Category: News

  • Obama administration grants temporary protected status to Haitian immigrants

    Answering the call of human-rights advocates, the Obama administration granted temporary protected status to Haitian nationals living in the United States as of Jan. 12.

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    Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano made the announcement this afternoon:

    This is a disaster of historic proportions and this designation will allow eligible Haitian nationals in the United States to continue living and working in our country for the next 18 months. Providing a temporary refuge for Haitian nationals who are currently in the United States and whose personal safety would be endangered by returning to Haiti is part of this Administration’s continuing efforts to support Haiti’s recovery.

    TPS will protect Haitians from deportation for 18 months and allow them to work legally in the United States. Even before this week’s disaster, remittances from Haitians living abroad accounted for more than a quarter of the gross domestic product of Haiti, the Western Hemisphere’s poorest nation.

    Administration officials told the New York Times that the special status would cover at least 100,000 Haitians believed to be in the United States illegally, along with about 30,000 Haitians who have been ordered deported. The U.S. government already grants TPS to people from El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua and the Sudan.

    “We are thrilled that at long last deserving Haitians will be getting TPS,” said Cheryl Little, executive director of the Florida Immigrant Advocacy Center. “We hope this will provide some comfort to Haitians here who are suffering in the aftermath of the devastating earthquake.”

  • New meds and BS issues — curious

    So I’m now on pancreatic enzymes, because my lazy sack-of-crud pancreas won’t even help me digest food anymore. (Seriously — can I kick it out of the basement and make it get a job, or at least pay me some rent??) I’m finally digesting fat again, which means…. NORMAL POOP!!! Sorry for the TMI, but after 3 years of diarrhea, I’ve had enough. Also, I suddenly feel satisfied again. I used to eat and eat and eat until I was sick and still feel this overwhelming horrible NEED to eat more, more more! I get now that my body was deficient in lots of stuff because of malabsorption.

    Anyway, I’ve been really good (until today, shame on me!) remembering to take my meds with every single meal. I started taking them last Friday, and my sugars are acting strangely. It seems like I’m suddenly less resistant to insulin — my highs fall faster, and sometimes lead to lows. I’ve had a low every single day since going on these meds, where I haven’t had a single one in over a month before this. I’ve actually had a day this week with TWO lows under 50. I’m sure that this is now becoming a bad cycle, because my liver is probably depleted of glucose for now.

    It seems connected, but how could the meds be causing this? All they do is help me digest fat and protien (ironically, my carb-digesting enzyme, amalyse, works PERFECTLY WELL!!) — why would be able to metabolize more food help my sugars — and maybe help them a little too much?

  • JavaScript Hack Brings Flash to the iPhone…Sort of

    Adobe FlashThe iPhone’s lack of support for Adobe’s Flash platform has been a topic of much debate ever since the smartphone’s 2007 début. However, a recently developed JavaScript work-around successfully manages to get Apple’s popular iPhone running Flash files, without the need to void your warranty by jailbreaking.

    The script, which goes by the name of Gordon, was capably developed by Tobias Schneider, a programmer from Munich, Germany. Sadly the small script does not give true fully functional Flash support to the iPhone, as the software only enables Flash files to be displayed within the iPhone’s Safari browser.

    However, the hapless and rather weighted shortcomings do not end there, as in order for the script to work correctly, website owners must incorporate Schneider’s code on each and every flash page they want to display correctly on the iPhone. In addition to this, preliminary tests have shown that pages running the new Gordon hack push the iPhone’s central processing unit (CPU) to it’s up-most limits.

    Schneider’s freely distributed open-source project, which works thanks to a Flash runtime written in pure JavaScript, unfortunately has its limitations, despite it being admirable and in some ways a successful effort. The restraints in place will stop this nifty piece of code from receiving wide-spread adoption, so don’t expect too many Flash-enabled sites popping up on your iPhone any time soon.

