Category: News

  • Bloomberg: Sony to Announce Android-Based Dragonpoint TV at Google I/O

    Bloomberg is reporting today that Sony is expected to unveil their new televisions based off a new version  of Android called Dragonpoint.  We’re going to go ahead and say this name will be a play on words “Drag N’ Point”.  The name alone already has us conjuring up ideas of pointing and dragging icons, apps, and typing with a keyboard that uses dragging.  Swype anyone?

    Google, Intel, and Sony have been working together for quite some time to bring the world a “Google TV”.  They’ve also been partnering up with Logitech to develop a keyboard that doubles as a remote control.  The television is built using Intel’s Atom processor which is a scaled down version of their PC chips.  This “Smart TV” experience will tie Internet access and other web-based services together and offer more advanced television guides.

    Might We Suggest…

    • Google TV Coming to a Set Top Near You!
      Google is reportedly teaming up with Sony and Intel to create a set top box based on the Android OS to bring home viewers rich web content via Android like apps right on their TV screen….


  • HTC DROID INCREDIBLE For $99?

    This is probably the best deal around the web right now for any piece of technology. You can now head over to Amazon and purchase a Droid Incredible for $99 with activation and a new 2 year contract. And with many Verizon stores being sold out, this may be the quickest way for you to get your hands on this hot Android handset.

    Orders usually ship within 9 – 10 business days. Verizon is expected to receive more Incredible’s on May 4th. Lately, HTC has had inventory problems so there’s a really good chance this date might get pushed back. But, I would go for the best deal and you can’t beat a price tag $99 anywhere. So head over to Amazon and place your order today.

  • Solar-powered concert, tree planting set at CBC

    Published April 28, 2010
    By the Tri-City Herald staff

    A solar-powered concert and tree planting are Thursday at Columbia Basin College in Pasco in honor of Earth Day and Arbor Day.

    The solar-powered concert featuring Jonathan Kingham is from 11 a.m. to noon in the HUB, 2600 N. 20th Ave., Pasco. The tree planting follows at 1 p.m. east of the “W” building along 20th Avenue.

    Franklin PUD is providing the solar power for the concert. People at the tree planting will be given seedlings.

    CBC has been named a Tree Campus USA school by the Arbor Day Foundation, the only community college in the state with that designation.

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

  • Soylent Twitter talk

    My talk from Social Business Edge is embedded below (Flash required).

    About a minute of set-up, but then I get going. No slides.

    Some nice phrases pop up here: “continuous partial attention means continuous partial empathy” is probably my favorite.

  • Tesla Forging Ahead with Ambitious Plans; Model S in 2012, 4WD and Crossover Coming

    According to an AutoWeek article, Tesla’s Elon Musk says that the company will be unveiling an ambitious line-up of EVs over the next several years.

    With the $50,000, 4-door Model S sedan already in the works for 2012, Musk says they have even more exciting plans for 2013 and 2014, including introducing 4WD to all of their vehicles and bringing an all-electric crossover to market.

    (more…)

  • C-PAP Sleep Apnea Pillow

    C-PAP Sleep Apnea Pillow specially designed to help keep a CPAP or BI-PAP MASK in place. Helps prevent pressure points that can cause mask to dislodge and release. Unique design accommodates sleeping on either side or your stomach. Buy pillow and case together and save. Polyester fill; machine-washable polyester cotton case. Made in USA. 23″Lx18″W.

    View C-PAP Sleep Apnea Pillow Details

  • Khadr, in ‘Extreme Pain,’ Voluntarily Appears in Court

    GUANTANAMO BAY — Crisis averted. With his right hand shielding his eyes and dabbing at his eyes with a tissue, Omar Khadr returned to court for his pre-trial hearing. Joe DellaVedova, a spokesman for the military commissions, confirmed there was no forced cell extraction. Khadr appeared voluntarily.

