Category: News

  • Man Sentenced To 12 Months For Stealing Buns From Burger King

    A fellow in the UK was recently sentenced to 12 months in the clink after using a broom handle to heist a bag of burger buns from his local Burger King.

    With a deadly broom handle at the ready, the master criminal talked his way into a then-closed BK and, say the local police, threatened a staff member “he would hit him with the broom handle unless he stayed still… Fearing he would be hurt, the member of staff complied, at which point [the robber] snatched a nearby bag of burger buns and fled.”

    The absolute inanity of the theft wasn’t lost on the police:

    Why he felt the need to intimidate and threaten someone to that extent simply for a bag of burger buns is beyond comprehension and we welcome the one year prison sentence handed down to him.

    The robber entered guilty pleas to charges of robbery, possession of an offensive weapon, and obstructing police.

    Croydon Burger King bun robber jailed [Croydon Guardian]

  • Lady Gaga Plastic Surgery?

    Over the past two years, Lady Gaga has risen from virtual obscurity to become one of the biggest pop stars of the past decade, but according to salacious new scoop from London’s Now Magazine, the singer is suffering from such low self-esteem she wants to go under the knife to rid herself on her insecurities.

    “She’s desperately unhappy but keeps talking about having thousands of dollars worth of plastic surgery,” one nervous tipster divulges. “She really thinks that could fix everything. She’s in a really bad way right now. She puts up such a guard that no-one ever really knows what she’s feeling. She thinks she looks too manly and spends hours looking at herself.”

    The insider adds: “She’s thinking about a whole host of cosmetic procedures, including a nose job, cheek implants, boob job and thigh and bum lift. She’s completely preoccupied with overhauling her looks….Everyone’s worried about her and is begging her to take a break and get some perspective and work on her self-confidence.”


  • What to do on Earth Day?

    What can we do on Earth Day to help the planet? Change our lives.

    I have read articles from and communicated with many leading environmental bloggers in the past week or so about Earth Day. As many are right and eagerly ready to say, Earth Day is not enough, not anymore. Today should still be Earth Day, perhaps, but it should also be the beginning of Earth Week, Earth Month and Earth Year. And Earth Year should be an annual thing.

    It is great to make a little more effort to be green on this day.

    And as I wrote over on Green Living Ideas recently, it can be a New Year’s Day kind of holiday, a holiday where we can examine our lives and see where we can improve, where we need to improve, and where we are determined to improve, for the long-term (not this single day of the year). It can be more useful in that way than any other way, I think.

    (more…)

  • PreCentral heading to Palm’s Developer Day

    Will there be exciting news? Could be? We’ll be there live if there is. Will there be a chance for developers to learn how to do awesome stuff on webOS? Definitely, and we’ll be there to watch the magic.

    More importantly, will there be a chance for developers to get on camera, show us their apps, and get featured on PreCentral? Yes, yes there will be just that chance. Keep an eye out for the guy with silver glasses hiding behind a videocamera, he wants to talk to you.

    Not going to be at Palm Developer Day? Stay tuned – PreCentral loves you too.

  • Luca di Montezemolo Steps Down As Fiat Chairman

    Luca di Montezemolo

    Luca di Montezemolo has stepped down as the chairman of Fiat and he is to be replaced by 34-year-old John Elkann. Montezemolo will however continue to function as the president of Ferrari and he declined any reports of joining the Italian Politics or even forming an individual party, insisting that he will always be on the Fiat board and he will never stop heading Ferrari. Montezemolo also mentioned that he is still in favor of major teams such as Ferrari and McLaren being allowed three cars in the Grand Prix circuit. Another one of his desires is to see Rossi competing in the F1 after he wins the MotoGP for the umpteenth time this season.

  • Volkswagen Golf BlueMotion

    nuevo-golf-bluemotion-el-modelo-mas-ahorrador-de-la-gama-precio.jpg
    El nuevo 1.6 TDI de Volkswagen promete dar un rendimiento muy importante a la marca. En este caso es el nuevo Volkswagen BlueMotion el que se beneficia de este nuevo motor más eficiente: tan sólo 3,8 litros a los 100 kilómetros y menos de 100 de CO2 a los 100 kilómetros, todo un logro.

    Además las prestaciones deportivas que ofrece son similares, alcanzando los 190 kilómetros hora y los 100 km/h en sólo 11 segundos, nada mal para un coche de calle. 99 gramos de CO2, 3,8 litros a los 100 y un par motor de 250 Nm para lanzarlo a 190 kilómetros hora, todo ello a un precio recomendado de 21.140 €.