    If you want to see Flash in action on your iPhone now, you can. Simply get Safari open and head on over to Paul Irish’s site to give various demos of Gordon a spin. But be warned Adobe’s Flash is one resource-intensive extension which will eat at your iPhone’s battery power in no time.

  • Volkswagen may succeed as replacing Toyota as largest automaker

    Volkswagen New Compact Coupe Hybrid Concept

    Just two years ago, people laughed at Volkswagen CEO Martin Winterkorn’s ambition to zoom past Toyota to become the world’s leading producer of automobiles. At that point, VW sold 3 million fewer cars annually than their Japanese target and had a questionable reputation when it came to quality. Toyota was also just poised to overtake GM as the world’s leading producer and seemed untouchable.

    Such is not the case today. This past November marked the first time that VW out-built its Japanese rival and while ToMoCo still moves more units per year, VW has closed the gap by half. The quality issue still remains a point of contention for VW, but a series of damaging recalls by the Japanese magnate received much unwelcome attention from the American public.

    Winterkorn is seizing the opportunity presented by Toyota’s negative press, and has pulled out all stops. VW has made a deal whereby they are to purchase a 20% stake in Suzuki in a move to target the explosive markets of Southeast Asia and India. He has also committed over $11 billion to Audi over the next three-years to take on BMW and Mercedes-Benz with the introduction of 10 new models.

    In the U.S., Winterkorn plans to try the inverse of the failed upmarket attempt that is known as the VW Phaeton and moving in on Ford, Honda, and Toyota customers as the company gets set to introduce a competitor to the $16,000 Toyota Corolla later this year.

    – By: Stephen Calogera

    Source: BusinessWeek


  • Put Some Spring in Your Bathroom

    In my current house, I have a bathroom that has no windows. I guess a lot of bathrooms have no windows, but it seems like I’ve always had bathroom windows before. (All the scary movies have windows in the bathrooms, too, so the bad guy can sneak in and hide in the shower. Hmm. Maybe I should be glad I don’t have one!) Anyway, when you don’t have windows in a room, you really have to have a bit of color and plenty of lights and mirrors.

    I’ve got the mirrors down and I’ve got walls that are a nice peach color, but all the accents are beige. Beige is so…beigey, you know? So, when I saw that The Company Store had a new spring line of bathroom products that are cheerful, colorful and just happen to match my walls, I was a little excited. For those of you who also want to bring a little spring to your bathrooms, here are my two favorites:

    hibiscus rug

    The hibiscus flower rugs are very colorful and would be fun in a tropical themed bathroom. I also think one of these rugs would look cute in a little girl’s bedroom.

    picnic stripe towels

    These towel sets are also very colorful. I absolutely want the pink and peach stripe set. (I like the floral ones, too, but I don’t think the guys would be as excited about them as I am!

    Do you plan to brighten up your bathroom for spring?

    Photos via The Company Store

    Post from: Blisstree

    Put Some Spring in Your Bathroom

  • The Week’s Best iPhone Apps [IPhone Apps]

    In this week’s self-contradictory app roundup: Videos, recorded! Hoops, shot! Stuff, copied and pasted! Photos, LEGO-ed! Navigation, given away! Classic movies, obsessively documented! Marbles, gratuitously exploded! Rivals of Yelp, doomed to die! And more…

    If you’d rather view this post as a single page, click here.

    Simplenote: An app that’s similar to, but obviously better than, the built-in notes app, if only for its online syncing abilities. The app is now free, though you can still download a paid, ad-free version for $5.

    Facebook: Facebook! You probably already have this. But if you don’t, get it now, because it has fully customizable push notifications. If you have the app, just check for updates. If not, it’s still free.

    LEGO Photo: Takes photos, and converts them into pixel art, in which the pixels are actually little LEGOs. Sort of. There’s a nice ripple effect when rendering photos, though the results, unless your subject is well-defined, can be kind of muddy. Free.

