Category: News

  • CBC gets $275,000 for math, science

    Published May 17, 2010
    By Sara Schilling, Tri-City Herald staff writer

    Pasco Columbia Basin College in Pasco is sharing in a five-year, $2.5 million grant aimed at helping under-represented students earn four-year degrees in the fields of science, technology, engineering and math.

    The college is getting $275,000 to provide support such as academic workshops, counseling and advising and help with internships and scholarships through the Washington MESA Community College Program. (MESA stands for mathematics engineering science achievement).

    The program was announced during a news conference this morning. CBC is one of four community colleges in the state participating.

    “This really moves us forward to make sure there’s an easier path” for students hoping to transfer to four-year institutions, said Martin Valadez, CBC vice president for diversity and outreach.

    The grant is being paid for by the National Science Foundation.

    For the full story, read Tuesday’s paper and tricityherald.com.

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

  • CBC launches $2.5M grant program to increase STEM grads

    NEWS RELEASE
    May 17, 2010                                                                            Dawn Alford, 542-5524

    Today, Columbia Basin College Office of Diversity and Math and Science Division announced the awarding and launch of the Washington MESA (Mathematics Engineering Science Achievement) Community College Program (WA MCCP) grant.

    CBC is one of four Washington community colleges to share the $2.5 million grant; and the first to launch all six MESA components (administrative, MESA Center, academic workshops, orientation course, counseling and academic advising, and professional development).   The other community college grant recipients include: Highline, Seattle Central, and Yakima Valley. 

    The 5-year grant, funded by the National Science Foundation, will further support the college’s effort to prepare and transfer underrepresented students to four-year universities and earn a bachelor’s degree in the STEM (Science Technology Engineering Mathematics) disciplines.   CBC will receive $275,000, over the duration of the grant, to fund the program.  The University of Washington will administer the grant and join with Washington State University as collaborative partners to ensure the community college MESA students’ smooth transition to their institutions upon transfer.

  • LEO II – the world’s first commercially available computer

    A computer bit circa 1958 from the LEO II/3 computer

    The latest in out series of early technologies from Michael Bennett-Levy’s collection looks at the world’s first commercial business computer, the LEO II/3. The LEO II (short for Lyons Electronic Office I) was the successor to the LEO I, which was designed by Oliver Standingford and Raymond Thompson of J. Lyons and Co. – one of the UK’s leading catering and food manufacturing companies in the first half of the 20th century. ..
    Continue Reading LEO II – the world’s first commercially available computer

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  • Third of Devices Accessing the Android Market Are Running Android 2.1 [Data]

    Occasionally Google produces charts showing “the relative number of active devices running a given version of the Android platform.” The latest of these charts is special though: It apparently marks the first time Android 2.1 was the most used version. More »










    Android MarketAndroidGoogleHandheldsApple

  • What is Fat Embolism?

    The term ‘fat embolism‘ was mentioned in the season finale of the popular TV series House.

    “Yeah, she died from a fat embolism, riding in the ambulance after the amputation. It was unavoidable,” said Saul Nutts. “I don’t even know what that is, but I gotta look it up now.”

    “She mostly lived until the end of the episode. Had a fat embolism from the amputation. I can’t believe she would,” said Maria.

    According to emedicine.medscape.com, Zenker first described fat embolism at autopsy in 1862. In 1873, von Bergmann clinically diagnosed fat embolism syndrome for the first time.

    But what is fat embolism and what causes it?

    Fat embolism syndrome (FES) occurs when embolic fat macroglobules pass into the small vessels of the lung and other sites, producing endothelial damage and resulting respiratory failure (ARDS-like picture), cerebral dysfunction and a petechial rash. It can be difficult to diagnose. Fat embolism is caused by fractures, Orthopaedic procedures, Massive soft tissue injury, Severe burns. Bone marrow biopsy and Nontraumatic settings. (http://www.patient.co.uk/doctor/Fat-Embolism.htm)

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  • Is The Great Firewall Of China A Trade Barrier? And If So, Does China Care?

