is not losing the bill. Reid has already said he plans to have the Senate vote again tomorrow. Still, the politics felt fevered today.

    Reid has pointed his finger at the Republicans, despite the progressive crossovers. He released a statement, saying: “At every stage of this debate, Republicans and their friends on Wall Street have worked overtime to weaken this bill because they view it as a threat to business as usual.  They know these reforms — reforms the American people overwhelmingly support and demand — will finally hold Wall Street accountable. I am calling on my Republican colleagues to start putting the interests of families, small businesses and seniors over those of big banks on Wall Street.” He later said one senator broke his or her promise on the vote, then suggested it was Sen. Scott Brown (R-Mass.).

    Feingold released a statement saying: “After thirty years of giving in to the wishes of Wall Street lobbyists, Congress needs to finally enact tough reforms to prevent Wall Street from driving our economy into the ditch again. We need to eliminate the risk posed to our economy by ‘too big to fail’ financial firms and to reinstate the protective firewalls between Main Street banks and Wall Street firms. Unfortunately, these key reforms are not included in the bill. The test for this legislation is a simple one: Whether it will prevent another financial crisis. As the bill stands, it fails that test. Ending debate on the bill is finishing before the job is done.”

    And, for her part, Cantwell said that the hold-up on the vote was due to another senator’s family matter — not due to Reid wrangling with her, though Reid was on camera speaking to Cantwell during the vote — and that she wants the Senate to close a loophole that might allow some firms not complying with derivatives clearinghouse requirements to avoid any penalties before another cloture vote.

  • On-demand Web Seminar:Heatsink 201 – Even More About Heatsink Design

    This session is a continuation on from Heatsink 101, during this 1 hour presentation we will dig deeper into how heatsinks work and discuss why they are not as simple as they look.

  • Megan Fox Fired From “Transformers” Series

    Bombshell Gets The Kiss-Off: Sex symbol Megan Fox has been dropped from the cast of Transformers 3, Hollywood tattle Nikki Finke of Deadline.com has learned.

    Megan, who played star the love interest of Shia LaBeouf’s Samuel James Witwicky in the first two films in the blockbuster franchise, will not return to the series when the third movie opens in 2011, a rep for Paramount Studios confimed to CNN.com’s Marquee Blog on Wednesday.

    The “official” word is that Fox has been dumped because T3’s storyline marks the beginning of a new chapter for Samuel and it would be better if the character were not tied down to a girlfriend — even one who looks like Mikaela Banes However, as we celeb-gawkers know, Megan has a long history of tense relations with director Michael and much of the rest of the Transformers cast and crew.

    After tabloid rumors surfaced claiming that Megan would be killed off in the forthcoming Transformers feature, the beauty angrily compared her director to “Hitler” and “Napoleon” in an interview with Britain’s Wonderland Magazine’s September/October 2009 issue.

    “He’s like Napoleon and he wants to create this insane, infamous mad-man reputation,” Megan said at the time. “He wants to be like Hitler on his sets, and he is. So he’s a nightmare to work for but when you get him away from set, and he’s not in director mode, I kind of really enjoy his personality because he’s so awkward, so hopelessly awkward.”

    Shortly thereafter, members of the film’s crew posted an open letter on the director’s site, condemning the actress for her behavior on set and viciously branding Megan, “the grump of the set,” “thankless, classless, graceless,” “unfriendly,” along with a host of other unflattering adjectives.

    Shia LaBeouf’s character is expected to move in a new direction with a new love interest for Transformers 3.


  • National Research Council Give U.S. Climate Action Plan Roadmap

    National Research Council (5/19/10)

    The National Research Council issued new three reports emphasizing why the U.S. should act now to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and develop a national strategy to adapt to the inevitable impacts of climate change. The reports by the Research Council, the operating arm of the National Academy of Sciences and National Academy of Engineering, are part of a congressionally requested suite of five studies known as America’s Climate Choices.

