Category: News

  • Mitsubishi ASX, precios y equipamientos disponibles

    Finalmente se ha dado a conocer toda la información sobre el nuevo SUV de Mitsubishi para la puesta en venta del mismo en los concesionarios españoles. El Mitsubishi ASX tendrá dos niveles de equipamiento y la versión más básica tendrá un precio de 24.150€.

    Por otra parte, en España sólo estará disponible con una motorización, un motor diésel 200 DiD de 150 CV. Más adelante se espera la llegada de nuevas motorizaciones de gasolina para completar la gama.

    Los dos equipamientos disponibles serán los siguientes:

    • Motion: Esta compuesto por múltiples airbags, ABS, ESP, control de tracción, asistente a la frenada de emergencia, llantas de 17 pulgadas, faros xenon, equipo de sonido MP3 con USB, climatizador automático y sistema Start & Stop.
    • Kaiteki: Este equipamiento cuenta con todos los elementos del “Motion” más tapicería de cuero, asientos con ajuste eléctrico y sonido Rockford Fosgate.

    En último lugar, os dejo con la lista de precios del Mitsubishi ASX:

    • ASX 200 DiD 150 CV Motion 24.150€
    • ASX 200 DiD 150 CV Kaiteki 25.750€
    • ASX 200 DiD 150 CV Motion 4WD 27.450€
    • ASX 200 DiD 150 CV Kaiteki 4WD 29.500€

    Related posts:

    1. Mitsubishi ASX, disponible esta primavera
    2. Mitsubishi ASX, nueva información disponible
    3. Mitsubishi podría fabricar para Saturn
  • Motorola Sold 2.3 Million Smartphones In Q1


    Motorola CLIQ with MOTOBLUR

    Motorola (NYSE: MOT) sold slightly more smartphones in the first quarter, but it was the home division that helped Motorola to swing to a profit.

    Overall, the company reported a profit of $69 million, or 3 cents a share, on sales of $5 billion. Analysts polled by Thomson Reuters were expecting $5.1 billion in revenue. That compares to a loss of $291 million, or 13 cents a share on revenues of $5.37 billion.

    Release. Earnings Call.

    However, with Motorola’s planned spin-off aimed at being completed a year from now, it’s important to examine how the company’s two units performed separately. Sales of the mobile devices segment sales were $1.6 billion, down 9 percent compared with the year-ago quarter. The operating loss was $192 million, which marked a significant improvement compared to the operating loss of $545 million in the year-ago quarter. The home unit reported a profit of $20 million on sales of $838 million.

    Motorola introduced six new smartphones during the quarter, and shipped 8.5 million phones in the first quarter, of which 2.3 million were smartphones. (In the year-ago period, it shipped 14.7 million phones). In the previous quarter, Motorola shipped 12 million handsets, of which only two million were smartphones. Motorola is now the world’s eighth-largest maker of phones, down from fifth-largest in the fourth quarter.

    Sanjay Jha, Motorola co-chief executive officer and CEO of Mobile Devices and Home, said in a statement: “We are in a strong position to improve our share in the rapidly growing smartphone market, particularly in light of our competitive portfolio, strengthened brand and improved carrier relationships.”

    For the current quarter, Motorola said it expects to earn 7 cents to 9 cents per share, which beats analyst projections of 3 cents per share. In early afternoon trading, Motorola’s stock increased nearly 4 percent, or 28 cents, to about $7.20 a share.

    Related


  • Ponds, pastoralists, and unpredictability: A snapshot of life in Ethiopia

    For the pastoralists of Dambi in Ethopia, water and pasture for their animals is vital. Nick Martlew finds out how unpredictable weather is putting their work – and consequently their lives – at risk.

    Tadhicha Wargo, a pastoralist in a village about a mile from the pond at Dambi. "The pond is very important for all the communities in this area. We all depend on it." Photo: Nick Martlew/Oxfam

    Tadhicha Wargo, a pastoralist in a village about a mile from the pond at Dambi. "The pond is very important for all the communities in this area. We all depend on it." Photo: Nick Martlew/Oxfam

    It reminds me of a nature reserve back home, a bird-strewn lake crowned with rich green foliage. Back in Wakefield (UK), the reserve was made from a disused slag heap, reclaiming for nature what had been discarded from man’s coal thirst. Here in Borena, almost as far south as you can go in Ethiopia before you reach Kenya, this particular pond has more important business than attracting dog walkers and Sunday cyclists.

