Category: News

  • Empregos Formais no Nordeste (Caged) – Dez/09 e acumulado 2009

    http://estatistica.caged.gov.br/cons…12&anoCPT=2009

    Dezembro/2009

    Brasil………….-415.192…-1,23%
    Nordeste……..-15.532…..-0,30%

    Sergipe………-163……..-0,07%
    Ceará………..-356……..-0,04%
    Paraíba………-975……..-0,33%
    Pernambuco…-1.123…..-0,11%
    Alagoas………-1.181…..-0,39%
    R.G. do Norte..-1.699…..-0,48%
    Piauí…………..-1.954…..-0,91%
    Maranhão…….-3.827…..-1,16%
    Bahia………….-4.254…..-0,30%

    No Ano (2009)

    Brasil:………..+995.110…..+3,11%
    Nordeste:……+227.376 ….+4,74%

    Bahia…………+71.170……+5,30%
    Ceará………..+64.436……+7,73%
    Pernambuco…+46.717……+4,85%
    Paraíba……….+13.291…..+4,77%
    Piauí…………..+12.727…..+6,49%
    Sergipe……….+11.198…..+4,99%
    Alagoas……….+7.821…….+2,70%
    R.G do Norte…+4.800…….+1,40%
    Maranhão…….-4.784…….-1,46%

  • Zia Natural Skincare Acne Treatment Mask

    Zia Acne Treatment Mask contains camphor, tea tree and colloidal sulfur combined to banish blemishes and fight acne-causing bacteria. Zia’s intensive mask helps speed healing of breakouts and reduces redness. Collodial Sulfur loosens pores, blockage, and calms oil gland activity while Camphor Oil fi

    View Zia Natural Skincare Acne Treatment Mask Details

  • Why Firefox Is Hardly Doomed

    Even as Mozilla rolls out Release Candidate 2 of its Firefox 3.6 browser update, and is only days away from the official release, some are convinced that the upstart open source browser is doomed. However, Mozilla’s director of Firefox, Mike Beltzner, provides some good reasons why it isn’t.

    According to a post from InfoWorld, Google Chrome’s momentum and the “immovable object” of Microsoft’s Internet Explorer browser spell trouble for Firefox. The post also points to changes in Firefox’s development model:

    “Now we hear that Mozilla is abandoning its traditional major release cycle model in favor of smaller, incremental changes that it will slipstream through security patches and other maintenance updates. Basically, Mozilla’s developers are admitting that they can no longer deliver a fully baked and tested Firefox release in a timely fashion. So they’re switching to an incremental model where they can deliver progress in more manageable chunks, thus bypassing the lengthy external beta/feedback process altogether.”

    While it’s true that Mozilla can’t continue to deliver major updates to Firefox at a machine-gun pace anymore, a talk I had with Mozilla’s Beltzner leads me to believe that it will continue to strip market share from Internet Explorer, in particular. Historically, a large part of the reason for Firefox’s success has been the thriving ecosystem of useful extensions available for the browser. The active community of extension developers helps make the browser better than the competition, and Internet Explorer and Chrome have not caught up in that area.

    Mozilla has drawn criticism for possibly moving to an app store model for paid extensions, which could hurt the ecosystem of free extensions. Beltzner told me, though, that there is as of yet “no decision about moving to a paid model or not.”

    He also said:

    “It doesn’t really intersect with our community values because it’s at odds with open source and openness.”

    He stressed that Mozilla is seeking to retain core open values for Firefox development. I asked him, for example, about the arguments going on regarding HTML 5 for video within browsers as opposed to other plug-in and proprietary solutions. “Video needs to be part of dynamic web pages, and that’s why we think the HTML 5 tag is inevitable,” he said. “Plug-ins aren’t as efficient. We shouldn’t have to wait for vendors to create plug-ins, and wrestle with situations like no Flash being available for the iPhone. We look to open source for solutions, and that’s why we chose OGG [an open source video format].”