    “These reports show that the state of climate change science is strong,” said Ralph J. Cicerone, president of the National Academy of Sciences. “But the nation also needs the scientific community to expand upon its understanding of why climate change is happening, and focus also on when and where the most severe impacts will occur and what we can do to respond.”
    The report suggests a range of emissions from 170 to 200 gigatons of carbon dioxide (CO2) equivalent for the period 2012 through 2050 as a reasonable goal, a goal that is roughly in line with the range of emission reduction targets proposed recently by the Obama administration and members of Congress. Even at the higher end of this range, meeting the target will require a major departure from “business-as-usual” emission trends. The report notes that with the exception of the recent economic downtown, domestic emissions have been rising for most of the past three decades. The U.S. emitted approximately 7 gigatons of CO2 equivalent in 2008 (the most current year for which such data were available). If emissions continue at that rate, the proposed budget range would be used up well before 2050, the report says.

    A carbon-pricing system is the most cost-effective way to reduce emissions. Either cap-and-trade, a system of taxing emissions, or a combination of the two could provide the needed incentives. While the report does not specifically recommend a cap-and-trade system, it notes that cap-and-trade is generally more compatible with the concept of an emissions budget.
    Carbon pricing alone, however, is not enough to sufficiently reduce domestic emissions, the

    report warns. Strategically chosen, complementary policies are necessary to assure rapid progress in key areas such as: increasing energy efficiency; accelerating the development of renewable energy sources; advancing full-scale development of new-generation nuclear power and carbon capture and storage systems; and retrofitting, retiring, or replacing existing emissions-intensive energy infrastructure. Research and development of new technologies that could help reduce emissions more cost effectively than current options also should be strongly supported.

    NRC Reports and Free Summaries

    Clean Fleet Climate Action Reports

    The compelling case that climate change is occurring and is caused in large part by human activities is based on a strong, credible body of evidence, says Advancing the Science of Climate Change, one of the new reports. While noting that there is always more to learn and that the scientific process is never “closed,” the report emphasizes that multiple lines of evidence support scientific understanding of climate change. The core phenomenon, scientific questions, and hypotheses have been examined thoroughly and have stood firm in the face of serious debate and careful evaluation of alternative explanations.

    “Climate change is occurring, is caused largely by human activities, and poses significant risks for — and in many cases is already affecting — a broad range of human and natural systems,” the report concludes. It calls for a new era of climate change science where an emphasis is placed on “fundamental, use-inspired” research, which not only improves understanding of the causes and consequences of climate change but also is useful to decision makers at the local, regional, national, and international levels acting to limit and adapt to climate change.

    The report recommends that a single federal entity or program be given the authority and resources to coordinate a national, multidisciplinary research effort aimed at improving both understanding and responses to climate change. The U.S. Global Change Research Program, established in 1990, could fulfill this role, but it would need to form partnerships with action-oriented programs and address weaknesses that in the past have led to research gaps, particularly in the critical area of research that supports decisions about responding to climate change.

    Substantially reducing greenhouse gas emissions will require prompt and sustained efforts to promote major technological and behavioral changes, says Limiting the Magnitude of Future Climate Change, another of the new reports. Although limiting emissions must be a global effort to be effective, strong U.S. actions to reduce emissions will help encourage other countries to do the same. In addition, the U.S. could establish itself as a leader in developing and deploying the technologies necessary to limit and adapt to climate change.

    An inclusive national policy framework is needed to ensure that all levels of government, the private sector, and millions of households and individuals are contributing to shared national goals. Toward that end, the U.S. should establish a greenhouse gas emissions “budget” that sets a limit on total domestic emissions over a set period of time and provides a clear, directly measurable goal. However, the report warns, the longer the nation waits to begin reducing emissions, the harder and more expensive it will likely be to reach any given emissions target.
    We must manage and minimize the risks of climate change, says the third report, Adapting to the Impacts of Climate Change. Some impacts – such as rising sea levels, disappearing sea ice, and the frequency and intensity of some extreme weather events like heavy precipitation and heat waves – are already being observed across the country. The report notes that policymakers need to anticipate a range of possible climate conditions and that uncertainty about the exact timing and magnitude of impacts is not a reason to wait to act. In fact, it says boosting U.S. adaptive capacity now can be viewed as “an insurance policy against an uncertain future,” while inaction could increase risks, especially if the rate of climate change is particularly large.