    For 25,000 pastoralists in this drought-prone region, this pond at Dambi, Moyale district, is the last line of defence against destitution – and worse. For people whose livelihoods depend on their herds, water and pasture for their animals is everything. If the animals don’t have enough fodder or water, they get weak. At best this means they don’t produce offspring so there’s no milk, vital to keep the children healthy. At worst the animals die, robbing families of their principle means of producing or buying food.

    In the words of Tadhicha Wargo, a pastoralist we met in a village about a mile from the pond, “the pond is very important for all the communities in this area. We all depend on it.” What’s special about this pond at Ketele is its reliability – an ever-more precious commodity. For the last five years there’s been drought in Borena. Failed rain after failed rain has seen herd-sizes slashed. But this pond was a lifeline. Situated to capture any rain that drops in a wide area, it never ran dry. Through Oxfam’s Drought Early Warning Surveillance (DEWS), the local community decided that the pond needed enlarging and reinforcing to retain more water so the supply lasts through the dry season. Oxfam put in the seed money – just $5,000 US dollars – but the villages around gathered together three times as much in cash as well as their labour. In addition Oxfam mobilised support from local government and other agencies.

    This shows the life-over-death value of getting ahead of drought: wait for it to hit and you have to bring in fodder, water and food at great expense. Pre-empt it, and you’ve got a ready-made water bank as a back-up for thousands of people.

    Devastating changes

    Water streams away from the pond after the second flood. Photo: Tita Mekonnen/Oxfam

    Water streams away from the pond after the second flood. Photo: Tita Mekonnen/Oxfam

    But in the last couple of weeks there has been a devastating shift in the weather. After five years of dry skies, the rain came in such exceptional volumes and violence that the pond filled dangerously quickly. The water overflowed, ripping through the banks. It still holds water – just. Shara Aden, a 22-year-old mother of two, told us: “One more heavy rain and it will break… If it breaks we might have to migrate. This pond is the only one we can reach.”

    And this points to a wider story: Climate change is leading to increasingly unpredictable weather patterns and this is the real killer. It’s no longer only drought that communities here have to worry about.

    As I left Borena, Oxfam’s team on the ground and our partners were looking at how we can work with the community to reinforce the dam and prevent a disaster. By reinforcing and enlarging the pond, the community around got ahead of the next drought. Now, we all need to get ahead of the next disaster.

    The first step is a bit of honesty. Disasters do happen, especially in a country as poor as Ethiopia. Their full scale has to be recognised, because things are only going to get tougher. The world needs to recognise that climate change will probably only make the weather more unpredictable. We all have a responsibility to tackle this head on, from the Ethiopian communities themselves, through their government, to rich countries’ governments and you and me. We burnt all that Wakefield coal. It looks like Shara and Tadhicha are living with the consequences. Tadhicha lugged soil and rock to reinforce that dam. He didn’t have any choice. If we take our responsibilities to those affected by climate change seriously, neither do we.

    Update: three days after I visited Dambi, another violent downpour burst the banks of the pond. As Tita Mekonnen, Oxfam’s man on the ground, watched, he said, “in the end, nothing could stop the water from leaving the Ketela pond.” Thoughts turn now to how to help the thousands who relied on this pond through the coming dry season.

    Where we work: Ethiopia

    Get involved: climate change

  • Senior military leaders announce support for climate bill – 33 generals, admirals: “Climate change is making the world a more dangerous place” and “threatening America’s security”

    Generals smallThe Pentagon affirmed earlier this year that “Climate change, energy security, and economic stability are inextricably linked.”

    Today an unprecedented 33 retired US military generals and admirals announced that they support comprehensive climate and energy legislation in a letter to Senators Reid and McConnell as well as a full page ad (click to enlarge).  The news release points out:

    It was the largest such announcement of support ever, reflecting the consensus of the national security community that climate change and oil dependence pose a threat American security.

    Here is the full text of the letters signed by these generals and admirals:

    Dear Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell,

    Climate change is threatening America’s security. The Pentagon and security leaders of both parties consider climate disruption to be a “threat multiplier” – it exacerbates existing problems by decreasing stability, increasing conflict, and incubating the socioeconomic conditions that foster terrorist recruitment. The State Department, the National Intelligence Council and the CIA all agree, and all are planning for future climate-based threats.