    Neelie Kroes, currently VP of the European Commission (and previously EU Commissioner of competition), is apparently claiming that China’s Great Firewall of internet censorship is really a trade issue, that should be reviewed by the WTO for trade violations. This isn’t the first time this has been suggested, but previous discussions never went anywhere. Now, restricting access to web information and websites can certainly be a trade issue. The fact that many of the websites blocked by China are foreign-run businesses, you can make an argument that China is protecting local companies. But, China has a pretty big trump card: it doesn’t care. The WTO could rule however it wants, and China will just say that it’s not a trade issue, but rather a way of protecting citizens from content it deems dangerous — and will then point to Australia’s attempted internet censorship along with things like ACTA, to point out that lots of countries seek to put limitations on internet content they deem “bad.” So call it what you want, it doesn’t seem likely that any WTO action will convince China to change.

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  • Path to Economic Recovery Filled With Lethal Obstacles

    We just stepped off the plane… We’ll have to catch our breath and open our eyes before we have anything to say about China…

    In the meantime, let’s look back at what is happening in Europe and America.

    And we will begin by thanking Paul Krugman, economiste ordinaire at The New York Times.

    Sometimes, in the dark of night, we are haunted by demons of doubt and worry. Especially when we’re alone. And far from home.

    Maybe we’re wrong. Maybe we’re leading thousands of loyal Dear Readers astray. Maybe the Great Correction isn’t what we think it is. Maybe deficits are good. And maybe the US will never run itself into the Greek-style yoghurt.

    What a relief it was to find Krugman in today’s International Herald Tribune! Naturally, Krugman disagrees with us completely. Which puts our mind at ease. If Krugman agreed with us, we’d have to re-think our position.

    “America is not Greece,” he says. So far, so good. His geography is correct.

    It is all downhill from there.

    Krugman won a Nobel Prize for his early work. Which makes us wonder about the Nobel committee.

    The US is running about the same size deficit as Greece; but don’t focus on that, says Krugman. The two places are not the same, he insists. Because the US has a “much lower debt level.”

    He’s wrong about that. If you add to the US national debt the debts of Fannie Mae, GM, and all the other financial holes, which the government will ultimately have to fill, the crater is about 120% of GDP – the same as Greece’s debt.

    “Even more important,” he writes, “is that we have a clear path to economic recovery.”

    Oh. Where’s that? As near as we can tell, the path is twisty, poorly lighted and full of lethal obstacles. There are now nearly as many people relying on the US government for food as the entire population of Spain. There are about as many people unemployed in the US as the entire populations of Greece, Portugal and Ireland…combined. And there are as many people who have gotten negligible income gains as…well…the entire population of America.

    Without more income, how can Americans increase spending? Without more spending, how can the economy really grow?

    The government can do the spending! Well, good luck with that. Already, the return on additional borrowing in the private sector is so marginal that banks are generally unwilling to lend. And the return on government debt? It looks like a positive return, at first. People spend transfer payments just like any other money. Economists like Krugman can’t tell the difference. But government spending generally produces negative real growth.

    Nevertheless, Krugman explains that IF the economy improves…and IF the administration cuts deficits…and IF the new health care program doesn’t cost more than the Obama team says it will – heck…everything will work out just fine! With a few tax increases, of course.

    Then, he tells us that, yes, over the long run we’re going to hell in a handcart. But that problem can be solved by a “combination of health care reform and other measures.”

    Finally, he’s right about something. Enough ‘other measures’ and you’ve got the problem licked.

    What other measures? Well, the deficit is now at about 10% of GDP. So, all you’ve got to do is to cut spending by 11% of GDP and you’ve got a surplus. Let’s see, where are we going to cut $1.4 trillion dollars? That’s cutting out 100% of the defense budget. And 100% of Social Security too.

    And if you don’t do that…you get more deficits. And if you get more deficits, you end up with more debt. And if you keep adding debt faster than real GDP growth, you eventually get to the point where the markets cannot or will not finance it. And then you’re Greece.

    What is likely to happen is that yields will stay low enough for long enough to make people think Krugman knows what he is talking about. They’ll think that the US can borrow as much as it wants for as long as it wants…

    In The Washington Post, economist James Galbraith is already a believer. He argues that the chance of getting into a Greek-style jamb is “zero.” He says deficits don’t lead to trouble. The US has been running deficits since the ’70s, he points out.