    In a demo of the Firefox 3.6 release candidate, Beltzner emphasized that Mozilla wants Firefox to be the best browser at efficiently running web applications. “Web apps need to understand files, and so does the browser,” he said. He also showed off how Firefox will increasingly allow users to drag and drop files and widgets directly to the browser from the desktop. And he stressed that Mozilla is very focused on Firefox’s ability to work efficiently with HD video.

    Over the long haul, I expect Mozilla is going to continue to see its greatest competition for Firefox — at least in terms of browser innovation – -come from Google Chrome, which is also open source. Google is focused on efficiently running web applications in Chrome, and has created a very stable browser for them.

    But until we see the very enthusiastic open source community surrounding Firefox failing to help its advancement, I don’t think we’re anywhere near Firefox being “doomed.” Mozilla’s own additions to the browser may come slower as Firefox’s size and popularity increase, but there is no browser that draws the same level of useful participation from the open source community as Firefox — not Google’s, and not Microsoft’s.

    Related GigaOM Pro Research:

    Image courtesy of Flickr user Johnath.

  • Reform: It’s a Bipartisan Thing

    Death penalty foes descended on Louisville, Ky. this weekend, in the latest wave of an emerging trend among criminal justice reform advocates: bipartisanship. It turns out that even in this much-examined age of political polarization, conservatives and progressives occasionally prove capable of privileging common sense over egos and ideologies.

    The Louisville gathering was the annual conference of the National Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty (NCADP), featuring Republican candidate for governor in Montana, Roy Brown, among others. Echoing arguments by NCADP, Brown made it clear that his opposition to capital punishment is, in fact, firmly rooted in his conservative perspective. In particular, his views that the death penalty is a). unjustifiably expensive and b). that “life is precious from the womb to a natural death” are two cornerstones of an effort to woo conservatives into adopting what many see as an inherently conservative position — that is, that governments shouldn’t be in the executions business.

    (more…)

  • Stake in Thailand bank good opportunity for Bank of Nova Scotia

    The rumoured sale of a 47% stake in Thailand-based Siam City Bank, is an opportunity that Bank of Nova Scotia should not pass up, says Blackmont Capital analyst Brad Smith. 

    "While not material from a consolidated bank perspective, the opportunity to have a front row seat in the formation of what could be Thailand's fifth largest bank sets BNS apart from its North American focused peers," said Mr. Smith in a note to clients.

    The analyst said the favoured bidder for Siam City is Thanachart Bank, which is 49% owned by Scotiabank, however other players are expected at the table, including Korea Development Bank. It is speculated that a winning bid will cost the purchaser roughly US$1-billion.

    Mr. Smith said a succesful bid would provide Bank of Nova Scotia earnings growth and regional diversification plus attractive risk adjusted returns on capital.

    "Based on Thanchart Bank's nine month published results, BNS has earned an 11% annualized return on its invested capital which compares very favourably to negative to low single digit return levels achieved by its domestic peers on their US retail banking initiatives," he said. 

    David Pett 

  • Graco recalls 1.5 million strollers

    WASHINGTON — About 1.5 million Graco strollers sold at Wal-Mart, Target and other major retailers are being recalled after some children’s fingertips were amputated by hinges on the products.

    The recall by Graco Children’s Products Inc. includes certain model numbers of its Passage, Alano and Spree Strollers and Travel Systems.

    The Exton, Pa., company received seven reports of children placing their fingers in a stroller’s canopy hinge as the canopy was being opened or closed. Five children had their fingertips severed and two children received cuts on their fingertips.

    The strollers were made in China by Graco and sold at AAFES, Burlington Coat Factory, Babies R Us, Toys R Us, Kmart, Fred Meyer, Meijer, Navy Exchange, Sears, Target, Wal-Mart and other retailers nationwide from October 2004 to December 2009.

    In announcing the recall Wednesday, the Consumer Product Safety Commission said the strollers pose an amputation and laceration hazard to children when opening or closing the canopy.

    The government advised consumers to stop using the strollers and contact Graco to receive a free repair kit.

    The recall involves strollers made between October 2004 and February 2008. The model numbers and manufacture dates are on the lower inside portion of the rear frame, just above the rear wheels.