    America’s billion-dollar-a-day dependence on oil makes us vulnerable to unstable and unfriendly regimes. A substantial amount of that oil money ends up in the hands of terrorists. Consequently, our military is forced to operate in hostile territory, and our troops are attacked by terrorists funded by U. S. oil dollars, while rogue regimes profit off of our dependence. As long as the American public is beholden to global energy prices, we will be at the mercy of these rogue regimes. Taking control of our energy future means preventing future conflicts around the world and protecting Americas here at home.

    It is time to secure America with clean energy. We can create millions of jobs in a clean energy economy while mitigating the effects of climate change across the globe. We call on Congress and the administration to enact strong, comprehensive climate and energy legislation to reduce carbon pollution and lead the world in clean energy technology.

    The anti-science crowd is blind to the growing threat and forced to offer the most ridiculous explanations of why so many of the nation’s military leaders have come together to warn the public and call on Congress to act.  Senator Inhofe (R-OIL) actually trashed generals who advocate for bipartisan clean energy legislation, saying they crave “the limelight.”

    In fact, the national security threat posed by unrestricted greenhouse gas emissions is great (see “NYT: Climate Change Seen as Threat to U.S. Security” and “Veterans Day, 2029“).  The threat is so clear cut that even the Bush Administration’s top intelligence experts were raising the alarm (see “The moving Fingar writes“).

    The time to act was a long time ago, but now is better than later.

  • Skyfire 2.0 for Android launching today

    Back in February, Skyfire (makers of the popular, Flash-enabled smartphone browser of the same name) announced that they’d snatched up Kolbysoft, the company behind the well-established Steel browser for Android. Today, we’re seeing the first fruits of that purchase coming to the market: Skyfire for Android is here.

    Skyfire’s flagship feature is that it supports Flash video playback, so you’d expect their Android port to do the same, right? And it does! It just does it… a bit differently.

    In past versions of Skyfire, Flash videos were embedded and played back directly within the page, just like you might expect from a PC version of the page. With Skyfire 2.0, one more step is thrown into the mix: the “Skybar”. When they’re ready to play back a Flash video, users tap the menu key to bring up the Skybar, click the “Video” label, and then choose which Flash video they want to view. Skyfire converts the video from Flash to H.264 in the cloud on-the-fly, and the video plays back (in full screen) on the device.

    Why the change? A rep for Skyfire shared a few reasons with us:

    • In this release, they’re building on top of WebKit rather than building their own browsing core from the ground up. Unlike all other versions of Skyfire, the page itself doesn’t go through a proxy. Standard content goes straight from the web server to the handset — only things that need to be transcoded go through Skyfire’s proxy.
    • Business reasons. Skyfire’s looking at OEM partnerships, and not all OEMs want Flash video playback, as they “want to enhance what they have rather than compete with another browser”.
    • They say it helps them adhere to Apple’s guidelines, improving the odds that they’ll be approved when they go to submit the iPhone/iPad release.

    Besides being the window to video, the Skybar also packs a few other tricks. An “Explore” option digs through Youtube, Twitter, Digg, and other sites for relevant video/imagery on the same subject as the content you’re currently looking at. For example: Believe it or not, they have videos of cats doing hilarious things on the Internet now; if you’re watching one of these and tap Explore, it’ll dig through the aforementioned feeds for other, equally hilarious cat videos. The “Share” button will let you sling the page out to Twitter, Facebook, Gmail, SMS, or save it for offline viewing.

    Beyond the Skybar, Skyfire’s got a few other features that make it worth checking out: Pinch-to-zoom, tabbed browsing, on-the-fly user agent switching, and optional automatic history dumping (Porn mode!), to name a few.

    Check out the video demonstration below, and look for the download to go live here and on the Android Market at right around 9 a.m. PST.


  • Imhotep’s a little ticked | Bad Astronomy

    On April 22, 2010, a sandstorm swept across the western Sahara desert. NASA’s Aqua satellite captured this frightening event:

    aqua_sahara

    Yegads. Click to ensandinate. This is a closeup of a much larger panorama at the border of Namibia and Burkina Faso. The whole front of the storm was about 1000 km (600 miles) across!

    I looked at the zoomed image, but couldn’t find Rick O’Connell’s biplane. That’s probably all for the best.


  • VIOLET-RAY LAMP PROBES NOSE TO CURE HAY FEVER (Nov, 1931)

    VIOLET-RAY LAMP PROBES NOSE TO CURE HAY FEVER

    SUNBURNED backs, as all know, may now be had from a “health lamp”; but here we have a mercury-vapor lamp in a quartz rod, small enough to pass up the nose and sunburn its inside. Four out of five cases of “hay fever” are cured.