    That doesn’t mean he’s doing well. Khadr’s lawyer, Barry Coburn, told Col. Patrick Parrish, the judge in the case, that Khadr “has been and is now in a lot of physical pain” as the result of “foreign bodies” that remain in his eyes as the result of 2002-era shrapnel wounds he sustained during his capture in Afghanistan. The foreign bodies, combined with “severe conjunctivitis” in his non-functional left eye and some in his right, as well as elevated blood pressure, left him in “extreme pain,” Coburn said. Parrish agreed to end the hearing today at 4 p.m. accordingly.

    Coburn said that the blacked-out goggles that detention-facility officials wanted Khadr to wear to transport him from his cell to court were “exacerbating” the pain. Commander Brad Fagan, a spokesman for the detention command, contradicted an earlier claim by Coburn, saying that Khadr’s treatment this morning followed “longstanding security transport procedures.”

  • The nature of reality

    A panel discussion with photographer/artist/essayist Allan Sekula quickly turned into a discourse on the nature of reality, a direction that fazed neither those presenting the conversation nor those listening in Emerson Hall.

    Indeed, Sekula, who explores questions of capitalism, globalization, and social reality in a variety of media, characterized his approach as “realism in a time of lies” during a conversation April 28 with Homi Bhabha, the Anne F. Rothenberg Professor of the Humanities and director of the Humanities Center, and Benjamin Buchloh, the Andrew W. Mellon Professor of Modern Art.

    As part of “The Church of What’s Happening Now” event sponsored by the Humanities Center and the Harvard Art Museum, Sekula showed clips from a film-in-process and discussed his seminal works such as “Fish Story,” an exhibit and book exploring maritime issues, “Waiting for Tear Gas,” about the Seattle protests against the World Trade Organization, and “This Ain’t China,” a riff on factory work.

    Sekula’s work “resists nostalgia and heroism in an attempt to portray the quotidian horror of what it takes simply to survive,” Bhabha said.

    In his remarks, Sekula noted with horrified glee the President George W. Bush-era attacks on the so-called “reality-based community.” He asked, “What does it mean that we live in a culture that thinks it can bomb peasants into modernity?”

    Reality is even an issue within art world. “One of the problems of the latest in modernism is the suppression of realism,” Sekula said. “And yet there is another reading of modernism which allows us to see realism as a kind of marginalized and potentially subversive strand within modernism.”

    Now based at the California Institute of the Arts, Sekula, the recipient of a Guggenheim fellowship, began his artistic career within the conceptual art movement, which is now much derided.

    “As much as you attack, contest, criticize, and denigrate that legacy, I think it is still interesting for us to think about that exchange moment from which you emerged in the late 1970s,” Buchloh said. Sekula, he noted, was among those who “redefined the history of photography in terms of our thinking on photographic representation.”

    Buchloh particularly cited the artistic performance by Sekula in which he threw stolen raw steaks onto a busy California freeway. Also, Bhabha told Sekula that raw meat or rawness “seems to be a real motif of your work.”

    Sekula seemed to regard the meat incident as an act of juvenile exuberance, an effort to create a “profane act.” But, he added, he recently saw the movie “The Wrestler,” and was struck with how the broken-down fighter played by Mickey Rourke said, “I’m just a used-up hunk of meat. The film is really about that.”

    Seeing in the audience Robin Kelsey, the Shirley Carter Burden Professor of Photography and director of graduate studies in the History of Art and Architecture Department, Bhabha invited him onto the stage. Kelsey asked Sekula why he moved away from still photography into filmmaking.

    Sekula said that he had to switch to film to capture what he was witnessing. He found that he could not, for example, capture the frenetic nature of a particular Japanese fish market with still photos. “I borrowed a camera and read the manual at 1 in the morning, and I started filming at 3 in the morning.”

    An audience member, Coco Segaller, a student at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, asked Sekula to distinguish reality from among his work’s social, artistic, and political narratives.

    Sekula, only half joking, responded, “You want an objective definition of reality?”

    Segaller tried again: “What is the reality in the realm of conflicting narratives?”

    “One way to answer is to say what the lies are,” Sekula said. “You can only make your own story. You can only make your own external truth.”

    But, he added, turning serious, “The biggest lie is the lie of marketization — that everything can be marketized.”