    Adaptaciones aerodinámicas y tecnológicas son las causantes de esta mejora en el rendimiento del motor del coche. Incorpora recuperación automática de energía de frenado, recargando la batería al frenar y el Start& Stop, que para el motor al estar en un semáforo y lo arranca al pisar el embrague. Una suspensión rebajada, llantas de 15″ y unos neumáticos de baja resistencia a la rodadura complementan las mejoras.

    Para el exterior los cambios estéticos para identificar el modelo BlueMotion incluyen un spoiler trasero pintado del color de la carrocería y un parachoques delantero deportivo. Un tapizado exclusivo Scout y el color exclusivo Azul Glaciar, junto con un equipamiento que incluye el paquete Advance Plus con Climatronic Bi-Zona, lunas tintadas y Tempomat completan este modelo de Golf.

    Fuente | Volkswagen



  • mocoNews Quick Hits 04.22.2010


    Wheres Waldo Game

    »  Google (NSDQ: GOOG) Maps 4.1 brings voice search to Windows Mobile and Symbian S60. [Mobile Tech World]

    »  What it’s like to blog on the Apple (NSDQ: AAPL) iPad. [jkOnTheRun]

    »  David Letterman’s “Lost iPhone Top Ten” on last night’s Late Show. [CBS via paidContent]

    »  On the iPhone, games are by far the most popular. Least popular? Travel, books, education and sports. [GigaOm]

    »  Where’s Waldo? game app reports over 1 million downloads. [Mobile Entertainment]


  • “Dirty Dozen” Cheat Sheet Reminds You Which Foods To Always Buy Organic

    To help you remember the “Dirty Dozen” foods to always buy organic, Heidi Kenney has designed this fun free cheat sheet to keep in your moneypurse (organic farming doesn’t use synthetic pesticides). Flip it over and you’ve got the “Clean 15,” which had the lowest pesticide count.. One time I was eating lots of fruits and vegetables and I ate a not-organic pear and my lip swelled up like a monkey’s for a few days… maybe I should start using this list!

    the dirty dozen cheat sheet [My Paper Crane]
    Shopper’s Guide aTo Pesticides [FoodNews.org]

  • Maybach unveils updated range for 2011 [w/video]

    Filed under: , , ,

    2011 Maybach 62 – Click either image for high-res image gallery

    Reports of Maybach‘s demise may have been slightly exaggerated – for the time being, anyway. The ultra-premium Daimler brand has released updated versions of its range, which is essentially the same vehicle with different configurations.

    For MY2011, the Maybach 57, 57S, 62 and 62S feature a handful of cosmetic, mechanical and interior equipment upgrades. The exterior benefits from a new grille (now different between the standard and S models), hood, tail lights and door mirrors, which – in addition to refreshing the limo’s looks – also reduces wind noise for a quieter ride. Underneath the new hood, meanwhile, Daimler has optimized the V12 engine for marginally reduced emissions and fuel consumption, and while the standard engine stays pegged at 542 horsepower, the S version gets an 18-horse boost to 630.

    Inside there’s a partition to separate passengers from chauffeur, and the reclining seats previously available only on the longer 62 model can now be fitted on the passenger side in the rear of the 57 as well. The 62 can be fitted with an electro-chromatic tinting glass roof panel, and customers can also specify a 19-inch rear screen instead of the individual 9.5-inch monitors, on which they can view camera feeds from around the vehicle. The perfume atomizer from the Zeppelin model can also be ordered on the rest of the range now as well, and there’s available wireless internet and seat piping either braided or embedded with Swarovski crystals.

    The revised Maybach range debuts this Friday at the Beijing Motor Show, where Bentley is also presenting a pair of special editions, Volkswagen its new Phaeton and Audi the long-wheelbase A8 L. If we didn’t know better, we’d think the Chinese had a thing for limos. Make the jump for a promo video.

    [Source: Maybach]

    Continue reading Maybach unveils updated range for 2011 [w/video]

    Maybach unveils updated range for 2011 [w/video] originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 22 Apr 2010 14:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Gorm Propagation Station

    Materials: GORM shelving, shop lights, heat mats, hooks, duct tape, power squid

    Description: This is our propagator for starting seedlings in the basement.

    We chose GORM shelves that make a total width of just over 4′, since standard shop lights are 4′ wide. After assembling the shelves, we added some screw in cup hooks to hang the shop lights from. The lights can be raised as the plants grow.