  • Jumpin’ Jiminy.. Check This Jumpin’ Water (Mar, 1962)

    Jumpin’ Jiminy.. Check This Jumpin’ Water

    THE illuminated fountain that will be one attraction of the soon-to-open Seattle World’s Fair is a combination of design and science that makes most other fountains look like amateur night at the waterworks.

    This one will shoot “sculptured” water 70 ft. into the air in graceful, moving patterns. Designed by two young Japanese architects, it was chosen from a field of 268 entries from the United States and 14 foreign countries. One of the fountain-competition judges described it as “a true breakthrough in imaginative frontiers in the use of water.”

    The fountain consists of a 185-ft.-diameter concrete basin, the floor of which is 12 ft. deep and 120 in diameter. At the center is a 30-ft.-diameter dome, 6 ft. high, which is sleeved to accommodate 117 water-jet nozzles. A maximum of 32 nozzles are on at a time, with each one discharging about 200 gals, of water a minute.

    Because the water jets fan out at differing angles from the vertical center nozzle, almost every nozzle has a different volume and pressure relationship. Thus, considerable balancing work was needed to get the precise angle and distance for each jet stream called for by the designers.

    In a control room, a pre-recorded tape mechanism sequences the operation of the nozzles to produce the ever-changing, spectacular displays. A carillon bell and music system is also tied in, as are lighting effects at night.


  • This IBM physicist is working to reduce the cost of data processing even more – before some other company does. (Nov, 1967)

    This IBM physicist is working to reduce the cost of data processing even more – before some other company does.

    Back in 1950, the cost of processing 35 thousand computer instructions was one dollar. Today, one dollar processes 35 million instructions.

    What has driven the cost down? The work being done by IBM’s Dr. Sol Triebwasser and his associates may give us a clue.

    In an oven and camera-filled laboratory, physicist Triebwasser and his colleagues are developing new methods to make the microscopic parts inside a computer even smaller.

    “Smaller parts mean faster computer speeds because the electronic impulses travel a shorter distance—more work in less time.

    “In the last ten years,” says Dr.Triebwasser, “competitive research in the industry has taken computers from bulky vacuum tubes to transistors so tiny that 50,000 of them would fit in a thimble. As the parts have shrunk, so have processing costs.

    “And we must find ways to make data processing even more economical. In today’s competitive world, we can’t afford not to.”

    IBM


  • How “Weather Eye” Maps World’s Clouds (Jun, 1959)

    How “Weather Eye” Maps World’s Clouds

    THE Vanguard II “weather eye” satellite has paved the way—although it’s a bumpy road— to continuous, world-wide mapping of the world’s weather.

    The forerunner of more-advanced satellites scheduled for orbiting this year, it has provided some basic know-how in the use of artificial moons for meteorological purposes.

    What it also has done is give scientists a crude picture of the cloud patterns over a large part of the earth. While forecasters now are limited to scattered ground observations, Vanguard II was above the clouds—over oceans and unpopulated areas—making continuous reports. And though cloud data alone can’t guarantee accurate forecasts, it is one of the most important factors.

    The weather eye was launched from Cape Canaveral, Fla., into an equatorial-type orbit with a perigee of 347 miles and an apogee of 2,050 miles (see Fig. 2).

    A 20-inch sphere weighing 21-1/2 pounds, it spins at about 50 rpm, which—with a gyroscope effect —keeps its axis always pointing in the same direction in space. Launching was timed so that perigee would occur at about local noon over the equator, insuring that the satellite would be at its closest to earth during daylight for the 19-day lifetime of the mercury cell batteries powering its instrumentation.

    Two photocells (see Fig. 3)—projecting diametrically opposite from each other at 45° from the spin axis—scanned the earth. At perigee, both photocells “saw” the earth (see Fig. 2), while at apogee both “eyes” saw above the horizon. As Vanguard II spun, each eye in turn scanned a swath on the earth about seven miles wide and 600 miles long. Thus, as the satellite moved in its orbit, the eyes covered a long path, different each time around since the satellite’s orbit changed constantly with respect to the earth’s surface.

    Each photocell picked up reflected sunlight from clouds and land and sea masses. The reflections, in the form of infrared radiation, were focused onto a tiny infrared detector, which converted them into electrical signals proportionate to their intensity. These signals were stored on a pigmy tape recorder (see Fig. 4) inside the satellite.