    Bhabha singled out Sekula’s 2006 movie “A Short Film for Laos,” in which “very simple acts of survival, even transitional moments, are always so central.” Sekula’s work can be interpreted as metaphor on many levels, “yet somehow when you talk, people feel that it is much more object-driven or content-driven,” Bhabha said.

    “Well, you should never trust what an artist says,” Sekula replied, to great laughter.

  • Shakira Speaks Out Against Arizona Immigration Law

    Shakira has cleared her calendar and is heading to Phoenix on Thursday, where she plans to meet with the Mayor and Chief of Police to discuss ways to campaign against the controversial immigration law passed in Arizona last week.

    The law — signed Friday by Republican Gov. Jan Brewer — makes it a state crime to be in the US illegally and directs police to question people about their immigration status if there is reason to suspect they’re illegal immigrants. The statue is believed to be the nation’s toughest on immigration, with even President Obama questioning its legality amid fears that the system could lead to racial profiling.


  • Solar Photovoltaic growth accelerates

    Dupont sees photovoltaic sales improve ahead of expectations and bumps up its near term revenue objective.  …

    … "DuPont now expects its sales into photovoltaics to exceed $1 billion in 2011, which is a year ahead of plan, and has set a new goal to exceed $2 billion in sales by 2014.

    In 2009, DuPont sales to the photovoltaic market exceeded $550 million – an increase of over 25 percent from the previous year – and outperformed the broader industry, which experienced significantly lower growth, estimated to be 10 percent or less. DuPont’s growth is supported by new innovations that improve module efficiency and lifetime, and enable new photovoltaic technologies and applications, which ultimately accelerate the industry’s drive to bring costs down in line with other forms of energy.
    DuPont materials and technology solutions are designed to help increase the efficiency and lifetime of crystalline silicon and thin film photovoltaic solar modules, while reducing total systems cost and enabling the photovoltaic industry to reach grid parity faster. " …

    Via Dupont: Photovoltaic Sales Growth

  • Coast guard to burn oil leaked out of blown-out well

    Deepwater-Horizon-oil-rig-006.jpg
    Almost 42,000 gallons of oil are being leaked into the ocean every day since the Deepwater Horizon exploded and sank last week. Though the direction of wind, and water currents are favourable, it is estimated the oil will reach areas with high marine life habitat by Friday. The options available apart from burning the oil are either not feasible or will take too long to implement. As a result, the Coast Guard have decided to burn the oil slick which is about 20 miles east of the mouth of Mississippi river, an area having hundreds of species of wildlife.

    Apart from environmental concerns, this disaster has caused huge economic losses as well. Though burning the oil will save marine life, it will cause a lot of pollution.
    [aolnews]

  • Confirmed: O2 is getting updated to the Pre Plus

     

    It seems like O2 loves dropping the sweet information to us in tweets doesn’t it?  Well, they’ve done it again. @Mechanical_Mind gave us a heads up that UK O2 users will see the Pre Plus (Pre+ to its friends) that Verizon users have known and loved since January.   No other details are being given by O2 beyond "It’s coming", so don’t look around for dates and pricing just yet.  The interesting thing about this is that O2 was one of the first carriers to carry the Palm Pre device in Europe and they aren’t waiting for the successor; They are going to do up UK like they did in Germany.  It’s doubtful they will still carry the original for much longer with the latest and greatest around; Now we wonder if Sprint is going to jump on the same thing here in the US or hold out for the mythical creature known as the C40.

    [via @Mechanical_Mind, source @O2]

  • Layar launches world’s first Augmented Reality content store

    Layar is the world’s leading Augmented Reality Platform on mobile. This browser is on a reported 1.6 million Android and iPhone devices. They are now integrating the ability to purchase things from various places that you may find while using the app. Paypal is first payment provider with support for United States, United Kingdom, Canada and Australia. More countries will be supported in the near future. This could prove to be very lucrative for Layar and their publishers.

