Category: News

  • UPDATE: Gulf of Mexico Oil Spill

    Oil spill has never been alarmingly destructive until now that gallons of it is polluting the Gulf of Mexico each day and worse spreading farther into the sea after previous efforts to contain it failed. What is more disturbing is it has entered a major ocean current and the repercussions may last for years. Investigation is on the way to measure how much of the oil has been released.

    “So first you have oily water that may be toxic to certain organisms and also the oxygen issue…this can interrupt the food chain at the lowest level, and will trickle up and certainly impact organisms higher. Whales, dolphins, and tuna all depend on lower depths to survive,” said Joye who discovered the plumes.

    A tube sipped more than 42,000 gallons each day while there is an estimated 210,000 more oozing from the damaged well every day and could be greater.

    It appears that the damage outweighs the contamination efforts and it is just the tip of the iceberg. Washington Post points out the greater scheme of what lies below the depths of the sea rich in aquatic life still to be discovered.

    “This is the unseen world imperiled by the uncapped oil well a mile below the surface of the gulf. The millions of gallons of crude, and the introduction of chemicals to disperse it, have thrown this underwater ecosystem into chaos, and scientists have no answer to the questions of how this unintended and uncontrolled experiment in marine biology and chemistry will ultimately play out.”

    President Obama earlier held BP accountable and there is no way this calamity will be solved without its intervention.

    No related posts.

  • Google Android Smart TV Patent Images Surface

    Mobileblab is reporting that something very interesting has been found regarding Google’s Smart TV project while searching the Google Patent data base.   What exactly could be so interesting?  Well, according to the database, the new Smart TV will be Android powered, and come with a special Android app store with its own TV applications.  This patent application was filled by Google and Sony for a “network media player with user-generated playback control.” That name sounds a little similar to their latest Android powered TV that should be announced soon.

    From what I read, the Android powered TV is planned to be able to bring all your media players into one and allow you to play your movies from cable, satellite, online, and more all in one place. Pretty damn cool if you ask me.

    They patents talk of a way users could add their own graphics on top of a recorded videos.

    “User-generated overlays can be used to create custom playback of content. For example, a user could overlay a frame image, add a ticket bar, place a logo in the corner of the screen, add a sound track, or perform any other overlay function.”

    This information is great, but I still have a lot of questions for Eric and the crew. What do you guys make of these images?

    Source:  Mobileblab

    Might We Suggest…

    • Sony X10 The GutReactionReview(TM) (Updated)

      By: Michael Schmidt

      Okay, I’ve had the X10 since 8:30pm last night now (but I had to sleep some) so here is my initial GutReactionReview™. This will be quick, and mostly point form. It’s poss…


  • Oklahoma Sets a Renewable Energy Standard!


    Oklahoma, the state that gave the world Senator James “global warming is a hoax”  Inhofe (R-Big Oil), has just passed a proposed 15% by 2015 Renewable Energy Standard, in the House. The Oklahoma Energy Security Act would have to pass its Senate too, to be the law. Or, as Senator Inhofe has described clean energy legislation; be “a job-killing agenda.”

    If it does pass the state Senate, this would make Oklahoma a trailblazer among most Southern states,  in passing legislation to add clean renewable power, albeit as a “goal.” The bill is unusual in that it encourages the development of natural gas, not normally considered a “renewable” source, but still one that has about half the global warming properties of coal.

    In the 35 states that now have a Renewable Energy Standard (RES), greenhouse gases have been lowered, compared with states that have no legislation, and green jobs created by adding more renewable power.

    Four of the RES states have actually achieved ambitious European-scale greenhouse gas reductions below 1990 levels – while growing their economies an average of 65%.

    (more…)

  • First Impressions: LG Rumor Touch (Sprint)

    LG Rumor Touch 1

    What’s Good: Good reception, decent battery life, roomy QWERTY keyboard.

    What’s Bad: Resistive screen can be wonky at times.

    Verdict: It’s a good mid-range device, but the screen isn’t always accurate.

    The LG Rumor Touch offers a 3.0-inch resistive touchscreen with 262,000 colors and 240 x 400 pixels.  Having worked with AMOLED displays in the past, it’s not the most amazing screen in the world, but will certainly get the job done.  The device ships in a small box, complete with the phone, battery, AC adapter, 1 GB microSD card, microSD card adapter, and instruction manuals.  Overall, it feels good in the hand, and isn’t too large (even when the keyboard is out).