    Since clouds reflect up to 80% of the sunlight that hits them, while land reflects only about 10% to 15% and water about 5% (see Fig. 1), the variation in intensities produced a definite range of signals on the tape and hence a rough electronic “picture” of cloud coverage. The photocells fed the tape with opposite polarities, so that during data reduction, technicians could monitor one eye at a time to avoid duplication.

    The tape recorder stored 50 minutes of data during each trip over the sunlit side of earth— roughly 25 minutes on each side of perigee. Then, as the satellite swung into the dark side of earth, the nearest ground station sent a coded command signal which triggered the tape recorder to run in reverse and transmit the data to earth, where it was re-recorded. The satellite’s tape was erased at the same time, readying it for new data. Playback speed of 15-in. per second compared to recording speed of 3/10-in. per second was needed, because only about one minute of telemetering time was available each orbit.

    The tapes made at the ground stations were sent to the Army Signal Corps lab at Fort Monmouth, N. J., where they converted them into crude film strips. Because there was considerable distortion at the edges of the 600-mile swath scanned, only the central 300 miles shown were used when the film strips were fitted together to form a global cloud picture.

    A tracking transmitter in Vanguard II kept the technicians up to date on the satellite’s whereabouts, and this information was correlated with the film data — plus routine ground cloud observations—to pinpoint where the pictured clouds were located.

    Several shortcomings showed up, most of which had been anticipated by the weather rocketeers.

    The mercury cell batteries lasted only 19 days, although the satellite itself may orbit for a century. To insure maximum use of the mercury batteries, however, tiny silicon solar batteries mounted on the detector units turned off the equipment when the satellite was on the dark side of the earth, then turned it on as it re-entered sunlight. Improved solar or atomic batteries—the designs of which have progressed much since the cloud cover satellite design was “frozen”—should enable future satellites to. gather and transmit information almost indefinitely.

    Another of the problems is the limited degree to which photocells can differentiate between various clouds. Even at perigee, Vanguard II could detect only those masses larger than seven miles in diameter. And where a thick cumulus reflects about 80% of the sunlight it receives, a thin cirrus might as well not be there at all, as far as reflections are concerned.

    Yet another difficulty—and perhaps the most crucial one—was the lag between the recording of data and turning it into useful information. Eventual aim is to have data from such satellites ready for use almost instantaneously.

    Some of the bugs should be ironed out later this year when another weather eye—this one carrying miniature television cameras—is sent into orbit lower than Vanguard II.

    Goal of the weather satellites is the gathering of basic meteorological knowledge that will tell forecasters the “why” of weather. With satellites measuring cloud motion, atmospheric temperatures, air moisture content, ozone content, and radiation flow into and out of the atmosphere, the forecasters hope to be able—for the first time —to say with 100% accuracy: “It’s going to rain Wednesday, and here’s why.”

    And beyond that, after the basic processes in the atmosphere are understood, is actual weather control. It’s a long way off, but Vanguard II was the first step.


  • Sade newest single “Babyfather” cover

    Sade-Babyfather-cover-croppedFrom her newest studio album “SOLDIER OF LOVE” Sade is set to release the new video for her second single titled “Babyfather” on May 4th 2010 which features Sade’s teenage daughter, Ila Adu on background vocals.

    In the mean while Sade released the flowery-colourful single cover for “Babyfather” and  recently she performed the single on “The Dancing With The Stars” and On the “Tonight Show with Jay Leno”.

    Sade-Babyfather-cover

    For a sneak peak on the single please click to watch: Sade – \”Babyfather\”

  • National Corvette Museum Planning Motorsports Park with Road Courses, Drag Strip

    The National Corvette Museum is planning a $35 million motorsports park in Bowling Green, Kentucky. The park will be built on 300 acres of land near the museum and GM’s Corvette assembly plant, and is expected to be ready in two to three years.

    The main attraction will be a pair of road courses, the larger of which is designed to mimic the Circuit de la Sarthe, which hosts the 24 Hours of Le Mans race. The East course features a turn modeled on the Nürburgring’s Caracciola Karussell and a chicane that supposedly apes the Bus Stop at Watkins Glen. Sounds neat if they can pull them off.

    Other plans include a quarter-mile drag strip, a ten-acre autocross area, a skid pad, and a 0.75-mile karting track. Organizers say all the facilities will meet FIA and SCCA rules, and will be open to driver training events as well as open track days. And yes, it’ll be open to cars other than ‘Vettes.