    The first publishers to seize the opportunity include among others:

    * Berlitz City Guides: Berlitz helps people experience the city’s highlights: the best attractions, coziest restaurants, most comfortable hotels, coolest places to shop and most fashionable nightlife.
    * Mouse Reality for Disney World and Disneyland: Helps find and navigate all attractions, shows, shops, dinning, transportation, and more in Disneyland and Disney World.
    * EyeTour: Explore Puerto Rico’s natural beauty and rich cultural heritage through exclusive video content of historical sites, museums, restaurants, parks and more.
    * UK sold prices: ‘Sold House Price Data 2010′ – Check the latest UK residential Sold Price information as recorded by the Land Registry while on the move.

    If you would like to sell things through Layar’s app, head over to their site and sign up. And if you are a user you can now use the Layar browser to find things that interest you and purchase it right from your handset.

    [via layar]

  • A Plea for Credit Score Transparency

    Do you know what your credit score is? Sorry to trick you with a loaded question like that. Different credit bureaus come up with different algorithms leading to different numbers. The three major credit bureaus, Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion, could all give you different numbers. And to get those numbers you typically have to pay them.

    If you are a bit frugal with your cash, there are cheaper options. For instance, thanks to some great legislation you can go to AnnualCreditReport.com and request to view your credit report from each of the three major credit unions. It’s important to note that this is just a credit report – not a credit score. You get the information that they are pouring into Fair Isaac Company’s Black Box (FICBB), but not the number the box spits out. Alternatively, you can get a free score of TransUnion’s data from Credit Karma. The catch there is that Credit Karma’s black box is not the same as FICBB. I’ve found it to be fairly accurate for me, but there is no guarantee that is similar for everyone.

    I suppose you are thinking, “Yeah, great… so what?” I’m uncomfortable not knowing exactly how that FICBB works. While there are numerous hints and tips on how to fix your credit the process for calculating the score isn’t as transparent as it could be. We don’t really know what’s going on in the FICBB.

    Now you may be thinking, “What do we gain from a transparent credit scoring system? I’ve done fairly well with the current system.” Our credit scores impact our finances greatly. Our finances impact our quality of life. I think we have the opportunity to make our credit scoring system more accurate. That will only help people with money to lend figure out who is a good credit risk. We’ll only find out if we open up the FICBB or develop another system that consumers can examine. Then, like open source software, we can look for holes in the credit scoring system and fix them. The overall product will be stronger because of it.

    Maybe someday a company (perhaps Credit Karma) will this vision to reality. Perhaps a company already has and it’s not on my radar. What do you think? Leave me a comment

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  • QUOTE: He had the reputation for judging a photographer

    He had the reputation for judging a photographer by looking at their contact sheets upside down. He would always say you should look at a picture upside down because you can see the construction. You can see the way the photograph is being composed much better than the right way up.

    Martine Franck discussing her husband and fellow photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson

  • Will Goldman Settle SEC Case?

    Goldman may try to settle the SEC case it faces rather than endure an embarrassing court battle, a new report from the New York Post indicates. Earlier this week past and present Goldman executives endured an 11-hour witch trial-like hearing before a Senate committee where there was broad bi-partisan anger at the bank’s actions leading up to the financial crisis. Goldman may feel that it’s worth paying up instead of going through that sort of thing for weeks at trial. Still, given the bank’s unwavering claim of innocence, a settlement would be a little surprising.

    The New York Post reports:

    “It’s almost a certainty that there will be a settlement,” said a source.

    As another person put it, the SEC has an “unlimited supply of ammunition” in the form of e-mails and records that it could release, and Goldman officials would like to avoid having those documents fired back at them the way they were on Tuesday.

    The problem with settling, of course, is that it means a defendant is implicitly admitting guilt. If there was anything clear through Goldman’s marathon testimony on Tuesday, it was the bank’s unflinching belief in its innocence. The only banker named in the suit, Fabrice Tourre, “categorically” denied that he did anything wrong. All the others testifying, including Goldman CEO Lloyd Blankfein, swore innocence as well. If they were planning on settling anyway, you might have expected at least a slightly more apologetic tone. Instead, they were brazen throughout the questioning.

    Considering the defense it intends to take, they also might have a pretty good chance at winning. Whether they misled collateral manager ACA comes down to a dispute of fact, which should be easily shown in Goldman’s favor if its executives are telling the truth.