  • Waste a target of changes at Washington State Ferries

    Can’t afford another ‘accountability’ manager

    This is a response to “Changes at state ferries to target waste” [NWThursday, May 13].

    The efforts “aimed at addressing waste and the lack of accountability” at Washington State Ferries is a typical, bureaucratic response to the problem. The story tells of “hiring a deputy ferries director to hold managers more accountable” to fix problems in the state ferry system. In the private sector, which helps pay the state’s bills, every manager at every level is continually held accountable for his or her actions.

    Businesses do not need and cannot afford another manager to accomplish their goals. Neither does Washington State Ferries.

    — Ted Nelson, Federal Way

  • 10 questions for MPEG LA on H.264

    By Scott M. Fulton, III, Betanews

    Prior to Google’s announcement earlier today of its open sourcing the VP8 video codec, a spokesperson for MPEG LA — the licensing agent that manages the patent portfolio for multimedia technologies relating to the H.264 codec, among others — agreed to answer ten questions submitted to the agency in advance. Those questions regard how it licenses the codec that Microsoft and Apple consider the best solution for HTML 5, the next markup language for the Web.

    Here, Betanews presents the questions and MPEG LA’s responses without editorial comment.

    1. One of the principal confusions we see people having, evidently, concerns the royalties process for non-commercial video. We know that MPEG LA does not charge royalties to the producers of videos encoded using H.264, for the non-commercial use of video made with cameras that use this codec, or through software that uses this codec. But royalties are paid, by someone, at some time, and perhaps people would have a better understanding of this process if they could comprehend who, when, and why. Because people evidently are under the impression that they will, at some time, owe a bill to MPEG LA; and the current conspiracy theory is that it will come due in 2015, which is the expiration date for the current royalty-free terms.

    MPEG LA: Please permit me to provide some general background with respect to our AVC/H.264 (“AVC”) License: The AVC License is effectively divided into two halves: (i) sublicenses granting the rights to “manufacture and sell” AVC Products and (ii) sublicenses granting the rights to “use” such AVC Products to provide AVC Video content for remuneration. An AVC Product is defined to be a product that contains one AVC decoder, one AVC encoder or a single product including a combination of the two (for example, hardware products, software products, etc.).

    In the case of (i) sublicenses granting the rights to make and sell AVC Products, the party that offers the end products concludes the License and is responsible for the applicable royalties associated with the products they distribute. Included in the royalty paid by a Licensee for the manufacture and sale of AVC encoders/decoders is the limited right for a Consumer to use the encoders/decoders for their own personal use (for example, in a teleconference or to watch personal video content). But, when the encoders/decoders are used to provide AVC video content to an end user for remuneration, the provider of such video service may be responsible for a royalty for the right to use the encoders/decoders in connection with the remunerated video. Specifically, AVC Video offered on a Title-by-Title, Subscription, Free Television, or Internet Broadcast basis will benefit from coverage under the AVC License (the first three bear royalties; the fourth [Internet Broadcast] does not).

    2. Has there ever been an instance in the history of the MPEG LA organization when an individual has been responsible for royalties for non-commercial use of technologies in its portfolio?

    MPEG LA: Individuals are responsible when they make [or] provide video for remuneration of the type for which a license is required and a royalty is payable, but there has been no instance where a consumer or end user was pursued for a royalty.

    3. Is it possible for any party to be held responsible in five years’ time for the non-commercial use this year of technology in MPEG LA’s portfolio?

    MPEG LA: We assume that by “non-commercial use” you mean something such as a Web site that distributes AVC video content free to end users (which is referred to in our AVC License as “Internet Broadcast AVC Video”). While that Web site would benefit from being a Licensee to our AVC License, it does not pay a royalty for the distribution of such video through December 31, 2015. Decisions regarding royalties for the period after 2015 are considered near the end of the prior term when then current business models and related conditions can be taken into account.