    Related posts:

    1. Track to Street: Chevy’s Corvette C6.R GT2 Helps Make a Better Production Vette
  • China amends state secrets law to require companies to inform on customers

    [JURIST] The Chinese government on Thursday revised its often-criticized state secrets law to require Internet and telecommunications companies to inform on customers who share state secrets. This new provision may provide a disincentive to many service providers from entering China, particularly when considered along with China’s Internet filtering laws. The new law also narrows the definition of state secrets. As approved by parliament, the phrase state secrets now means, “information concerning state security and interests and, if leaked, would damage state security and interests in the areas of politics, economy and national defense.” The amended state secrets law will take effect in October.
    China’s state secrets law has frequently been criticized for the breadth of action which falls under the doctrine. In November 2009, rights activist Huang Qi was sentenced to three years in prison for violating the state secrets law, when he discussed how some schools collapsed after the Sichuan province earthquake in 2008 because of shoddy construction. China began a review of its state secrets law last June, after concerns were raised regarding Internet filtering software on computers sold in that country.

  • Bill proposed to keep NHTSA employees from getting automaker jobs for three years

    Filed under: , ,

    Toyota’s very public recall problems have cast light on what critics suggest is the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s sometimes cozy relationship with automakers. A new report in The Detroit News shows that new legislation is being proposed that aims to curb workers transitioning between the government agency and the automakers which NHTSA oversees. On Wednesday, Senator Barbara Boxer of California (above) introduced legislation that would increase the amount of time NHTSA employees would have to wait to work for an automaker to three years. The legislation, if passed, would reportedly only block NHTSA employees from working with OEMs in any capacity that included oral or written interaction with the government agency.

    The Democrat senator called the movement of employees from NHTSA to OEMs a “revolving door,” giving automakers “undue influence on agency decisions.” Violators of the proposed requirements could face a fine of up to $55,000, while automakers could be fined $100,000 or more.

    The legislation comes after news of some automakers hiring ex-NHTSA employees became public knowledge. In the case of Toyota’s unintended acceleration recalls, it was discovered that two ex-NHTSA employees working at Toyota were directly involved with the administration’s investigation into possible safety defects. Ex-NHTSA head Joan Claybrook said in a prepared statement delivered to the House Subcommittee on Commerce, Trade and Consumer Protection that all three domestic automakers as well as Honda and Suzuki were among the automakers hiring workers from the government agency.

    [Source: The Detroit News | Image: Alex Wong/Getty]

    Bill proposed to keep NHTSA employees from getting automaker jobs for three years originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 29 Apr 2010 10:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Las Vegas Remains Foreclosure Capital in Q1

    Maybe they should call it Foreclosure City instead of Sin City. Las Vegas was again the source of the highest foreclosures density in the U.S. during the first quarter, according to a new RealtyTrac report documenting foreclosure rates in the 209 largest metropolitan statistical areas. It had an incredible one foreclosure for every 28 properties. That’s even worse than Nevada’s overall 1-in-33 foreclosure rate for the quarter. The city’s foreclosure density was also nearly 5x the national average.

    Most of the other worst cities were from states who are the usual suspects for housing market problems. In fact, you have to look all the way to the #22nd worst — Boise City-Nampa, Idaho — to find a city outside California, Florida, Nevada, or Arizona. Here are the 10 worst:

    Worst Foreclosure Cities 2010-Q1.PNG

    The good news is that all but two of the 10 worst saw fewer foreclosures than in the first quarter of 2009. The bad news is that only four of those ten have seen declines since the fourth quarter of 2009. Las Vegas is a prototypical example of this phenomenon. It has 19% fewer foreclosure than a year earlier, but 13% more than a quarter earlier.

    These changes suggest a lack of stability in foreclosures. Earlier this month, we learned that March set a new high for total U.S. foreclosures. That was partially due to modification programs and banks releasing more shadow inventory into the market.The short-term increases but long-term declines in some of the worst cities make sense in this context.

    Most of major cities less affected by foreclosures are those in relatively rural areas. Of the 10 best, three are in upstate New York, while the others are scattered around states like North Carolina, Alabama, Nebraska, Vermont, and West Virginia.