    LG Rumor Touch 2

    Slide the device to the left to view the full QWERTY keyboard.  With five rows, the raised keys made it easy to type long text messages and the like.  Though navigating Sprint’s OneClick interface was easy as always, I had issues with the resistive touchscreen.  As with all resistive displays, I had to push the screen rather hard to get it to register my gesture, and it would often register in the wrong place.  As a result, it became quite frustrating to use, and I found myself relying on the QWERTY keyboard for most navigational tasks.  I’m still working with it for the full review, but I haven’t been pleased to date.

    The Rumor Touch offers a 2.0-megapixel camera, and while it works decently, it’s nothing to write home about.  Featuring four resolutions, you can customize several settings (white balance, color tone, and brightness, just to name a few) to your liking.  The phone also offers a camcorder, which can record in MMS-length or longer for storage on the microSD card.

    I’ve been working with the Rumor Touch in the Charlotte metro area, and call quality has been very good.  I’ve had no issues whatsoever, and when I took the device to a Sprint dead spot in the area, the device was able to hold the call despite being a bit choppy.  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 through conference calls with no issues.

    LG Rumor Touch 3

    The Rumor Touch offers 3G (EVDO Rev. 0) connectivity on Sprint, so the HTML web browser worked well throughout my testing. The mobile CNN webpage loaded in about 11 seconds, and the PhoneDog homepage loaded in 31 seconds. Other data-intensive tasks such as Sprint TV, Sprint Music, and Twitter worked incredibly well.  Sprint’s 3G connectivity has been flawless during the time that I’ve been working with the unit; I can’t think of a single time I’ve seen it revert to 1X.

    At the time of this writing, the LG Rumor Touch can be purchased at Sprint retail stores or online for $79.99 after a $50 mail-in rebate and new two-year customer agreement.  For more information, check out Noah’s video review, and stay tuned for my written review of the device!


  • Exclusive: The Details on AT&T’s Bridge to LTE

    AT&T has what it hopes to be an ace in the hole while it transitions to the Long Term Evolution fourth-generation wireless network technology — faster 3G over its entire footprint by the end of the year. How fast? Up to 14 Mbps through an upgrade to the HSPA+ technology standard, according to John Stankey, president and CEO of AT&T Operations, who spoke with me this afternoon.

    In the interview Stankey confirmed plans for the nation’s second-largest carrier to move from the current planned rollout of HSPA 7.2 (which offers maximum theoretical speeds of 7.2 Mbps down and real-world speeds of about 3.5 Mbps) to a version of HSPA+ that will offer real-world speeds closer to 7 Mbps down. He said that, for less than $10 million, AT&T can upgrade its 3G network to provide HSPA+ network access to 250 million people by the end of the year. AT&T still plans to begin its LTE roll out in 2011, but for less than $10 million it can provide a fallback network that’s more robust than the 3G network offered by its closest rival, Verizon. My hunch is that it can also afford to take more time completing its LTE rollout while still competing with its rivals, which are boosting speeds on their networks.

    Verizon’s 3G network is based on a CDMA standard (EVDO Rev. A) that currently offers speeds of up to 3.1 Mbps (I generally get about 1.7 Mbps down on my modem). As Verizon upgrades to LTE (it plans to cover 100 million people by the end of this year and its entire footprint by the end of 2013) it’s going to offer its users two networks with widely varying speeds. In places with LTE, Verizon says speeds will range from 5 to 12 Mbps down, while in places it has 3G, users will see speeds drop significantly. This is one argument in favor of Verizon looking at deploying EVDO Rev. B in some places, which offers speeds of up to 14.7 Mbps down. Verizon denies this plan.

    So, essentially AT&T wants to spend a fairly small chunk of change to make sure its customers have a network on which to fall back on without experiencing a steep drop in speeds. It also wants to buy itself some time to roll out an LTE network without looking like a laggard, speed-wise. Indeed, T-Mobile is deploying an HSPA+ network that’s delivering speeds of up to 8 Mbps in real-world tests.