    And look at the Japanese, he adds. They’ve been running huge deficits (fiscal stimulus) since their economy slipped up in 1989. And they’re still able to borrow at practically zero interest.

    Makes you wonder how Greece got into trouble. It ran plenty of stimulating deficits. Then again, everything was all right in Greece until it wasn’t.

    A man jumped off the 65th floor of a skyscraper. As he went by the 11th floor, the secretaries heard him remark:

    “All right so far.”

    The US is all right so far. So is Japan.

    And more thoughts…

    – Deep Do-Do Horizon

    “Following the Gulf disaster…it will be a long time before any new permits are issued for drilling for oil in the Gulf…” said Rick Rule, at the Family Office get-together this weekend.

    And this from Bloomberg:

    Senators from California, Oregon and Washington introduced legislation to ban oil drilling off the West Coast amid mounting concern about the spill in the Gulf of Mexico.

    “We believe that offshore oil drilling is simply not worth the risk,” Senator Dianne Feinstein, a Democrat of California, told reporters today in Washington.

    The measure would amend the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act to impose a permanent ban on drilling off the three states.

    Offshore drilling was banned for decades after a 1969 spill about five miles off the Santa Barbara coast soaked California beaches in a 35- mile long oil slick. In July 2008, then-President George W. Bush lifted the presidential moratorium. Congress allowed its own drilling ban to expire three months later.

    “This oil spill could destroy the future of offshore drilling,” adds our Family Office researcher, Charles Delvalle. “More states will be allowed to decide whether they want drilling offshore or not. And Senators are trying to allow neighboring states to have a ‘veto’ over any one state’s offshore drilling decision.

    “So let’s say Florida wanted to put some offshore rigs up close to Georgia. If Georgia doesn’t want that rig up, it can ‘veto’ Florida’s decision.”

    Daily Reckoning readers can see where this is going. Even if the oil were available beneath the sea, the oil industry is going to have more and more trouble bringing it to market.

    Rick notes that even on dry land, the oil industry is facing disasters. A number of major exporters – Mexico, Iran, Venezuela and Peru – could take themselves out of the export business in the next few years, he says, thanks to their habit of using oil revenues for social/political purposes and failing to invest in additional capacity.

    This is occurring as the number of cars – and the demand for energy – is exploding.

    Implication: a higher oil price.

    “There’s plenty of $200 oil,” said Rick.

    Trouble is, there isn’t that much $70 oil.

    Regards,

    Bill Bonner
    for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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  • Zuki Urban Premium Theme By Zuki Software Ltd, It’s Zuki In The City!

    Zuki has done it again. This time it’s the city at night. This is a theme for those who cherish their happy hour and out time. The icons are a nice neon seagreen and the theme is fast and beautiful. I have the screenshots to prove it! So let me introduce you to Zuki Urban.

    Zuki Urban is available in the BlackBerry Sync Store for $4.99 and only works with 5.0 for the Tour, 97xx Bold, and the 89xx Curve. The description from the store is this:

    Everyone loves that Friday feeling after a long week of work. That moment at half 5 on a Friday evening, the weekend’s arrived and it’s time to enjoy your weekend with your mates. You go home, get showered, get changed, have a drink and head out into the city to live it large.

    Get that feeling every time you look at your BlackBerry with Zuki Urban. Designed with ultra HQ graphics, neon icons, fantastic font changes and slick transitions, this theme will remind you of your great weekends and get you ready for the next one.

    Zuki Urban captures city life at it’s best. From a stunning cityscape wallpaper, neon icons, fade transitions and blurred wallpapers on the menu to enhance the icons, you’ll really feel the weekend coming when you look at your BlackBerry.

    The features listed are here:

    • Visually stunning HD graphics
    • Fantastic new fonts
    • Fade screen transitions that add to the feel of the theme
    • No lag whatsoever – Very smooth
    • Battery/signal/network info clear to see without spoiling the theme’s look
    • Get that Friday feeling every time you look at your BlackBerry

    I downloaded this theme to show it in it’s glory on my BlackBerry 9630 Tour. The homescreen is a sharp picture featuring the city at night or dusk. Then the icons sit above, six customizable icons. The time sits in the lower left and the date below that. To your bottom right the signal indicator, GPS, and battery indicator rest.