    When it comes to major cities, it’s not hard to figure out which ones are at the top — Phoenix, Miami, Detroit, Los Angeles, and San Francisco. Interestingly, the foreclosure problem in New York City metropolitan statistical area remains relatively benign, showing that its economy probably won’t be much affected by defaulted homeowners going forward. Its foreclosure density is only about a third of the national average. Here’s a list of some major cities:

    Foreclosure Big Cities 2010-Q1 v2.PNG





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  • El futuro Chrysler Sebring sería llamado Nassau

    chrysler-nassau-2007.jpg

    El Chrysler Sebring es uno de los modelos que la marca americana quiere renovar urgentemente, de acuerdo a las directivas de Sergio Marchionne en la reestructuración de Fiat-Chrysler. Una de las maneras en que el Sebring, de venta en España a un precio bastante competitivo, hay que decirlo, pueda renovarse es cambiar totalmente su forma y convertirlo en una berlina de formas mucho más redondeadas, como es la tendencia actual. En este caso, la mercadotecnia también obliga a que se le cambie el nombre y es por eso que la próxima generación del Sebring, recibiría el nombre de Nassau.

    Y no es la primera vez que Chrysler usa dicho nombre, ya que por allá de los lejanos años cincuenta Chrysler reservó ese nombre para una variante de más acabados de uno de sus modelos. Sin embargo, el actual Nassau está más cercano en el tiempo, ya que en el salón de Detroit del 2007 se presentó un concepto llamado Nassau Concept, que bien podría ser el fundamento del nuevo Sebring, aunque desde Chrysler negaron que haya algún parecido.

    Si Chrysler pudiera asegurarnos que el nuevo Nassau va a tomar al menos algo del Nassau Concept, entonces me animaré a decir que la marca va por buen camino. Y si así fuera, Lancia tomaría también como base una línea similar ya que Marchionne anunció en su momento que Lancia y Chrysler irán de la mano compartiendo modelos para Europa y EEUU respectivamente.

    Vía | Free Press



  • Technology Transfer Coordinator

    University of Illinois
    Office of Technology Management
    Chicago Campus

    The Office of Technology Management (OTM) at the University of Illinois in Chicago is seeking applicants for the position of Technology Transfer Coordinator.    The successful candidate provides the highest quality professional expertise and leadership across the spectrum of technology management or within a particular set of technology management and marketing professional services.  The services include supervision of all personnel that research and analyze the commercialization potential of technologies developed by employees and contractors to the University of Illinois, and such third parties as are approved by the OTM and also maintenance of a comprehensive intellectual property portfolio in various stages of evaluation.

    Duties:

    1. Coordinate inter-campus efforts between the OTMs to maintain integrated and knowledge based databases of technologies, marketing information, and other business-related information to provide standardized services for both campuses.
    2. Responsible and accountable for research and analysis for a portfolio of technologies (intellectual property developed by UIC employees and contractors), and approved third parties, more specifically: all screening for initial marketability performed by OTM personnel; commercial assessments (including patent landscape analysis, citation analysis and  analysis of potential market, competitors and names of researchers working in similar areas); and creating and supervising presentations and reports reflecting research.
    3. Coordinate and lead internal and external communications on behalf of the OTMs.
    4. Supervise OTM research and screening personnel (currently a staff of 6 part time employees including Business Analyst I’s).
    5. Responsible for coordinating the OTM research intern program including the identification and hiring of interns for the office.
    6. Test, select, learn and train for all databases used in the course of performing research services for the OTM.
    7. Assist technology managers in the marketing presentations based on research services.
    8. Coordinate and maintain the Customer Relationship Management (CRM) tool to support smooth operation of the office in the following aspects: operational work flow, projects deadlines, internal and external contacts, marketing efforts, as well as general records management and reports.9. Responsible for implementing and maintaining effective communication between participants in the research process, including researchers, faculty and technology managers.
    9. Assist in development, sales and management of the delivery of professional screening services to outside entities.
    10. Maintain a productive relationship with faculty and inventors to ensure positive feedback and engagement.
    11. Provide information to identify and develop relationships with strategic partners and companies interested in technology transfer and related sponsored research.
    12. Participate in development and improvement of OTM infrastructure, policy and procedure, including the development of annual objectives, goals, priorities and productivity benchmarks specific to research services.
    13. Develop and deliver presentations to UIC, third parties and conferences regarding the UIC research services.

    Qualifications:

    Qualifications include:  Bachelor’s degree in science, business or related area with a minimum of two years of intellectual property related experience in data mining; Master’s of Business Administration preferred.  Other required qualifications include: excellent written and oral communication skills; the ability to work independently and in a team situation; be able to identify and assess value of intellectual property; ability to maintain confidential information; knowledge about sponsor guidelines/regulations; strong interpersonal skills to develop/maintain effective working relationships; demonstrated managerial skills to work independently and to exercise good judgment and discretion in handling personnel issues; effective teamwork skills to address/resolve problems; demonstrated organizational and multi-tasking capability to produce work in a fast-paced environment that imposes stringent deadlines and requires flexibility to handle urgent matters; and proficiency with Microsoft computer programs/applications. Strong scientific or technical knowledge preferred. Some travel can be expected including but not limited to intercampus trips.