    AT&T also wants to make sure its customers have good devices and coverage while the vendor community gets the LTE ecosystem up to speed. Stankey has long been vocal about his belief that LTE won’t be ready for the mainstream until 2014, and said today, “The vendors are experiencing some challenges on certain features and software, and first implementations in 2011 will be…pretty vanilla.”

    Among his worries are issues about roaming between 3G and 4G, and the handoffs between voice and data on 4G networks. He believes a wide variety of LTE handsets for the general consumer, as opposed to early adopters, won’t appear until 2014 — which is also the same time he expects voice to be delivered via VoIP on LTE. Until then, the handsets will be big, have bulky antennas and suffer from short battery life, he predicted. However, he also acknowledged that the HSPA+ handset ecosystem will take some time to develop and said the first products will likely be data cards — a forecast which effectively killed my hope of a fourth-generation iPhone that works with HSPA+ networks.

    Even if the handset experience for LTE is lame through 2014, the market for data cards or service for devices like the iPad is a growing opportunity that AT&T can’t ignore. And that’s the main benefit to an upgrade to HSPA+ for Ma Bell: It gets double the speeds on its network for a low price, and it won’t fall behind as it competes with what would otherwise be faster speeds on Verizon’s LTE network, Sprint and Clearwire’s WiMAX network and T-Mobile’s HSPA+ network next year and beyond.

    Related GigaOM Pro content (sub req’d):

    Everybody Hertz: The Looming Spectrum Crisis

    Thumbnail image courtesy of Flickr user mrbill



    Alcatel-Lucent NextGen Communications Spotlight — Learn More »

  • More and More Americans Know: HSUS Isn’t a Pet Shelter Group

    Unless you’ve been living under a rock, you’re probably aware of our 3-month-old, revitalized HumaneWatch campaign that’s exposing the deceptive “Humane Society” of the United States (HSUS) as the PETA-esque animal rights group that it is. Judging from the reaction of HSUS (and its head honcho “Humane Wayne” Pacelle) to our new efforts to keep the group honest, we’re having a serious, nationwide impact that threatens HSUS’s attempts to continue to masquerade as a pet-shelter umbrella group. Sunlight is the best disinfectant, after all.

    Yesterday we upped the ante with full-page ads in The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal to make sure our message reached millions of Americans. And today we’re targeting Hollywood celebrities who lend their star power to this faux humane society with a full-page ad in Tinseltown’s must-read magazine, Variety.

    You may not know it, but more than 100 celebrities, from Carrie Underwood to Harrison Ford, have aligned themselves in serious ways with HSUS. These stars (and their agents) may not know that HSUS is simply PETA in a suit-and-tie, so we’re happy to set the record straight:

    You can see all of our HumaneWatch ads here.

  • Good idea: try on virtual watches using augmented reality app


    There are a lot of augmented reality apps out there, some even worthwhile. Not all, however, are this practical. When you’re shopping for a new watch (which people do, I understand), it’s not always easy to tell how it’s going to look on your own wrist. How big is it, exactly? Does the face look cool upside-down? Will that silver color clash with the blue of my veins? Important questions all. Don’t worry, though. Tissot has your back with this new augmented reality app.

    Hmm. I wish I could tell you a little more about how well this app works, but I haven’t had a printer for like five years, and so cannot print out the little paper watch you need in order to interact with the app. Wait, maybe if I….

    Yes, it worked! Can’t really tell much about how it would look on my wrist (the G1 kept falling off when I tried to balance it) but that’s pretty funny. You too can do it, if you feel like downloading the 82MB (!) app. Eh, why not?

    [via The Awesomer]


  • Parade of Rosso: Ferraris take over Colorado Blvd for Concorso Ferrari in Pasadena

    Filed under: , ,

    2010 Ferrari Concorso in Pasadena – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Colorado Blvd in Pasadena, CA is most known for the annual Rose Parade on January 1st, with intricate floats and marching bands bringing in the new year. The famous street hosted a different kind of celebration this past weekend, though, with the Ferrari Club of American putting on a Ferrari Concorso on three blocks of the downtown portion of the city.