    CoPilot Live Directions: CoPilot is an all-around decent turn-by-turn app, and it’s one of the cheapest available. This version, though, lets you use the app for free for 30 days, after which voice directions, traffic, and a few other features are stripped. But you still get to keep turn-by-turn directions for free, which is pretty amazing.

    Momento: A very pretty journaling app. Unless you’ve felt the specific urge to keep a journal or scrapbook on your iPhone before, it’s hard to recommend this. But if that’s something you’re into—apparently this is a thing, now—then there isn’t a nicer way to indulge your habit. $3.

    iVideocamera: When this video camera app came out, it was a joke—it recorded postage-stamp-sized video at a stuttering framerate, without sound. Now, it records at a decent resolution—320×486—at a full 10fps. This conforms to commonly held definitions of “video,” almost! There’s still no sound, but this is the best you can do without jailbreaking. A dollar.

    Turner Classic Movies: TCM’s got an extensive database of vintage film trivia, previews, posters and other info—it’s an invaluable source for people who like films that are older than they are. The app is a faithful adaptation of most of the web content, including a lot of video. As a non-buff I found a fair amount to be entertained by here, though I wish it was a little less than three dollars.

    Pastefire: Remember Pastebot? It was great. Pastefire is like that, sliced in half: Any content you paste to your online Pastefire account, or into a bookmarklet, shows up on your iPhone in Pastefire. One you’ve got it set up, it’s quite a bit faster than sending an email, and the app gives you a lot of options as to how to deal with the pasted content once you’ve got it. Free.

    Typograffit: Instant ransom letters! It’s pure gimmickry, but pretty well executed. $2.

    Dark Nebula: is great. It’s basically a marble labyrinth game with guns, and explosions. My opinion here doesn’t really matter, though, because over the weekend, this app—normally a dollar—is free. The discount is live now, so GO GO GO.

    NBA Hotshot: I laughed at how simple the original Skee-ball game was, but I kept coming back to it. NBA Hotshot used the same physics engine and general concept, so if you’ve already got one, you probably don’t need the other. But if you don’t, this simple throw-the-ball-in-the-hoop casual game is a brilliant timesuck, which you can play for a short or as long as you want.

    MobileMe Galleries: Apple doesn’t release official iPhone apps that much, and adding a MobileMe gallery after all these months seems a little tardy. Thankfully, it’s pretty good—better than Flickr’s app, for example, and a nice value-add for MobileMe subscribers.

    Yelp: So, uh, as I was writing this roundup, I got an email from Yelp. It was long, and it was announcing a new version of the app. Here’s the part that matters:

    Yelp Check-ins: We’ve now added the ability for yelpers to “Check-in” to businesses. This includes being able to broadcast your whereabouts and send Quick Tips to your friends on Yelp, Facebook and Twitter who, if they opt-in to these updates, will be able to see your location both via “Push” alerts, as well as on a map. Active users of this feature may receive “Regular” status of highly-frequented businesses. This means they are part of an active group of people who patronize a business and this moniker will appear next to reviews and tips and on business pages in the app, as well as on the business listing on Yelp.com.

    In other words, Yelp probably just murdered FourSquare in its sleep. Yikes. There are some other nice updates to the app’s augmented reality feature, account support and sharing faculties. Still free.

    This list is in no way definitive. If you’ve spotted a great app that hit the store this week, give us a heads up or, better yet, your firsthand impressions in the comments. And for even more apps: see our previous weekly roundups here, and check out our Favorite iPhone Apps Directory. Have a great weekend, everybody!







  • The GAO Report: The Great Student Theory of History

    At the Stanford-in-Washington (SIW) Fall 2009 reunion this week, we discussed the concerns toward our reintegration into life at the Farm. Similar to our classmates who study abroad, we return to campus from a quarter in D.C. experiencing “reverse cultural shock.”