    4. If a Web site were to charge subscription fees for up-front access to its content, and among that content happened to be links to, or embedded streams of, videos that were created using H.264 for which there appeared to be no commercial intent at the time of creation, is anyone responsible for royalties? The producer, the Web site, the viewer? (For example, say The Wall Street Journal under a paywall was to host an H.264 video that it presents as having been independently produced, and the paywall pertains to the site as a whole.)

    MPEG LA: Yes, since the Web site is receiving remuneration for the AVC video content it makes available on a subscription basis, it would benefit from the coverage our AVC License provides. The amount of royalties owed, if any, would depend on the number of Subscribers to that website during a calendar year: 100,000 or fewer subscribers/year = no royalty; 100,001 – 250,000 subscribers/year = $25,000; 250,001 – 500,000 subscribers/year = $50,000; 500,001 – 1,000,000 subscribers/year = $75,000; and more than 1,000,000 subscribers/year = $100,000.

    Next: Why are browser and plug-in makers also responsible for royalties?

    5. If a Web site were to present a video produced using H.264 as an advertisement for a product or service sold commercially through that site, is that considered a commercial use of the codec, and if so, who’s responsible (and for how much, if you can say)?

    MPEG LA: Assuming there is no remuneration for the video itself (in this case, an advertisement), this would fall under “Internet Broadcast AVC Video.” The Web site would benefit from being a Licensee to our AVC License, but would not need to pay a royalty for the distribution of such video at least the license term ending December 31, 2015.

    6. When an independent producer wishes to legitimately sell (or make commercial use of) a video or movie produced using technologies in MPEG LA’s portfolio, how does this producer make arrangements with MPEG LA?

    MPEG LA: For more information about MPEG LA’s AVC License or to request a copy of the License, the producer should visit this page.

    7. Since a plug-in technology such as Adobe Flash (which utilizes H.264) may or may not be used by viewers in the processing of videos that were distributed commercially, and for which royalties were apparently paid, why is Adobe responsible for royalties also? And why would the manufacturer of a (hypothetical) H.264 codec plug-in for Mozilla Firefox be responsible as well?

    MPEG LA: As explained earlier, Adobe is considered a seller of its AVC Product, and Adobe would benefit from coverage under our AVC License. The royalties owed, if any, would depend on the number of units Adobe distributed during a calendar year: 100,000 or fewer units/year = no royalty; 100,001 ??” 5,000,000 units/year = US$0.20/unit; 5,000,001+ units/year = $0.10/unit, with a cap of $5 million in 2010. Adobe and Mozilla would be responsible for paying the royalty as described above since they are the providers of the AVC Products.

    8. Some are under the understanding that when an open source, non-commercial codec that does not use H.264 is used in the processing or creation of videos that may be playable in consoles or with devices or software that utilize H.264, the creator of that codec is not responsible for royalties to MPEG LA. In other words, if a developer avoids the use of H.264 technology to create a video that a true H.264 codec recognizes as compatible, no charges apply. Is that accurate, and why or why not?

    MPEG LA: By definition, an H.264 video is playable using an H.264 codec. To the extent that is true, coverage is provided and applicable royalties are payable under the AVC License.

    9. Is there any reason for individuals to suspect that, if today they happen to use technology that attempts to be compatible with H.264, and that is later found to infringe upon MPEG LA patents, the individual users themselves (the viewers and producers of videos using infringing codecs) would become liable for unpaid royalties?

    MPEG LA: As answered in #2 above, the consumer, or end user, is not responsible for concluding our AVC License or paying a royalty. However, as also explained in #1 above, when the encoders/decoders are used to provide AVC video content to an end user, the provider of such video service will benefit from coverage under the AVC License.