    This is the second major recall in recent months of strollers that led to fingertip amputations and injuries. Last November, about a million Maclaren strollers were recalled after there were 12 reports of children’s fingertips being amputated by a hinge mechanism.

    The safety commission is now examining all strollers with the designs that have caused the fingertip amputations, said spokesman Scott Wolfson.

    “CPSC is taking a larger look at the entire product line to determine what steps need to be taken to keep children safe in and around strollers,” he said.

    For more information about the recalled strollers, consumers can call 800-345-4109 or visit cpsc.gov.

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • An Epic 22-Minute Behind-the-Scenes of Avatar [Movies]

    We’ve all heard allusions to Cameron’s massive sets, motion cap system and 3D/virtual cameras used to create Avatar, but this 22-minute clip actually shows us these techniques. (So don’t watch this video if you don’t want the magic spoiled):

    Hit up about 16 minutes in to see CGI characters layered into live action scenes in real time—which is essentially augmented reality making its way into filmmaking. [Sci Fi Wire]






  • Distance Education: UT Takes Lean Healthcare Course to Saudi Arabia

    KNOXVILLE — The College of Business Administration at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, is sending a team of four instructors to Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, on Saturday to teach two customized Lean for Healthcare courses at the King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Center.

    It is the first time UT faculty — who have delivered the course for organizations in Italy, Germany, Canada and across the U.S. — have tailored the course for healthcare professionals in the Middle East.

    A customized one-day lean healthcare overview will be delivered to approximately 40 senior King Faisal healthcare executives; a customized five-day Lean for Healthcare course will be delivered to approximately 40 King Faisal healthcare practitioners.

    “We’re excited to take the expertise we’ve developed in this area to another part of the world,” said Ted Stank, associate dean of executive education in UT’s College of Business Administration. “This opportunity illustrates how global the reputation of our college and curriculum has become.”

    Developed in 2007, Lean for Healthcare is a five-day program offered through the College of Business Administration’s Center for Executive Education. Designed for hospital executives, physician leaders, nursing executive and medical suppliers, the course teaches how to efficiently deliver quality healthcare by identifying and eliminating waste. Instructors include academics, lean practitioners and physicians who have gone through the program and have successfully implemented lean in their work environments.

    The opportunity to take the Lean for Healthcare course to Saudi Arabia came about, in part, because five physicians associated with King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Center graduated from the University of Tennessee’s Physician Executive MBA program (PEMBA). PEMBA has trained over 350 physician leaders from 45 U.S. states; Saipan; Puerto Rico; and eight other countries, including Saudi Arabia. Lean is one of the organizational improvement philosophies taught in PEMBA.

    “In Lean for Healthcare, the patient is the center of everything,” said Jody Crane, a 2004 PEMBA graduate who helped develop and is a lead faculty member for the Lean for Healthcare program. Crane is an emergency physician at Mary Washington Hospital in Fredericksburg, Va., and business director of Fredericksburg Emergency Medical Alliance.

    By applying lean principles, Crane and his team reduced the length of stay in the Mary Washington Hospital emergency department by more than 38 percent — from over four hours in 2004 to two hours and 30 minutes in 2009. They also decreased the rate with which patients leave without being seen by almost 90 percent — from a high of 13 percent in 2003 to 1.5 percent in 2009. In essence, the team created the capacity to treat 38 percent more patients with similar resources.

    Crane, who is traveling to Saudi Arabia, said UT’s Lean for Healthcare curriculum applies to for-profit and nonprofit healthcare facilities, as well as facilities that operate in countries having a government-run healthcare system.

    “The curriculum is the same; it’s robust enough to apply to just about any healthcare setting,” Crane said.

    For more about the Lean for Healthcare program, see http://LeanHealthcare.utk.edu.

    C O N T A C T :

    Amy Blakely (865-974-5034, [email protected])

    Cindy Raines (865-974-4359, [email protected])

  • Symbian Gets a New Skyfire Browser

    Remember Symbian? It’s still alive and kicking in spite of Nokia’s fascination with Maemo. Seriously, Symbian has got nothing to worry about as Nokia has made it clear they are still 100 percent behind the platform. Well, except for that portion of the company that is now behind Maemo. In any event, third party companies are still developing apps for Symbian, and the Skyfire browser has just opened up a new version for the platform.