    More than 100 Ferraris were on display, both current and vintage models. All four of the modern Ferrari supercars were present – 288 GTO, F40, F50 and Enzo – as well as the latest models like the California. There was even a Schumacher-driven 2001 Formula 1 car. Most of our time, however, was spent in the area of judged cars filled with pre-1999 models. Noted collector Bruce Meyer was kind enough to bring out his famous1956 625 TR, the Petersen Museum showed off a rare Vignale 225 Sport Spyder, and there was a multitude of gorgeous 275 GTBs and 250 series cars including a 250 GT SWB and not one but two 250 GT TdFs. You can see all of our photos from the event in the high-res gallery below.

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

    Parade of Rosso: Ferraris take over Colorado Blvd for Concorso Ferrari in Pasadena originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 17 May 2010 18:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • PSA: Pre-Order Your Sprint HTC Evo 4G at Radio Shack, Best Buy Now!

    As of a now, Evo fans can go into a Best Buy and Radio Shack and preorder the Evo 4G for pickup when the Android superphone launches on June 4.  You will have to go into an actual store to place the order, but the good news is that you’ll get the $199.99 price instantly (provided that you sign up for a two-year contract).  This will mean you actually pay $199.99 the day you purchase it, no sending in anything through the mail for a rebate.

    Radio Shack is also offering a free $20 accessories gift card to those customers who put down a $50 deposit.   Sounds like a deal!

    So Android fans? Who is getting one?

    Source: CNET

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      N…


  • Rumor: BMW M3 GTS-R in the works to celebrate Nurburgring victory

    2011 BMW M3 GTS

    By now most of you BMW fans already know that the company’s motorsport division won the 2010 24-hour race at the Nurburgring-Nordschleife on Sunday with the M3 GT2. According to some sources (or rumors), BMW is now working on a limited edition version of the M3 GTS to celebrate the Nurburgring victory.

    Click here to get prices on the 2010 BMW M3.

    To be called the BMW M3 GTS-R, the model is rumored to feature a matte-black exterior, a front spoiler, wider rear fenders and light alloy wheels. BMW will also use plenty of carbon fiber in addition to the carbon fiber roof on the regular BMW M3 GTS. You can expect to see more carbon fiber on the deck-lid, hood and rear spoiler.

    Power is likely to come from the same 450-hp 4.4L V8 under the BMW M3 GTS. The GTS-R could also be equipped with a KERS regenerative braking system from the 2011 M5.

    Refresher: Weighing in at 3,285 pounds (the standard BMW M3 coupe weighs 3,704 pounds), the 2011 BMW M3 GTS is powered by a 4.4L V8 making 450-hp. Power is transmitted to the wheels through a 7-speed M DKG Drivelogic gearbox. The BMW M3 GTS accelerates from 0 to 62 mph in 4.4 seconds with a top speed of 190 mph.

    2011 BMW M3 GTS:

    2011 BMW M3 GTS 2011 BMW M3 GTS 2011 BMW M3 GTS 2011 BMW M3 GTS

    – By: Kap Shah

    Source: M3Post (via WCF)


  • Android devices on Eclair inch up as Cupcake, Donut wither ever so slightly

    Android version statistics

    The latest numbers are in showing how many devices are using a given version of Android, and we’re slowly but surely getting more and more on Android 2.1. Devices on the latest version of Android ticked up to 37.2 percent, from 23.4 percent for the two weeks ending May 3. Android 1.5 (Cupcake) and 1.6 (Donut) were down to 34.1 percent and 28 percent, respectively. That’s about a 3-percentage-point drop for Cupcake and 1-percentage-point for Donut.

    Anybody want to guess how long it takes before we start complaining about how many devices are languishing on Android 2.1, with Froyo expected to be announced this week? (And if you really want to get into the nitty gritty, there are now stats for screen sizes and densities.) [Android Developer Blog]

  • Obama and Dem senators call for spill inquiries; head of MMS retires

    by Agence France-Presse

    WASHINGTON—President Barack Obama will establish an
    independent presidential commission to probe the huge oil spill from a wrecked
    BP-leased rig in the Gulf of Mexico, an official said Monday.

    The commission,
    similar to other presidential-ordered probes into civilian disasters, will be
    established by executive order, the official said on condition of anonymity.

    Reports said
    that the commission will be officially unveiled in the next few days, and will
    supplement existing government inquiries into the disaster sparked by an
    explosion aboard a drilling rig last month.