    This is a full-time 12-month Academic Professional, benefits eligible position.   For full consideration, candidates must apply to and submit a letter of application, resume, and names/addresses/phone numbers of three professional references by May 3, 2010 at https://uajobs.hr.uillinois.edu/.

    University of Illinois
    Employee Relations and Human Resources
    809 S. Marshfield Ave M/C 078
    Chicago, IL 60612
    Phone: (312) 996-5130
    Fax: (312) 996-6005

    The University of Illinois is an affirmative action/equal opportunity employer dedicated to building a community of excellence, equity and diversity.  University Administration welcomes applications from women, underrepresented minorities, persons with disabilities, sexual minority groups and other candidates who will lead and contribute to the diversification and enrichment of ideas and perspectives.

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  • David Rosenberg: Get Over It, Greece Is Going To Default

    rosenberg

    We’re guessing that a lot of folks share David Rosenberg’s sentiment on this one, that it’s time to ban the bailouts, and forget the idea that a Greece “default” would be tantamount to failure.

    BAN THE BAILOUT
    First we have governments bailing out banks (and auto companies and
    mortgage providers), homeowner debtors, and now we have governments
    bailing out governments.  When does someone finally say — enough is enough!
    Oh no — bank ABC is too big to fail.  Company XYZ is too complex to fail.  And
    now country GRK is too interconnected to fail.  Give me a giant break.  

    Look, Greece is not going to “fail”.  They are going to default.  There will be a debt
    restructuring.  And there will be some recovery.  Bondholders will take a haircut —
    why shouldn’t they?  Why should Angela Merkel care if German banks own Greek
    bonds?  Greece has been in default in its recent 200-year history almost half the
    time.  So has most of Latin America come to think of it.  What about Russia?  
    So Greece defaults, bondholders who knowingly bought these instruments
    knowing the historical record went for the yield and simply do not deserve a
    taxpayer-supported bailout of any kind.  To actually come to the aid of Greece
    (especially after all the accounting gimmickry) would send a signal to investors
    that the best way to make money is buy the debt of the most risky and highest
    yielding enterprise because there will always be a bailout.  Rewarding bad
    investment decisions is a huge mistake, in my opinion.  

    Let Greece default, the world will not come to an end, and whether or not the
    country gets a “bailout”, the fiscal drain is going be a pervasive drag on economic
    activity for at least the next five years.  While there may be contagion risks — same
    deal.  Investors who bought Club Med bonds with their stretched government
    balance sheets in order to stretch for yield don’t deserve to be bailed out either.  
    Taxpayers unite, wherever you live (because you too support the IMF).  These are
    solvency issues we are talking about, not liquidity issues.  This is about bad
    decisions, not market failure.

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  • Thoughts on Flash

    Certainly worth reading the entire post, but here are Mr. Job’s conclusions:

    Flash was created during the PC era – for PCs and mice. Flash is a successful business for Adobe, and we can understand why they want to push it beyond PCs. But the mobile era is about low power devices, touch interfaces and open web standards – all areas where Flash falls short.

    The avalanche of media outlets offering their content for Apple’s mobile devices demonstrates that Flash is no longer necessary to watch video or consume any kind of web content. And the 200,000 apps on Apple’s App Store proves that Flash isn’t necessary for tens of thousands of developers to create graphically rich applications, including games.

    New open standards created in the mobile era, such as HTML5, will win on mobile devices (and PCs too). Perhaps Adobe should focus more on creating great HTML5 tools for the future, and less on criticizing Apple for leaving the past behind.

    Steve Jobs

    April, 2010

    via Thoughts on Flash.

  • Indochino Linen Collection

    Leave it up to Indochino to get you just right and ready for summer. These ain’t your father’s linen suits as Indochino finds the right blend of silk for sheen and tight weaves for an even structure. No longer will you have to worry about too many rumples or irregular wrinkles when still trying to look the business part. Indochino has found the perfect balance in selections aptly named, The Cuban Missle Suit, The Buena Vista Suit, The Havana Suit, and the Montecristo Suit. Available now at Indochino.

    Continue reading for more images.