    The new Skyfire 1.5 has performance improvements, along with some totally new features (from the press release):

    • Finger friendly UI: A new, intuitive, and finger friendly UI for high resolution touchscreen devices provides an easier browsing experience.
    • Smooth Scrolling: Kinetic scrolling has been enabled to Skyfire. Pan or flick the screen to move in any direction smoothly on touchscreen.
    • Full screen mode: For touchscreen, browse in full screen mode with no UI elements on the screen for maximum page visibility.
    • Auto-Rotate: Browse in portrait or landscape mode with a simple change of the device orientation.

    Skyfire 1.5 supports both Symbian S60 Third Edition and S60 Fifth Edition, and can be downloaded here. Skyfire is the mobile browser that does page rendering on the Skyfire servers, making for fast performance and the ability to display virtually any web page just like on the desktop.

  • Teresina (PI) | Thread oficial do estágio de obras

    Vualá! E fez-se o Estágio de Obras de Teresina!

    Sintão-se a vontade prar fazer perguntas sobre como vão nossas obrinhas e obrões!

  • Kournikova’s mother charged with child neglect

    Tennis star Anna Kournikova’s mother has been arrested in Florida and charged with child neglect.

    A Palm Beach police report says 46-year-old Alla Kournikova left her 5-year-old son home alone while she ran errands Tuesday.

    Someone passing by the home found the boy and called police.

    The boy told police he jumped out a second-story window, but was not seriously injured.

    Police said Alla Kournikova locked the home with a deadbolt and officers had to get inside through a second-story window.

    She was released from the Palm Beach County Jail after posting a $3,000 bond.

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • Google Runs Search Ad to Promote Its New Stance in China

    Google has been known for its quirky ways and has surprised most people with its unique approach to any problem. If it’s the company’s way of doing business, giving away most stuff and making money from ads, or the way it approaches innovation, developing many of its products as open-source projects, Google has rarely followed traditiona… (read more)

  • ARTICLE: Symbian-powered Sony Ericsson Vivaz leaks out

    Sony Ericsson Vivaz

    Like Sony Ericsson devices, but unimpressed with the Satio, Aino, and Yari?  The Sony Ericsson Vivaz (formerly known as “Kurara”) might be the device for you.

    Sporting a 3.2-inch WVGA display, the Sony Ericsson Vivaz offers Symbian S60 5th Edition, an 8.1-megapixel camera with image stabilization, face detection, and 720p video capture, A-GPS, Wi-Fi, FM radio, and TV-out.  The Vivaz will launch with four color options: Moon Silver, Cosmic Black, Galaxy Blue, and Venus Ruby.

    No word on pricing or availability at the moment,  Shortly after hitting the internet, Burson-Marsteller pulled the release, so it appears that it wasn’t supposed to be announced today.  In the world of Android, iPhone, BlackBerry, webOS, and Maemo, does the Vivaz appeal to you at all?

    Via Engadget


  • Windows Phone Video – Smartphone Round Robin

    It’s the penultimate week of the Smartphone Round Robin and my task this week is to try to understand where Windows Mobile / Windows Phone is at these days.  I’m seeking advice from Windows Mobile users over at WMExperts, so if you’re in that camp, go on and give me a shout-out there.

    If you’re looking to get the final word in on the comparative looks at webOS, Rene Ritchie of The iPhone Blog has it this week and he’s looking for assistance himself.

    After the break, Phil Nickinson of WMExperts walks me though the latest and greatest Windows Phones

    read more

  • Cooper encouraged by Buehrle’s workout program

    Mark Buehrle’s left arm already is a topic of discussion, but White Sox pitching coach Don Cooper is pleased with reports about Buehrle’s off-season preparation.

    ”He’d doing more arm specific stuff, and he hopes to continue to feel good,” said Cooper, who has stayed in contact with Buehrle through telephone calls and text messages.