    When you click options, the options screen is there immediately. All the icons sit bright with yellow edging. The time and battery indicator move to the top left and the signal indicator and GPS move to the top right. They sit in front of a blurred city background. The icons are big and easy to know what they are. Messages have a dark blue bar on top and highlight is a darker purple color. The messages have a white background with black lettering which turns white when highlighted. Options comes up black with white lettering and the purple highlight bar.

    The call screen is in front of a blurred city and is very visible. It’s simple yet nice and bright, and very city like. Anyone care to take a guess as to what city is in the background?

    The theme is great, sfw, classy enough for work and play.

    You can grab your copy of Zuki Urban by Zuki Software Ltd for $4.99 from the BlackBerry Sync Store here

    You’re reading a story which originated at BlackBerrySync.com, Where you find BlackBerry News You Can Sync With…

    This story is sponsored by the new BlackBerry Sync Mobile App Store. Grab your free copy today at www.GetAppStore.com from your BlackBerry.

    Zuki Urban Premium Theme By Zuki Software Ltd, It’s Zuki In The City!

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  • From Tech Town to Maker Faire, Detroit’s Entrepreneurship Culture is Growing

    Lesa Mitchell wrote:

    In April 2009, the Kauffman Foundation formally engaged on the ground to support the New Economy Initiative, TechTown, and other efforts to re-energize the Detroit entrepreneurial ecosystem. More than 1,500 individuals have since attended Kauffman’s FastTrac to the Future one-day events, which have exposed them to the opportunities and challenges of entrepreneurship. Over 800 individuals have completed the Kauffman/FastTrac workshops that provide the learning curricula that equip aspiring and existing entrepreneurs with the information, skills, and tools to start and grow businesses. The next series of workshops in Detroit will launch next week, on May 25 and 26.

    While everyone in Detroit has been working at a fever pitch to build out a new ecosystem for entrepreneurship, the refreshing response from entrepreneurs NOT located in the region who want to help has been inspiring and encouraging. At Tim O’Reilly’s FOO Camp last summer, I led a session on recovery in Detroit. Since that time, we have been watching the planning for the first Maker Faire Detroit scheduled for July 31 – August 1, 2010 at the Henry Ford Museum. Maker Faire aims to bring together inventors, designers, and artists of all ages to share their skills in an inspiring and exciting public forum. Bob Buderi, Wade Roush, and Howard Lovy at Xconomy, and the national voice of Xconomists in this column, have begun to chime in with great advice and a strong show of support.

    The experience of Detroit over the next five years will be important. Can entrepreneurs working in partnership with innovators big companies, and with the support of state and federal government, lead a city to recovery? What are the lessons from other cities or regions that today we would call a cluster? I, for one, am committed to bringing my own social network to Detroit, and I bet if many of you who read Xconomy show up on July 31 for Maker Faire we could all work together to show what entrepreneurs can actually accomplish.

    [Editor’s note: To help launch Xconomy Detroit, we’ve queried our network of Xconomists and other innovation leaders around the country for their list of the most important things that entrepreneurs and innovators in Michigan can do to reinvigorate their regional economy.]

    UNDERWRITERS AND PARTNERS



























  • In the Shadow of the Volcano

    It will be a thoughtful reckoning today. Put on your thinking cap. There is a lot to think about. What exactly is going on in the world and what, if anything, can you do about it?

    Let’s start with China, where Shanghai stocks fell 5.1% yesterday and are 26% off the index’s 52-week high. If Chinese stocks are leading the economy, one crash is in and another could be just beginning.

    About the only bright side of predicting a crash in Chinese construction and real estate spending is that it’s a run-of-the-mill kind of crash and not a systemic failure. That might not sound positive. But it is. It means that while the pain of China crash would be sharp and probably not short, it wouldn’t be the end of the world. Just the end of the world as we know it.