    The harder question is whether they should have disclosed hedge fund manager John Paulson’s involvement in the portfolio selection to the investor IKB. Goldman has a pretty strong argument that it was immaterial for two reasons. First, ACA ultimately had the authority to decide which bonds to pick, and in fact threw out many of those Paulson suggested. So the disclosure was accurate and complete. Second, pool selection influences aren’t relevant to an investor’s analysis. If the investor is given all available statistical information to analyze the collateral, then it should be indifferent to how the portfolio happened to be chosen.

    Goldman must be asking itself: will there be more reputational harm done to settling a suit and implicitly admitting guilt, or by enduring a grueling trial but possibly winning. Neither is a particularly good alternative, but this question should be considered in the context of how it might affect the firm’s client relationships.

    Goldman’s customers are almost exclusively other financial firms or giant corporations. Most people at such companies understand the nature of derivatives and a broker-dealer’s fiduciary duty. As a result, it’s likely they most of its clients considered this week’s hearing a performance for Senators to score political points, rather than a just censure of Goldman. This week’s hearing surely brought more applause from average Americans outside big business and high finance — those who are not clients of Goldman Sachs. So its actual past and future customers might find admission of fraud more troubling than a messy trial.

    However, those average Americans might be the ones sitting on the jury, and that’s a problem for Goldman. The argument for taking the case to court, hinges on the likelihood that Goldman can win. Since this case is intended for a jury, that might be tough. The subject matter is complicated, and few people outside of Wall Street have a positive opinion of Goldman. So there’s also a possibility that even though Goldman believes in its innocence, it’s smart enough to question the likelihood that a jury will accept its version of the truth.

    (h/t: Felix Salmon)

    (Nav Image Credit: Chris Hondros/Getty Images)





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  • SkyFire 2.0 Brings Another Way to Get Flash on Android [Video]

    When SkyFire (the maker of the mobile browser of the same name) picked up Kolbysoft — who developed the mobile browser called Steel, everyone was wondering what the purchase would bring. A few short months later, and we get to see the fruit of their labor. SkyFire 2.0 has officially launched on Android, and with it, a couple of features that Android-users should welcome with open arms.

    Features wise, and as the title suggests, SkyFire 2.0 brings Flash Player to your Android device. As it stands right now, until Froyo hits the market, it seems that HTC’s Sense UI is the best way to access Flash content. That is, until now. SkyFire 2.0 offers Flash in a very different way: by utilizing the other excellent feature known as SkyBar. When you access a page with a Flash video on it, you simply hit the Menu key, and it will bring up the SkyBar. This bar will give you access to “videos,” which is a quick way to see the Flash videos that would normally display on the page.

    This means that pages should load a bit faster, as they won’t have to render the video in the page, while it loads. Just hit the SkyBar, and access the video whenever you want. The application is available right now in the Android Market, so if you’re interested, go take a look. If you’re still skeptical, check out the video below and see what all the talk is about. Full press release below.

    Click here to view the embedded video.

    Skyfire Launches the First Flash Video Enabled Mobile Browser for Android

    The first ‘mobile browser for the Social Media generation’ eliminates broken links from your Facebook stream, tracks Twitter buzz, and makes sharing easy

    Mountain View, CA – April 29, 2010– Skyfire, maker of the award-winning web-browser for mobile devices, today launches Skyfire 2.0 for Android, making the mobile internet experience faster, Flash-enabled and fun, with media recommendations and social features. Skyfire is one of the fastest growing mobile browsers in the world, ranking in the top 10 all-time apps in the Nokia Ovi Store and Windows Marketplace.
    Skyfire 2.0 for Android is built upon many of the popular features of Skyfire’s 1.0 browser, and uses cloud computing to give a “booster engine” to mobile phones so they can handle rich media like video. And now, Skyfire 2.0 for Android takes mobile browsing to a new level with the addition of the SkyBarTM, a new toolbar that lets users enjoy millions of videos previously unviewable on mobile, and also discover the latest buzz on any topic they browse.

    What is the SkyBarTM?