    10. Under current US law, an Internet service provider is granted “safe harbor” against liability for copyright infringement, if the system with which videos or other content is hosted there, or flows through their channels, is automatic and without the ISP’s intervention. That law is said to apply to YouTube (and thus Google) when videos from a major content producer (such as Viacom) are uploaded there (although Viacom is, of course, challenging this). But it’s my understanding that Google is a payer of royalties to MPEG LA and others, for the use of H.264 in the display of YouTube videos, which may include content where it’s protected against copyright infringement. Why do royalties apply to the providers of videos which may include not only non-commercial works but non-authorized or illicit ones as well?

    MPEG LA: Google is responsible for the use of patents in connection with any distribution of AVC video content that occurs on its Web site because its Web site is where the transaction took place with the end user, regardless of who supplied the video or whether the video infringed anyone’s copyright.

    Copyright Betanews, Inc. 2010



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  • BREAKING: 2011 Jeep Grand Cherokee fully revealed (w/ video)

    2011 Jeep Grand Cherokee

    …and we thought we’d have to wait until Friday. Chrysler Group LLC has finally released all the details, high-res images and a video of the all-new 2011 Jeep Grand Cherokee. Read to go on sale nationwide next month, the 2011 Grand Cherokee has been completely reengineered and redesigned for 2011 with a new sculpted body, panoramic dual-pane sun roof and a world-class interior with premium soft-touch materials. Chrysler says this will be our first hint at the future quality of its vehicles – as a result of its partnership with Fiat SpA.

    “Capability highlights include a choice of three 4×4 systems, new Jeep Quadra-Lift Air Suspension and Selec-Terrain systems and towing capability of 7,400 lbs,” Chrysler said in a statement. “On-road dynamics are improved courtesy of new independent front and rear suspension systems and a new body structure that dramatically increases torsional stiffness.”

    Click here for more news on the Jeep Grand Cherokee.

    2011 Jeep Grand Cherokee Interior

    Power for the 2011 Jeep Grand Cherokee will come from Chrysler’s 3.6L Pentastar V6 unit making 290-hp delivering up to 23 mpg and over 500 miles on one tank of gas. That boasts an 11 improvement in fuel-economy over the outgoing model.

    The 2011 Jeep Grand Cherokee will be available in 3 models: Laredo, Limited and Overland. The 2011 Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo 4×2 model starts at $30,995, while the 4×4 Grand Cherokee Laredo model starts at $32,995. Prices for the 2011 Grand Cherokee Limited 4×4 start at $39,995, while the Overland 4×4 model start at $42,995. Optional features include a 360-hp 5.7L V8 and a Trailer Tow Group

    The all-new 2011 Jeep Grand Cherokee will be built at the Jefferson North Assembly Plant (JNAP) in Detroit.

    Hit the jump for the high-res image gallery and a video of the 2011 Jeep Grand Cherokee in action.

    2011 Jeep Grand Cherokee:

    2011 Jeep Grand Cherokee in Action:

    – By: Omar Rana


  • Video: Robert Redford tells President Obama it’s time to lead “America on a path to cleaner, safer energy”

    Robert Redford calls on the President to get off his butt and start leading America away from dirty fossil fuels toward a clean energy future — in a video and blog post (and, no doubt, on MSNBC’s Countdown with Keith Olbermann tonight at 8:55 pm EDT):


    Okay, the “get off his butt” part was my interpretation of the video and this blog post:

    Mr. President: Now is the Time For Clean Energy

    Thursday, May 20, 2010, marks one month since BP’s oil rig exploded off the Gulf Coast, killing 11 people and unleashing one of the worst environmental disasters our nation has ever seen.

    Since then, millions of gallons of oil have gushed into the ocean, poisoning marine life and threatening hundreds of miles of coastal waters, beaches and estuaries from the mouth of the Mississippi to the Florida Keys.

    This is the clearest picture we could have of our failed national energy policy, which extends over many decades and administrations. Yet, shockingly, our elected officials in the Senate continue to drag their feet on enacting the policies that would bring the real change we need to shift our country from dirty to clean energy sources, while creating jobs and cutting our dependence on oil.