    And that would be fine too. Because over the next few decades, you get the sense that the balance of economic power in the world will have decisively shifted. It’s shifting away from the over-indebted industrialised Western Welfare States and toward the higher-saving nations of the developed world. Back a few years ago, we called this The Money Migration. And our view then was that this shift favoured Australia, despite Australia’s own massive private debt levels.

    But who knew that so much paper money would be destroyed in transit between points A and B? Markets in Europe and the Americas were again indifferent yesterday. It’s like investors can’t quite believe that you’re actually watching a junior reserve currency (the euro) slowly take off its shoes and socks and lower its dishevelled self into its deathbed.

    Can this really be it for the Euro? Well, there is always the possibility that reports of the euro’s demise are simply being exaggerated. That’s the 24/7 news media cycle works these days. Everything is a crisis all the time, especially right now. A lot of what passes for urgency is just manufactured panic.

    Despite the theatrics, though, there’s something rotten at heart of the currency. The real problem for the Euro is that it is the unbacked liability of a political union that is slowly unravelling. It must be unthinkable for the planners and bureaucrats of Europe to imagine the economic landscape without a common currency. But they better start thinking fast and printing D-marks.

    This must be what it’s like to live in the shadow of a dormant volcano. You plant a colourful green garden in the fertile soil and live on the gentle slopes and pass your days quietly. And then one fine day you are erased from existence in the time it takes to scratch your nose by a searing hot pyroclastic flow. Game over.

    Except, switching metaphorical gears, we have always known a global financial system built on debt was an active volcano capable of blowing at any time. Throwing virgins into the crater to appease the gods – like throwing Fed money onto bank balance sheets – is not a realistic survival strategy. Virgins don’t prevent volcanic eruptions and more money doesn’t improve bad debts.

    So what IS a realistic survival strategy?

    Well, the conventional wisdom – and we say this not really knowing what conventional people think – is probably to not try and time the market, to have a diversified portfolio with an asset allocation strategy designed to suit your risk and your financial goals, and to let time do your work for you, with annual rebalancing to make sure you are not over-exposed or under exposed to any particular asset class. That’s how they write it up in the textbooks.

    For most of the last twenty years, that strategy has worked. But will it keep working in a world where you may see de facto default by sovereign governments or, if they manage to avoid that, massive inflation? What do you reckon?

    Meanwhile it is beginning to dawn on more people that the Rudd government has introduced its resource rent tax at almost the worst time imaginable for the Aussie share market. China’s banks are being instructed to tighten lending. This ought to reduce the demand for base metals used in China’s infrastructure and housing industries. Base metals prices are falling.

    Yet in this environment the government has submitted a budget which assumes perpetual boom times in the resource patch and projects a surplus based on a big tax it hasn’t yet passed. If you have some time today, make sure to read this article by Business Spectator’s Robert Gottliebsen in which he warns of a looming ‘capital strike’ by the mining industry.

    A ‘capital strike’ sounds like something out of Atlas Shrugged doesn’t it? Wealth producers of Australia unite! And do nothing! You have nothing to lose but the profits the government was going to take from you anyway.

    The government seems to believe that the miners will still develop project in Australia under the new regime. Why the miners would do this when there are other projects in other countries, well, we don’t know. But the bottom line is that nearly $100 billion in mining projects may get shelved as a result of the tax.

    You might be of the opinion that this is a good thing; that accidentally the government has done the right thing by slowing down the development of Australia’s resources so they can be managed more deliberately and for the greater good. That would make you a communist. And besides, it’s a pretty risky and presumptuous gamble to say that you can handle an entire industry like a finely tuned automobile, or that you know how to run it better than the people who actually run it for a living.

    In any event, it looks like a bigger battle is brewing between the industry and the government. From an investment perspective this is a massive negative for Australian stocks. It introduces a huge amount of uncertainty. And in that environment, no one wants to take many risks.

    However, as our mate Kris Sayce pointed out in the note we sent you yesterday, the only good news is that when the playing field is deserted, you have it all to yourself. And if you preserve your capital in the big corrections, you can pick and choose the projects you want to invest in, usually at a cheaper price. At least that’s how it worked for Kris in2008.