    Obama has
    gradually ratcheted up criticism of BP over the spill of millions of gallons of
    oil into the Gulf in an unfolding ecological disaster, betraying more and more
    frustration over the company’s failure to stop the leak. A visibly angered
    president on Friday hit out at oil companies for trying to avoid blame over a massive slick, and vowed an all-out effort to stop the leak
    pouring into the Gulf of Mexico.

    “I will not
    tolerate more finger-pointing or irresponsibility. The people of the Gulf Coast
    need our help,” Obama said, as he also unveiled a review of the
    environmental safeguards to be put in place for oil and gas exploration.

    He slammed the
    three oil companies linked to the Deepwater Horizon rig—BP, Transocean, and
    Halliburton—for seeking to pass the blame, denouncing what he called a
    “ridiculous spectacle” by their top officials during congressional
    hearings.

    Senators join in

    Eight senators urged Attorney General Eric Holder on
    Monday to investigate possible civil and criminal misdeeds by British energy
    giant BP in connection to a disastrous Gulf of Mexico oil spill.

    “We are
    writing to ask that you open an inquiry into whether British Petroleum made
    false and misleading statements to the federal government regarding its ability
    to respond to oil spills in the Gulf of Mexico,” the lawmakers, all
    Democrats, wrote to Holder [PDF].

    The group, led
    by Senate Environment and Public Works Committee Chair Barbara Boxer, urged
    Holder to investigate whether BP misled U.S. regulators on its ability to
    respond to catastrophic oil spills.

    They cited a
    Feb. 23, 2009 document BP submitted to the federal Minerals Management
    Service expressing confidence in its ability to contain an oil spill and
    mitigate any impact on the environment. “In the event of an unanticipated
    blowout resulting in an oil spill, it is unlikely to have an impact based on
    the industry wide standards for using proven equipment and technology for such
    responses,” that document said.

    “In the
    wake of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, it does not in any way appear that
    there was ‘proven equipment and technology’ to respond to the spill, which
    could have tragic consequences for local economies and the natural resources of
    the Gulf of Mexico,” the lawmakers wrote.

    They also cited
    a May 10 document in which BP said all of its potential strategies for
    containing the disaster “involve significant uncertainties because they
    have not been tested in these conditions before.”

    The senators
    pressed Holder to evaluate BP’s actions “with respect to civil and
    criminal laws related to false statements to the federal government” as
    well as “any federal law or regulation that may have been violated in
    connection with issues surrounding the spill.”

    Head of MMS to retire

    Chris Oynes, a top official overseeing offshore energy
    for the Minerals Management Service—an agency blamed for lax inspection in the
    Gulf of Mexico oil spill—announced his retirement Monday, his agency said.

    “After 35
    years of service he will be retiring from the agency,” an official at the
    Department of the Interior, which includes MMS, told AFP on condition of
    anonymity.

    Oynes was named
    in 2007 as the associate director of the Offshore Energy and Minerals
    Management Program in the MMS, with responsibilities including administering
    the Outer Continental Shelf oil and gas program.

    His retirement
    comes amid scathing criticism of the agency for being too lax on enforcement of
    safety standards in offshore drilling. Last week, President Barack Obama himself
    slammed it as being too “cozy” with the companies it regulates.

    After the Gulf
    of Mexico disaster at a BP-leased offshore oil rig that ruptured an undersea
    well which continues to spew crude into the water, the Obama administration
    announced a breakup of the agency’s leasing and regulatory functions into two
    separate entities.

    Obama ordered
    “top to bottom” reform of MMS after allegations it had allowed BP and
    other oil companies to drill in the Gulf without first obtaining required
    permits. “For too long, for a decade or more, there’s been a cozy
    relationship between the oil companies and the federal agency that permits them
    to drill,” he said.

    The Washington
    Post said the retirement would come May 31 and that Oynes, who oversaw oil and
    gas leasing in the Gulf of Mexico for 12 years before being promoted to MMS
    associate director, had come under fire for being too close to the industry
    officials he regulated.

    MMS separately
    drew criticism from senators Monday by failing to send an official to a hearing
    on the response to the Deepwater Horizon oil spill.