    This oil disaster is threatening marine life and habitat in a region that accounts for about 70 percent of U.S. production of shrimp and oysters, as well as millions of pounds each year of red snapper, grouper, bluefin tuna, and other fish. Fishing has been shut down from the Mississippi River to the Florida Panhandle — an area of 46,000 square miles, or roughly the size of the state of Pennsylvania. These closures are devastating to thousands of Gulf Coast families who depend on this bounty for their livelihood. Many of these people are still reeling from the trauma of Hurricane Katrina five years ago.

    I am glad that President Obama announced that he would appoint an independent commission to look at the causes of the blowout and determine what we must do to prevent this from ever happening again. This is an important first step in addressing the national tragedy and coming up with real solutions to prevent future drilling disasters.

    But it is not enough.

    Right now, the Senate has legislation on the table that would help move us in a new direction and put America back in control of its energy future. The American Power Act, drafted by Senators Kerry and Lieberman, is not perfect — but it is a significant step toward cutting our dependence on fossil fuels, limiting carbon pollution, and encouraging businesses to shift to clean energy sources.

    Unfortunately, the full Senate continues to stall — weighed down by too much infighting and too many special interests. That’s why we need the president to assert his voice and leadership by letting the Senate — and the American people — know that he is serious about getting clean energy and climate legislation passed this year.

    Americans want action. It is time for President Obama to use the power of his office to make sure we clean up this mess, and get America on a path to cleaner, safer energy.

    In order to help get this message out, I’ve just recorded a new hard-hitting television commercial, produced by my colleagues at the Natural Resources Defense Council, calling on President Obama to lead us to a clean energy future.

    In making this plea for leadership, Redford joins many others begging him for leadership, including CP:

    NYT columnist Tom Friedman has another column on the subject:

    No, the gulf oil spill is not Obama’s Katrina. It’s his 9/11 — and it is disappointing to see him making the same mistake George W. Bush made with his 9/11. Sept. 11, 2001, was one of those rare seismic events that create the possibility to energize the country to do something really important and lasting that is too hard to do in normal times.

    Sadly, President Obama seems intent on squandering his environmental 9/11 with a Bush-level failure of imagination. So far, the Obama policy is: “Think small and carry a big stick.” He is rightly hammering the oil company executives. But he is offering no big strategy to end our oil addiction. Senators John Kerry and Joe Lieberman have unveiled their new energy bill, which the president has endorsed but only in a very tepid way. Why tepid? Because Kerry-Lieberman embraces vitally important fees on carbon emissions that the White House is afraid will be exploited by Republicans in the midterm elections. The G.O.P., they fear, will scream carbon “tax” at every Democrat who would support this bill, and Obama, having already asked Democrats to make a hard vote on health care, feels he can’t ask them for another.

    I don’t buy it. In the wake of this historic oil spill, the right policy — a bill to help end our addiction to oil — is also the right politics. The people are ahead of their politicians. So is the U.S. military. There are many conservatives who would embrace a carbon tax or gasoline tax if it was offset by a cut in payroll taxes or corporate taxes, so we could foster new jobs and clean air at the same time. If Republicans label Democrats “gas taxers” then Democrats should label them “Conservatives for OPEC” or “Friends of BP.” Shill, baby, shill.

    Why is Obama playing defense? Just how much oil has to spill into the gulf, how much wildlife has to die, how many radical mosques need to be built with our gasoline purchases to produce more Times Square bombers, before it becomes politically “safe” for the president to say he is going to end our oil addiction? Indeed, where is “The Obama End to Oil Addiction Act”? Why does everything have to emerge from the House and Senate? What does he want? What is his vision? What are his redlines? I don’t know. But I do know that without a fixed, long-term price on carbon, none of the president’s important investments in clean power research and development will ever scale.

    Obama has assembled a great team that could help him make his case — John Holdren, science adviser; Carol Browner, energy adviser; Energy Secretary Steven Chu, a Nobel Prize winner; and Lisa Jackson, chief of the Environmental Protection Agency. But they have been badly underutilized by the White House. I know endangered species that are seen by the public more often than them….