    We put heat mats on one of the shelves since some plants like to be warm. The power for heat mats and lights is fed through a power squid which is taped under the middle shelf to keep it under control. We also put some plastic sheeting on the shelves to reduce the chance of water leaking through.

    ~ Edward and Cheryl, Boston, Massachusetts, USA


  • Irma Muñoz

    by Grist

    .series-head{background:url(http://www.grist.org/i/assets/2/forty_people/40people_header_C.gif) no-repeat; height:68px; text-indent:-9999px;} h3.subscribe-head{padding-left:5px;background-color:black;color:#ff8400;} dl.series-nav{margin-top:-15px;} .media {float:left; width:300px; margin-right:10px;}

    Art: Nat Damm

    Irma Muñoz

    Founder, Mujeres de la Tierra
    Baldwin Vista, Calif.

    Los Angeles native Irma Muñoz, 57, founded Mujeres de la Tierra (Women
    of the Earth) in 2004, after two neighbors died of cancers that they
    suspected had been caused by nearby oil wells. Her group organizes
    women in Southern California to fight for cleaner, healthier
    neighborhoods for their families. Muñoz also serves as an
    environmental affairs commissioner for Los Angeles. “I
    think when you talk about the environment, most people are talking
    about the natural elements: air, water, the earth. But for me, and for
    many in my community, the environment starts with the family,” she says.

    Meet more people who are redefining green.

    Next »    

    Related Links:

    Are we too clean?

    Scientists link ADHD in kids to routine pesticide exposure

    New report from Childhood Obesity Task Force has something for everyone






  • EULA lets Sony tinker with your PS3 without your permission

    A lot of you may have upgraded to the latest firmware by now, and I bet a big slice of those who did didn’t even bother with the mass of text that came with it. While most

  • A church of words

    Call him a preacher, a soothsayer, a shaman, a poet. It’s the last that Jericho Brown goes by, but it takes all of the above to write lines like “The loneliest people have the earth to love and not one friend their own age” (from “Odd Jobs”).

    Brown, the Radcliffe Institute’s 2009-10 American Fellow, read Wednesday (April 21) inside the Radcliffe Gymnasium from “The New Testament,” his newest collection of poems.

    Born to a New Orleans churchgoing family, Brown read with the breathless urgency of a reverend to a hoard of sinners. Before launching into “Another Elegy,” his opening poem, Brown’s command over the audience was palpable. Lapsing into a silence so long it might otherwise be deemed uncomfortable, Brown could’ve predicted the world’s end and no one would’ve budged.

    Instead he spoke: “Expect death in all our poems. Men die. Death is not a metaphor. It stands for nothing and represents itself. … It enters whether or not your house is dirty. Whether or not your body is clean.”

    In “The New Testament,” Brown mashes up religion, mixing identity, sexuality, violence, race, death, and more death. “The Bible is a text to go back to,” said Brown, “just like ‘The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock’ is a text to go back to.”

    Both texts are soaked with death; yet as bleak as Brown’s poems can sometimes be, his performance of them — though never shy in intensity — is a catharsis.

    “I was raised in a church where part of growing up was about getting in front of people and doing what we saw our pastor doing every Sunday,” he recalled. “You have to be able to give over to an audience for them to enjoy it. So I think that’s ingrained in me, no matter what I’m doing.”

    In “Another Elegy,” a different poem with the same title, Brown read: “Every night, / I take a pill. Miss one, and I’m gone. / Miss two, and we’re through. Hotels / Bore me, unless I get a mountain view, / A room in which my cell won’t work, / And there’s nothing to do but see / The sun go down into the ground / That cradles us as any coffin can.”

    “I think of every poem as its own character, so I do my best to embody that character,” said Brown, who won the prestigious Whiting Award while at Radcliffe. The coveted honor, which carries a $50,000 prize, is given to writers in the early stages of their careers who show extraordinary talent and promise. Brown is author of the book “Please” (New Issues, 2008), and teaches at the University of San Diego.

    In “To Be Seen,” Brown read: “You will forgive me if I carry the tone of a preacher, / Surely, you understand, a man in the midst of dying / Must have a point, which is not to say that I am dying / Exactly.”

    Last year, Brown had a life-changing revelation: “I became very afraid that I was going to die. For the first time in my life, I was thinking, ‘Oh, I might die?’ It had never crossed my mind before. It’s that feeling you have when you almost hit a car, that shaking inside, and I was having that feeling all day, every day, that shaking inside.”

    Brown handled those thoughts by writing. “I felt like I could deal with that feeling if I wrote about that feeling,” he said.