    “There’s
    one set of witnesses that are not here, and I must say that’s from MMS,”
    said Sen. Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.), who heads the committee on homeland
    security. “I regret that the MMS leadership has chosen not to appear
    before our committee today because, really, they need to be asked the same
    questions I’m going to ask Homeland Security, Coast Guard, and BP, because MMS,
    as I’ve mentioned, must approve or reject the oil-spill response plans for
    wells, which is where this accident occurred before those wells can be
    drilled.”

    Last week, one
    MMS official told a hearing in New Orleans that the oil and gas industry
    largely policed its own drilling operations in the Gulf of Mexico with little
    government supervision.

    An MMS official
    said the regulatory agency did not enforce compliance with its “safety
    alerts” on underwater blowout preventers and allowed oil companies to
    inspect their own drilling equipment.

    “I am not
    aware of who does the self-certification,” Michael Saucier, the Minerals
    Management Service regional supervisor, said when asked about the inspections.

    Interior
    Secretary Ken Salazar announced plans to break up the functions of the MMS to
    eliminate a conflict of interest in its role as oil industry regulator and a
    lessor of lucrative federal oil rights.

    Related Links:

    Obama to establish presidential commission to investigate Gulf oil spill

    Limbaugh: ‘When do we ask the Sierra Club to pick up the tab for this leak?’

    The real trouble from the oil spill is brewing deep under the sea






  • 2011 Audi Q7 3.0T Supercharged – First Drive Review

    Audi gives the Q7 a supercharged six in two different strengths, and few will miss the engines it replaces.

    As the auto industry starts the great engine shrink-down in preparation for new fuel-economy standards, Audi has been perhaps the strategy’s most visible proponent. To that end, the 2011 Q7 sport utilities headed to the U.S. will drop their big iron, the 3.6-liter V-6 and 4.2-liter V-8, in favor of two versions of the company’s relatively new 3.0-liter supercharged V-6 making 272 or 333 hp. Behind the six sits the new A8’s eight-speed automatic with a broad ratio spread for better mileage. On a recent trip to Munich, we pounded the autobahn in the new Q7 and found nothing lacking.

    Keep Reading: 2011 Audi Q7 3.0T Supercharged – First Drive Review

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  • Conair Satiny Smooth Lady Pro Cordless Wet/Dry Razor

    Twin independent floating cutters and foils work on wet or dry skin for silky smooth results. Two full-size trimmers provide the ultimate in close shaves. The unit is rechargeable, with each charge allowing 25 minutes of run time.

    View Conair Satiny Smooth Lady Pro Cordless Wet/Dry Razor Details

  • Leisure Eyes Cover with Nature Sounds Sets the Bar a Little Higher [Brando]

    This gadget has it all: it’s a light-blocking face mask, plays nature sounds, plugs into any audio player and comes in a variety of colors. And for only $16, you can afford one for every room in your house. [Brando] More »







  • What Was Hurricane Katrina’s Impact on the Environment?

    The worst hurricane to ever hit the United States is still being felt today.

    It’s been almost 5 years since the deadliest hurricane and most expensive natural disaster in US history made landfall, and scientists are still discovering its affects. Scientists studying the hurricanes impact have shown the ecological impact and human health risks as a result of the exposed chemical containments.

    According to the study, published in a special edition of Environmental Toxicology and Chemistry, Hurricane Katrina caused significant ecological damage by altering coastal chemistry and habitat. (more…)

  • GM reports first quarterly profit in almost three years

    GM reports first quarterly profit in almost three years
    General Motors Co. acquired its first quarterly profit in almost three years, based on spending cuts as part of a reorganization to exit bankruptcy and strong sales of redesigned models, which the company approached a stock offering that would allow him to pay at least part of the federal aid it received.

    The automaker said it achieved profits from sales of new models and because its bankruptcy last year allowed him to cut debt and other expenses. Furthermore, the company generated more profit for its growth in Asia and South America.

    GM reported a net profit of $ 865 million, $ 1.66 per share in the first quarter. That compares to a loss of 6,000 million, $ 9.78 per share, a year earlier. The first-quarter revenue rose 40% to 31 500 million.

    The new signature models like the Chevrolet Equinox and the Buick LaCrosse, contributed to GM operations in North America had revenues of 1,200 million, compared with losses of 3.400 billion in the same quarter last year.

    The North American unit had been a constant burden for GM’s revenue before its application for federal bankruptcy protection.