    ”He’s doing all he can. So far, everything is going smoothly.”

    Buehrle’s health has been a topic of discussion for the past four years, as he has thrown at least 200 innings for nine consecutive seasons. Cooper wanted Buehrle to focus more on concentrating on his left arm to ensure his durability.

    Buehrle, 30, has worked with a trainer in his St. Louis-area off-season home this winter. At the end of the 2009 season, there was some speculation that, with the addition of Jake Peavy, Buehrle could be pushed back to as far as the fourth spot in the Sox’s rotation in an effort to preserve his arm.

    In recent seasons, the Sox have protected Buehrle’s arm by pitching him in minor league and ‘B’ games during spring training and adjusting the rotation during the first month of the regular season to give him an extra day of rest when it was possible.

    ”I’ll say this,” Cooper said. ”I’m getting a lot of energy from Mark Buehrle.”

    By Mark Gonzales

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • Ciudad Obregón – México

    Ciudad Obregón (locally known as Obregón) is the second largest city in the northern Mexican state of Sonora and is situated 525 km (326 mi) south of the state’s border with the U.S. state of Arizona. It is also the municipal seat of Cajeme municipality, located in the Yaqui Valley.

    A lifestyle that combines traditional and modernism with the opportunities of economic growth. Located in the heart of the Yaqui Valley, Ciudad Obregón’s stands out among tourists for its modern urban design and the comforts of a medium sized city, where cultural traditions and the advantages of contemporary living mesh to create an atmosphere of well being and productivity, of fun and security. It offers all the services for the modern tourist and business traveler; as well as the necessary infrastructure for meetings, symposia, and all type of academic and business reunions.

    On foot or by car, the visitor experiences the pleasure of enjoying a city with broad straight streets where everything is near: hotel services, restaurants that serve the freshest and most exquisite meats and sea food, shopping centers, medical services with state of the art technology, university campuses, sport hunting, long nights in the city’s nightspots that are packed on the weekends an above all, the hospitality of a population of 500 thousand people that are distinguished by having one of the highest education levels in the country. That’s Ciudad Obregón, a young city barely 78 years old, proud of its Yaqui roots and of its immigrants that in the early 20th century came from Europe and the United States brought by the promise of a kind and fertile valley where they intermingled with the population come from the mountains and other regions of Mexico. From these origins arises a hard working and peaceful community that has created a wide spectrum of options to please its visitors.:)

  • Sony Ericsson Kurara accidentally announced early, now known as “Vivaz”

    Vivaz1

    Don’t you just hate it when some big dumb press release company spills the beans on your top secret product long before you intended? Wait, you’ve never experienced that? Well, neither have we. We were just trying to, you know, connect with our readers or something.

    Sony Ericsson, on the other hand, has felt that burn. Just today, in fact! We’d already heard rumors and tales of an 8 megapixel Symbian phone called the Sony Ericsson Kurara; thanks to some mis-scheduling, it’s now about as official as things get.

    Here’s what we learned before they pulled down the presser:

    • The Kurara is now called the “Vivaz”. We liked the old name better; it reminded me of that “your crew run run” line in Notorious B.I.Gs “Hypnotize“.
    • It will launch sometime in Q1 of 2010 — in other words, sometime in the next 2-3 months.
    • Four colors: Silver Moon, Cosmic Black, Galaxy Blue and Venus Ruby.
    • 8.1 megapixel camera, capable of recording video at 720p, with continuous autofocus, geotagging, smile detection, and image stabilization.
    • It’ll run S60 5th edition with the same stylistic tweaks as you’d find on the Sony Ericsson Satio
    • One detail the press release skimped on was the price. According to the dudes over at PhoneArena, we should expect it to come in somewhere between $670 and $750 bucks.

    Crunch Network: CrunchGear drool over the sexiest new gadgets and hardware.


  • More Readers Skimming Google Headlines Than Going Directly to Newspaper Web Sites?

    By Jennifer Saba
    EditorandPublisher.com

    Aggregator sites — especially Google — really are hurting newspapers as more people increasingly simply skim the news headlines without bothering to click to linked newspaper Web sites, a new report finds.