    “To Be Seen” takes its title from a doctor’s appointment (“the doctor will see you now”), and in the poem Brown confronts disease, mortality, the doctor he does not trust:

    My doctor, for instance, insists on the metaphor of war;

    It’s always the virus that attacks and the cells that fight or

    Die fighting.  I even remember him saying the word siege

    When another rash returned.  Here I am dying

    While he makes a battle of my body — anything to be seen

    When all he really means is to grab me by the chin

    And, like God the Father, say through clenched teeth,

    Look at me when I’m talking to you.  Your healing is

    Not in my hands, though I touch as if to make you whole.

    Noting the lack of joy in his poems, Brown called himself an elegiac poet, but admitted he is really a happy person. “Maybe the joy hasn’t gotten into my writing just yet,” he said. “But it will.”

  • Illinois Republicans close fundraiser featuring controversial national GOP chairman Michael Steele

    Posted by Rick Pearson at 2:21 p.m.



    The state’s long out-of-power Republican Party holds its annual big fundraising soiree tonight at the Drake Hotel in Chicago and is labeling the event “Illinois is Next” after recent GOP wins in Massachusetts, Virginia and New Jersey.

    The question is, will anybody know it?

    The event, featuring embattled national Republican Chairman Michael Steele, is now closed to the media. Pat Brady, the Illinois Republican chairman, announced the fundraiser would be private today. Brady, no relation to the Republican governor nominee, state Sen. Bill Brady of Bloomington, said the decision was his, but offered no rationale.

    There is little doubt, however, that Steele’s attendance at the big-bucks event is a major factor and Brady, the state GOP chairman, has been a Steele ally even before the national chairman was picked for the job. In recent weeks, Steele has been embroiled in several controversies, ranging from the use of a party credit card by aides to pay for young GOP donors to go to a West Hollywood strip club to Steele’s comment comparing himself to President Barack Obama and contending African-American political leaders have a “slimmer margin” for error.



    The closed-door fundraiser stands in contrast to the post-February primary election unity day. Back then, Republicans sought media coverage to tout their chances against Democrats who have problems due to the scandal of disgraced former Gov. Rod Blagojevich and one-party rule of state government. The state GOP’s decision to close the event to the press may raise more questions about the ideological and social direction of the Illinois GOP when the votes of independent, non-partisan aligned voters are the key to winning in November.



    Among the financial co-chairmen of the event is wealthy ultra-conservative Republican activist Jack Roeser, a businessman from Barrington who has long been at odds with the structure of the traditionally moderate-controlled state Republican Party. Roeser, bitingly critical in the past of U.S. Senate nominee Mark Kirk and others on the statewide ticket, last month gave the state GOP $50,000 and asked to be welcomed into the tent.

  • Patti Moreno

    by Grist

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    Art: Nat Damm

    Patti Moreno

    Founder, Garden Girl TV and Urban Sustainable Living
    Roxbury, Mass.

    Patti Moreno, 38, aka “The Garden Girl,” wants to sow the seeds of
    inspiration and get everyone growing organic veggies and living a more
    self-sustaining life. In her how-to videos and on her websites, Garden Girl TV and Urban Sustainable Living,
    she demystifies gardening (indoor and out), raising chickens, shearing
    rabbits, spinning wool, cooking, and even aquaculture. Before you know it,
    her infectious enthusiasm could have you not just building raised
    garden beds but considering goat adoption. Watch Garden Girl videos on Grist.

    Follow Moreno on Twitter.

    Watch Garden Girl explain how to start a vegetable garden:

    Meet more people who are redefining green.

    Next »    

    Related Links:

    Ask Umbra’s Book Club: Local or organic?

    Ask Umbra’s Book Club: WTFood?

    Ask Umbra’s Book Club: Live chat with author Anna Lappé






  • Android Central Editors’ app picks for April 22, 2010

    Android Central Editors' app picks

    Another week, another round of our favorite applications. Up this week: Tethering, a great Google Voice utility, baseball scores and an on-screen keyboard. Check ’em out after the break.

    read more

  • The interruption tax

    Corey Waldin of Internet Simplicity, a Silicon Valley web dev firm, wrote in to tell us about the firm’s “no talking time.”

    We have our own “no talking time” during the afternoon where every just designs, programs, works. No talking at all (unless there’s a client meeting). We even made a little sign that goes up during this time so when people come into the office they don’t forget.

    no talking

    But in his review of REWORK, software developer Henrik Paul worries about taking the idea that “interruption is the enemy of productivity” too far.