    GM’s chief financial officer, Chris Liddell, said that might be difficult to sustain the same level of earnings for the rest of the year because the production of the first quarter is usually higher, with producers getting ready for sales of spring.

    The chief executive Ed Whitacre has forecast that profits will end the year at a time when car sales in the United States continues a slow recovery. That could lead to a sale of shares in GM and full payment of the 50,000 million dollars in federal aid that prevented GM went bankrupt last year. Currently, the U.S. government owns 61% of the company.

    GM has returned a total of 6700 million dollars of federal aid. Barack Obama’s government expects to recover the remaining $ 43 000 million by selling its shares in the company.

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  • Tune In to Tonight’s Podcast Live and Win 1 Year of TeleNav GPS!

    Tonight’s episode of the podcast marks the official 1 year anniversary of our weekly Monday night show.  It’s hard to believe it but we’ve been doing this for 52 weeks now!  Our podcast goes live every Monday at 10PM EST/7PM PST over at BlogTalkRadio.  We open up a chat room about fifteen minutes before we go live for all you enthusiasts and developers who wanna talk Android.

    To mark tonight’s special occasion, we’ll be giving away two copies of TeleNav GPS for Android handsets.   All you have to do is tune and listen live for the instructions! We promise we’ll make it easy on ya.

    Oh, you might wanna follow us on twitter.  We’re just saying.

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      We’re pleased to announce another giveaway of Slacker Radio Plus accounts!  If you’re not familiar with the streaming music service and Android application, it allows for personalized radio stations b…


  • Breaking: Obama to establish “presidential commission to investigate the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico”

    On May 4, Daniel J. Weiss, CAP’s Director of Climate Strategy wrote, “We need an independent commission to investigate the BP disaster.  Now Weiss reports that the White House is doing just that.  As hundreds of thousands of gallons of oil continue to gush from the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico four weeks after the tragic BP disaster, AP reports that

    President Barack Obama will establish the commission by executive order. It will be similar to panels created to investigate the space shuttle Challenger disaster and the nuclear accident at Three Mile Island, according to the official, who spoke on condition of anonymity ahead of a public announcement.

    The New York Times reports

    The president will create the panel by executive order “in coming days,” a White House official said. “The commission will take into account the investigations underway concerning the causes of the spill and explore a range of issues including: industry practices; rig safety; Federal, state, and local regulatory regimes; federal governmental oversight, including the structure and functions of M.M.S.; and environmental review and other protections,” the official said, requesting anonymity to discuss the matter in advance of the presidential announcement.

    An hour ago White House sources indicated to CAP that an official announcement about this executive order could occur on Tuesday or Wednesday.

    In addition to the horrible loss of eleven lives on the now sunken Deepwater Horizon oil rig, the BP oil disaster could be the most devastating environmental disaster to ever befall the United States.  To understand what caused this oil nightmare, in early May CAP proposed that President Obama appoint appoint “an independent commission to completely examine the causes of the BP disaster and offer guidance for how we can make sure it never happens again.

    This would enable investigators to conduct an independent assessment of the causes of the disaster, and determine the responsibilities born by BP, Transocean, and Halliburton. An independent inquiry would also be able to determine whether the Minerals Management Service of the Department of Interior fulfilled its oversight duties.

    Representatives Lois Capps (D-CA) and Ed Markey (D-MA), introduced the “BP Deepwater Horizon Disaster Inquiry Commission Act of 2010,” H.R. 5241.  Senators Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), Barbara Boxer (D-CA), and Robert Menendez (D-NJ) have a companion proposal.  These measures would create a bipartisan independent commission to investigate the BP oil disaster.

    Rather than wait for legislation, Presidents Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan used executive orders to create independent commissions to investigate the near nuclear meltdown at Three Mile Island nuclear plant and the Challenger Space Shuttle accident.  The orders were signed two and one week after these events, respectively, and the panels completed their work six months and three months after the events.

    These were discrete incidents, while the BP oil disaster is an ongoing event so it may take longer to investigate and draw conclusions about the causes and damages.  By using an executive order, President Obama can get this inquiry started much more quickly than by waiting for Congress to pass legislation.  This will enable investigators to question witnesses while their memories are still fresh, and promptly order BP, Transocean, and Halliburton to preserve all relevant communications and documents.