    Frankly, we’re not sure how anything’s going to work the rest of the year. The sun will come up. It will go down. But in the hours between, what happens next is anyone’s guess. Stay tuned.

    Dan Denning
    for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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  • If Only Everything In Life Could Be Coded [Image Cache’ ]

    If only the trick worked, I’d actually learn to code this properly: More »










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  • The five hallmarks of denialism.

    Denialism: what is it and how should scientists respond?
    Black is white and white is black

    HIV does not cause AIDS. The world was created in 4004 BCE. Smoking does not cause cancer. And if  limate change is happening, it is nothing to do with man-made CO2 emissions. Few, if any, of the readers of this journal will believe any of these statements. Yet each can be found easily in the mass media.

    Denialism is a process that employs some or all of five characteristic elements in a concerted way. The first is the identification of conspiracies

    …There is also a variant of conspiracy theory, inversionism, in which some of one’s own characteristics and motivations are attributed to others

    …The second is the use of fake experts. These are individuals who purport to be experts in a particular area but whose views are entirely inconsistent with established knowledge…

    The use of fake experts is often complemented by denigration of established experts and researchers, with accusations and innuendo that seek to discredit their work and cast doubt on their motivations…

    …The third characteristic is selectivity, drawing on isolated papers that challenge the dominant consensus or highlighting the flaws in the weakest papers among those that support it as a means of discrediting the entire field…

    The fourth is the creation of impossible expectations of what research can deliver

    …The fifth is the use of misrepresentation and logical fallacies

    ..Logical fallacies include the use of red herrings, or deliberate attempts to change the argument and straw men, where the opposing argument is misrepresented to make it easier to refute…

    …The normal academic response to an opposing argument is to engage with it, testing the strengths and
    weaknesses of the differing views, in the expectations that the truth will emerge through a process of debate.
    However, this requires that both parties obey certain ground rules, such as a willingness to look at the evidence as a whole, to reject deliberate distortions and to accept principles of logic. A meaningful discourse is impossible when one party rejects these rules…

    …Instead, we argue, it is necessary to shift the debate from the subject under consideration, instead exposing to public scrutiny the tactics they employ and identifying them publicly for what they are. An understanding of the five tactics listed above provides a useful framework for doing so.

    Pascal Diethelm, Martin McKee
    OxyGene`ve, Geneva, Switzerland
    London
    School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine,
    London, UK
    European Journal of Public Health, Vol. 19, No. 1, 2–4

  • Amy Adams Welcomes her Baby Girl

    Oscar-nominated Amy Adams and her fiancé Darren Le Gallo welcome their first child who is a baby girl. The named their 7 lb daughter Avianna Olea Le Gallo. Amy Adams, 35 years old, gave birth last Saturday in Los Angeles. Adams’ rep said “Mom and baby are home and doing great… Everyone’s healthy and happy.”

    Adams and Le Gallo met in 2001. They got engaged in 2008. Amy announced her pregnancy last December 2009 and said that she was “excited” to be a mom.  Adams also said, “I’m trying to work on my relationships. I’ve been gone so long. I’ve had relationships that have been really great and supportive, but I need to learn how to keep in touch with people better, and it will be nice to have the time to focus on other people, instead of just myself and my career. Any woman that intends on having a career and a family, simultaneously, thinks about the challenge of balancing that, and also balancing that with the relationship and keeping that going well.” Adams, now a proud mom, also stated that Le Gallo was “doing everything humanly possible” to spoil her while she was pregnant, “will be an amazing dad!”

    Congratulations to the couple and their baby girl!

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  • Finally, Taylor Lautner’s Comic Book Will Be Out on August!

    Who will not know Jacob Black of the twilight movies and his popular smile? Who would not wish to dream to touch his face and his enormous body? Yes, every teenage girl is dreaming to be with him! But wait, here is an important information that you must read.