    We know the problem, and Americans are ready to be enlisted for a solution. Of course we can’t eliminate oil exploration or dependence overnight, but can we finally start? Mr. President, your advisers are wrong: Americans are craving your leadership on this issue. Are you going to channel their good will into something that strengthens our country — “The Obama End to Oil Addiction Act” — or are you going squander your 9/11, too?

    When you are criticized by both Robert Redford and Tom Friedman for failure to lead on the same issue, you are definitely screwing up.

  • Nvidia’s Android Tablet: Okay, I Could Want This [Nvidia]

    A rounded, plasticky take on the iPad. That’s how Nvidia’s latest Android tablet prototype struck me. It’s pretty nice. But not as nice as the inside. More »







  • Deadline for Iraq Drawdown Looms

    Today the United States has 94,000 U.S. troops serving in Iraq and President Barack Obama’s plan is to remove 44,000 of them in 15 weeks time.

    Yet a delay in forming Iraq’s new government following the March 7 elections is causing concern for U.S. officials.

    Shiite Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and Sunni Ayad Allawi are the two leading contenders to be the next prime minister, and both are arguing they have the right to form the next government. The concern is that a Maliki government could leave Sunnis feeling slighted, while an Allawi government could lead to Shiite militias reactivating.

    Meanwhile violence in Iraq has increased in recent months. The latest example was a coordinated attack by three suicide bombers on a soccer field in the Shiite-dominated town of Tal Afar that killed at least 10 people and wounded 120. Al Qaeda insurgents with Sunni ties are being blamed for the attack.

    Incidents like these, along with uncertainty about the next government, leave some to question if the deadline is feasible.  “It’s going to be difficult,” one military official told Fox on the condition of anonymity.  “Large movements always come with increased risk and not since the Iraq surge have we seen the Army attempt to move such a large number of soldiers,” this official said.

    Even the Iraq surge in 2007 doesn’t amount to the effort this drawdown is going to take. This Presidential deadline calls for 44,000 troops to leave in 3 and half months, while the surge moved in 30,000 troops over a 3 month period.

    The Army claims it can move 25,000 troops in 4 weeks.

    But according to some in the Pentagon moving that many troops so quickly comes with inherent risks. “Instead of moving 5 bus loads of troops with security, we’ll have to move 15,” this military official told Fox. That translates to bigger targets. “You also run the risk of an emboldened adversary who ramps up his efforts to attack.”

    The top U.S. Commander in Iraq, General Raymond Odierno, has said he is fully committed to drawing down to 50,000 by the end of August. His chief spokesman, Major General Steven Lanza, says the U.S. is on track to meet the troop goal, and it is important to remember progress that’s been made. “Two years ago, the Iraq government and the people here were on brink of civil war, in terms of sectarian violence,” Lanza said. “We have not seen these people revert back to sectarian violence. We have not seen the people lose faith in the Iraqi security forces. We have not seen this government fracture.”

    Senior military sources say adjusting the 50,000 troop deadline has not been raised with the President because there is still time to do it successfully. But these sources say if in June some of the key hurdles have not been met, then it will be up to the President to press on or adjust.

  • Group of automakers agree to make electric-cars louder

    2011 Chevrolet Volt

    Quietness is a common attribute of hybrid vehicles. While this rarely poses a problem to the average person (in fact many people find this quality a positive one), there is one insular group out there to which this poses a threat; the visually impaired.

    To address this issue, a group of carmakers and advocates for the blind have banded together to present to Congress a proposal for minimum noise levels that future electric and hybrid vehicles would be required to make.

    An NHTSA study performed last year showed that hybrid vehicles tend to hit pedestrians more often than other types of vehicles in those scenarios where the approaching vehicle could not be seen. The language presented to Congress by the Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers, Association of International Automobile Manufacturers, the American Council for the Blind, and the National Federation for the Blind, could become part of the Motor Safety Act of 2010; a bill currently before Congress that would create a whole host of new auto safety rules.

    – By: Stephen Calogera

    Source: CNNMoney