    This alarming trend for newspapers is occurring as more people are getting their news online and through aggregators, according to the report from Outsell Research. In fact, just as many people turn to aggregators to get news first thing in the day as people who crack open a newspaper.

    The “News Users 2009” study conducted by Outsell Research affiliate analyst Ken Doctor found that 19% of people accessed Google, Yahoo, MSN and AOL News for news in 2009, up from 10% in 2006. For newspapers, 19% of those polled went there first, a drop from 23% in 2006.

    The report makes a distinction between newspaper print editions and newspaper Web sites. When isolating newspapers online, 6% of those surveyed went to newspaper Web sites first thing in 2009, up from 3% in 2006. Other sites dedicated to specific subjects, such as sports or business, were up 7% in 2009 from 4% in 2006.

    The study finds that together, aggregators, newspaper Web sites, and other sites account for 57% of where people turn to first for news, up from 33% in 2006.

    When it comes time for people finding local news, newspapers — particularly their Web sites — still shine. The study shows that over three years, newspaper Web sites have more than doubled their share to 17% from 8%, while aggregators grew to 4% from 1% during the same period.

    Outsell’s research shows that readers tend to only skim headlines at aggregator sites — specifically Google — for news. . . READ FULL STORY

  • Sony delays PlayStation motion controller

    TOKYO — Sony Corp. said Wednesday it has pushed back the release of its highly anticipated motion controller for the PlayStation 3 game console to the fall.

    The device will be available in North America, Europe, Japan and other Asian countries. Sony did not say how much the controller will cost.

    The controller was slated for a spring launch when Sony first announced details in September. But it decided to wait several months until new games were available to accompany the release, said Makiko Noda, spokeswoman for Sony Computer Entertainment Inc. in Tokyo.

    “We will continue to work to have a comprehensive portfolio of attractive and innovative games for the Motion Controller,” said Sony Computer Entertainment President Kazuo Hirai in a statement.

    Games are being developed by SCE and third party developers, he said, Sony said it will unveil its software lineup at a later date. Used with the existing PlayStation Eye camera, the controller can track players’ voices, faces and body motion.

    The controller, in turn, has on its end a light-emitting sphere that can be recognized by the PlayStation Eye camera. The latest announcement comes as both Sony and Microsoft Corp., maker of the Xbox 360, take aim at Nintendo Co.’s dominance in the gaming sector.

    Since Nintendo launched its popular Wii console in 2006, it has consistently outsold rivals. The company was the first to introduce motion-detecting controllers, which enable users to physically interact with games.

    Now Sony has developed its own version, as has Microsoft Corp. with its “Project Natal.”

    Natal, which combines a camera, depth sensor, microphone and processor, eliminates the need for any button-mashing device. Microsoft is expected to release Natal in time for the Christmas shopping season but has not set a specific date.

    Although demand for the Wii has slowed in recent months, it remained the most popular console among Americans in December with 3.18 million units sold.

    The PS3 sold 1.4 million units, while Microsoft Corp.’s Xbox 360 came close with 1.3 million.

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • HTC Bravo Snapped in the Wild

    On paper, the HTC Bravo appears to be everything the Nexus One offers.  Although the two practically mimic each other in terms of specs, there are some subtle differences. For instance, there is an optical joystick in place of the trackball. Also, there are four physical buttons across the bottom as opposed to touch sensitive buttons found on the Nexus One. The other two changes are the inclusion of Sense UI and multi-touch support. Other than that, one might consider them the same phone.

    Thanks to someone over at Omio, the first “in the wild” shot has arrived for the Bravo.  For now, it appears that Bravo will be headed to T-Mobile UK.  It’s not known whether or not this phone will arrive here in the US, but we get the feeling that many of our readers would welcome it.Couple the hardware of the Nexus One with the great interface that HTC has put together and you have a winning combination.

    Stay tuned to AndroidGuys for more details on the HTC Bravo as we can gather them.

    Other Great AndroidGuys Posts