    If you abolish all kinds of interruptions, you would effectively seal everyone to their own small little soundproof, locked-door cell, and nobody may talk to each other directly. The piece does mention that passive communication is ok (e.g. email), while active is not (talk, meetings, phone, IM.)

    The key to a successful project, in my mind, is good communication. Communication should be open, and there shouldn’t be any protocol to do that. Once you put obstacles in front of communication within your project, people will slowly just stop asking about those little “meaningless” things. It turns out, those meaningless things are often not that meaningless after all, but those nuances that take your product from merely good to excellent.

    Sure, nobody likes interruptions. But I like to communicate with my collagues. Consider a good compromise. My suggestion (as if I would have any weight) is to cut unnecessary interruptions. Allow people to opt-out from interruptions, don’t interrupt people with out-of-topic things. But don’t discourage communication. That’s not a workplace I want to work at.

    It’s all about striking the right balance. You don’t want to discourage necessary communication – do that and you’ve thrown out the baby with the bathwater. But you do want to move away from a de facto “tap on the shoulder” environment that constantly breaks up the workday.

    Every interruption comes with a tax. There’s a slight price you’re paying. And that adds up.

    Make sure what you want to discuss is worth that cost. Whatever you’re about to tell a colleague needs to be worth taking them away from what they’re doing. If it’s not, take it to an email or some other way that won’t take that person out of the zone.

  • BlackBerry Pearl 9100 dummy units appear at Rogers stores

    Rogers Pearl 9100

    If you’ve been following the BlackBerry news in the slightest, you’re well aware that the Pearl 9100 is right around the corner.  Given that RIM is a Canadian company, wireless providers like Rogers and Telus have historically been first to the gate with many of RIM’s devices (with the exception of the Storm).  Keeping that in mind, the fact that several Rogers locations are receiving BlackBerry Pearl 9100 dummy units is no surprise at all.

    I’m no fortune teller, but with dummy units arriving at stores, I’d be willing to guess that we’ll see the Pearl 9100 at WES 2010 next week.  Anyone care to speculate with me?

    Via Engadget Mobile


  • Why Didn’t Facebook Launch Location Features?

    Facebook introduced some pretty impressive features at its f8 conference on Wednesday, including the social graph API, which will unleash a tidal wave of “like” plugins across the web, as well as a graph protocol to allow searching of status updates. All of this was predicted by many (including Om) in the lead-up to the conference. But one thing that virtually everyone expected was missing: a location-related feature for the network, or at the very least, the integration of location-based services. Location was supposed to be one of the biggest announcements made at the conference, something Facebook telegraphed in its recent privacy changes. So what happened?

    Facebook hasn’t said why it changed its mind about launching location features (if it did in fact change its mind). I’ve got a request in to the company for comment, and will update this post if I hear back. But here are some of the leading possibilities:

    • It wasn’t ready to be launched: One theory is that Facebook is developing something in-house — something big — but that it wasn’t in production-quality shape in time for the conference, so decided to delay it.
    • It would have been confusing: Even if it was ready, Facebook may have wanted to save the location launch for its own separate event. Sources said several other potential new offerings were stripped out of f8 at the last minute.
    • Facebook is buying Foursquare: According to some rumors circulating around the web, the network is looking at acquiring Foursquare.
    • The company is working on partnerships: Instead of trying to develop something internally, Facebook could be working on integrating with providers like Yelp, Foursquare and Gowalla.

    Of all these potential explanations, the last option seems the most plausible. For one thing, Yelp was heavily featured in Mark Zuckerberg’s keynote as a partner on the new social graph API features, and it’s unlikely that he would do that if Facebook were going to turn around and eat Yelp’s lunch on some location offering. Venture fund Elevation Partners — which has reportedly acquired a stake recently in Facebook via the secondary market for employee shares — is also a financial backer of Yelp, and would likely favor a partnership (maybe that’s part of the reason Yelp walked away from a Google acquisition deal). Roger McNamee of Elevation is also said to be an important mentor of Zuckerberg’s.

    Facebook may have plenty of hubris when it comes to dominating social activity on the web, but I think it’s more likely that the company will opt to federate with or integrate services from Foursquare, Gowalla and others such as Yelp, rather than trying to duplicate them. It’s true that the network could simply add location awareness through its mobile apps, the same way Twitter has added the ability to tag tweets — but it would be just as easy, and would still allow Facebook to become the one ring for location, if it allowed other services to use its social graph API and then aggregated and mined the data.

    Post and thumbnail photos courtesy of Flickr user Dunechaser