    The SkyBar brings the best of the internet to a mobile user’s fingertips, without any additional searching. By activating the SkyBar with a single touch, users are given access to Flash videos on a web page that otherwise would not play, related content recommendations, and easier sharing with their social networks.

    · Video –The “Video” icon enables users to play millions of Flash videos around the web that otherwise do not play on mobile. This unlocks content trapped behind those error messages with question marks and blue Legos. Behind the scenes, videos are translated into a format easier for the phone to play, like html5 video.

    · Related Content – The “Explore” icon brings the most relevant content on the internet to a user’s fingertips based on what they are viewing at the time. The Explore button pulls video, buzz, news, images and other sites from the web based on what is on the current page.

    · Sharing – The “Share” icon lets users share any article or video easily to their friends on Facebook, Twitter, or by email and SMS messaging, adding a comment, and all with a single click.

    The first mobile browser for the social media generation:

    “Skyfire 2.0 was built for the way people use social media and the web today. People are now starting their web experience by scanning their Facebook and Twitter news feeds,” explains Jeff Glueck, CEO of Skyfire. “Our new browser allows you to open those links and view the videos that your friends have shared. To make that work, people need a browser that can handle the full internet.”

    The Power of Cloud Computing:

    Skyfire on Android uses cloud-computing technology to enable this web video; the benefits for consumers include faster and smoother video playback, and extended battery life by offloading more of the work to cloud servers. At the same time, since Skyfire 2.0 is built on a webkit core, users get all the functionality they know on the default Android browser, such as pinch to zoom, copy and paste, find text on the page, open up to eight browser tabs, and more.

    Skyfire is one of the fastest growing downloadable browsers with usage increasing 500% year over year, and currently streaming over 25 million minutes of Flash video every month, more than any other mobile browser worldwide.

    Skyfire 2.0 for Android is available for download worldwide free at bit.ly/skyfireandroid

    About Skyfire

    Skyfire is the creator of the Skyfire mobile browser, and has a mission to enable the “full internet” including rich media on mobile phones. The browser won the Best Mobile Application-People’s Voice at the 2009 Webby Awards and was named a Top App of 2009 by the New York Times’ Gadgetwise. Skyfire is based in Mountain View, California, in the heart of Silicon Valley. For more information, visit www.skyfire.com, or follow Skyfire on Twitter attwitter.com/skyfire.

  • Skyfire 2.0 Brings Flash-Enabled Browsing to All Android Devices

    The award-winning web-browser known as Skyfire has come to Android today in the form of Skyfire 2.0. The flash-enabled browser client works on all flavors of Android, even for you 1.5 MOTOBLUR folks! Based on cloud computing, Skyfire 2.0 lets media rich websites load efficiently and without those pesky empty boxes telling you to download a plugin. While the world waits for Android 2.2 to arrive with Flash capability, the rest of us are going to use Skyfire!

    Other features in this new release:

    • Pinch to zoom (on Android 2.0 and above)
    • Multi-tab browsing – open up to eight windows and browse simultaneously using visual tabs
    • Choose to load full desktop webpages or mobile optimized versions
    • Clear session history easily upon exit to maintain anonymous browsing

    Might We Suggest…

    • Boo-yah! Skyfire for Android Beta Leaked

      Attention Android fans: so, those nice folks over at XDA seem to have gotten a hold of a copy of Skyfire for Android Beta!  I have to tell you it is extremely fast and extremely sharp, even fo…


  • GM Makes Amends With Former EV1 Drivers; Even Chelsea Sexton Likes the Volt

    Those of you familiar with the documentary “Who Killed the Electric Car?” know exactly what kind of emotional connection former GM EV1 drivers had to their vehicles. The depth of their outrage and sadness when the EV1 program was killed off and their beloved cars recalled and subsequently crushed has led, in large part, to GM getting a bad next generation vehicle rap and inspiring a decided lack of confidence in their ability to make the upcoming Volt a success.

    Recognizing that the final piece to moving forward was making peace with those disenfranchised EV1 owners, GM has has launched an effort to bring them back into the fold. In a kind of simultaneous homage to the past, mea culpa, and effort for atonement, GM is using the opportunity to show just how committed they are to making it work this time.

    (more…)