    Taylor Lautner also known as Jacob Black in Twilight movies is finally having a comic book! Arriving on your nearby stores in August is the “Fame: Taylor Lautner” from Bluewater Productions. This comic book promises to show once-unknown actor’s meteoric rise in Hollywood, including his pre-”Twilight” years and upcoming roles. And do you know who will script the 32-page issue? It will be Kimberly Sherman who is the author of Bluewater’s “Fame: Robert Pattinson” and “Fame: Kristen Stewart” comics. The feature interior art will also be made by Warren Martineck and covers will be created by JuanMar Studios.

    The Twilight series has become a pop culture phenomenon,” Darren Davis, president and founder of Bluewater Productions, said. “It’s transformed previously unknown actors into superstars. It seems that the same thing is happening with Taylor Lautner. We at Bluewater are happy to bring Taylor’s story to his fans, and hope that his comic helps introduce these readers to the joys of graphic storytelling.” Yeah right! Many fans of Taylor Lautner will be waiting for the release of the comic book to buy and read it.

    It was great that Bluewater Productions got an idea like this. Not only they created a comic book about Taylor, but they also created comic books for Robert Pattinson, Kirsten Stewart and even Lady Gaga!

    ** Here is one of the the images that you will see in the “Fame: Taylor Lautner” comic book

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  • Free Kindle App Coming To Android Devices This Summer [Android]

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    AndroidHandheldsShoppingSmartphoneVerizonWireless

  • N.Y. Times Story on Candidate Richard Blumenthal: Reaction Pouring In From Around The Country

    Reaction is pouring in from Connecticut and around the country on The New York Times story about U.S. Senate candidate Richard Blumenthal and his service in the U.S. Marine Corps Reserve during the Vietnam era.

    The story made news on CNN’s Anderson Cooper show, where Cooper said, “Politically, it makes no sense to do this.”

    Longtime Democrat Paul Begala, who was a strong defender of President Bill Clinton, said, “It’s indefensible. It is a catastrophic mistake.”

    The panel was talking about U.S. Senate races where Democrats were in trouble, including Arlen Specter, who is facing a difficult challenge in a primary Tuesday. CNN’s John King said that the Blumenthal case was “another wrinkle to another state” for Democrats across the nation.

    The panelists, however, noted that they were responding as the story was breaking late Monday night and they had not yet heard Blumenthal’s full explanation.

    http://muckrack.com/JoeNBC

    Nate Silver: “A Murphy or DeLauro would be a safer bet”

    Colin McEnroe: “For Blumenthal, integrity has always been given. What will happen to him if, suddenly, it’s not? ” 

    Hearst Newspapers’ Brian Lockhart: “Who’s Worse: A candidate who fudges military service or one who gloats about the story?” 

    TIME.com’s Swampland: Paging Chris Dodd

    Cillizza: Possible Game changer?

    Healy: “Blumenthal’s 30 Years of Shameful Lies”

    NPR’s Ken Rudin: Shades of Wes Cooley


  • Swarovski D:Light White Crystal LED Watch Gets Rubberized

    watch 196x300 Swarovski D:Light White Crystal LED Watch Gets Rubberized You may already know about the D:Light collection of  watches from Swarovski. You know those expensive bracelet watches that at the push of a button display the time on 171 crystals. Well the gold and silver metal versions must have been such a hit that they just released a newer version, the D:Light White. What’s the difference exactly? Nothing much really, expect that the band is made of a white rubber and the face is stainless steel. The same 171 crystals are here and when you press a button the time still displays in all its LED crystal glory. 1047345 gi2 20100421 240 Swarovski D:Light White Crystal LED Watch Gets Rubberized Lastly the price is still up there at $1500 so a Swatch watch this ain’t. You can get a hold of the D:Light White at Swarovski’s website.


  • DuPont breakthrough could mean bigger OLED TVs that don’t cost the earth

    LG's 15-inch OLED TV could soon get some more affordable bigger brothers

    The prospect of more affordable large screen OLED TVs has taken another step towards becoming reality with the announcement by DuPont that it has developed a manufacturing process that can be used to print large, high-performance OLED TVs cost effectively. The announcement could see OLED TVs become more widespread and affordable than the pint-sized and prohibitively-priced offerings that we have been restricted to until now…
    Continue Reading DuPont breakthrough could mean bigger OLED TVs that don’t cost the earth

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