    Practical and tangible challenges dominated the conversation: feeling isolated living in non-traditional settings like Oak Creek and Escondido Village (a mom yesterday chided me for endangering the lives of small children by forgetting to close a gate in EV), having to adjust to the rigorous standard of classes at Stanford, dealing with the onslaught of summer internships recruitment and facing the imminent entry into the real world upon graduation. People missed the SIW house, the clear delineation of the day between eight hours of work and evening classes (unfortunately, there is now more potential for time mismanagement), the physical convenience of living in a city and uhmmm…the brunches (yes, SIW has an amazing chef).

    The overwhelming attitude toward these challenges was that they can and should be conquered easily, with the passing of time. The focus is on surmounting, rather than understanding such issues. There is nothing like spending time in the nation’s capitol that forces you to be a pragmatist. While some of my peers felt “old and disillusioned,” and commented on the disconcerting insularity, what seemed to be missing from the conversation was a broader discourse about the underlying sources of our displacement. Perhaps struggling more than in this process than others, I am desperate to theorize and seek answers.

    As someone who has been on campus continuously for the past two years, the last four months was the first time that I left “the bubble” and lived in an actual American city. For those of us whose being was inherently connected to the movement and rhythm of this place, we deal with the strange paradox of Stanford after some time away–confronting a place that remains the same yet changes rapidly. The world that was my Stanford has become radically different. June 2009 Stanford is not the same as January 2010 Stanford.

    Sure, things have stayed constant. As I stroll (okay fine, more like madly dash) around campus, there is comfort in the familiar sights and patterns. The frightening thing was realizing that Stanford goes on without you. It raises the questions: Do we matter? Do our four years here on the Farm make a difference in the long run?

    In an uncharacteristic moment of fatalism, our dear columns editor Zachary Warma published a column on Monday that offered a disheartening conclusion: we are not so special. I disagree. A sense of cyclical repetition of experiences and norms certainly govern our time at Stanford. But, we are unique and make distinct contributions to our environments. Individuals matter. Individuals make history.

    While it is difficult and almost impossible for us to directly measure and quantify each of our impact on the campus community, our mere presence affects others and inevitably this University. Indeed, the tough readjustment some of us are encountering can be attributed to the change in people. Undoubtedly, the graduation of last year’s class witnessed the departure of some of my closest friends and intellectual and political mentors.

    As a result, this place feels different. Whether it is dropping by The Daily office last week or sitting in ASSU meetings, the dynamics and atmosphere seem drastically altered. It is the personalities that define campus institutions and culture. Ideas and ideologies are important. However, without people pushing them forward and driving implementation, they would be insignificant.

    The behavior of institutions at Stanford springs from the behavior of individual actors–their idiosyncrasies, ambitions, abilities and foibles. Individuals define the intention of the organization, formulate its priorities and devise its strategies. There is no such thing as inevitability. Individuals are the ones that make decisions. More importantly, our predecessors have laid the foundation for all of us–just as we will be laying the framework for future generations of Stanford students.

  • Text-to-donate total exceeds $10m – I think we’re onto something

    Chances are you’ve heard of the text-to-donate system set up by the Red Cross to provide relief to quake-devastated Haiti. It seems that the ease of donating and the immediacy of the disaster have prompted a response far beyond what the Red Cross anticipated. I can understand why: I used the system to donate $10 (not to toot my own horn), and found it as easy as dropping a quarter in a slot at the grocery store. So: good work everyone, and if you haven’t donated yet, give it a shot or check out Google’s catchall page for Haiti relief efforts.

    The success of this campaign raises some questions about the way this sort of thing should be handled by the telecoms. A $10 charge will appear on my T-Mobile bill, I’m assuming; they volunteered to support this effort, so I think that’ll be the end of it, but now that I’ve gotten a taste of it, I want more. Not necessarily just for donations, but for mobile charging in general.


  • Intel’s Impressive Q4 Beat Triggers… Major Tech Sell-Off? [Voices]

    By Eric Savitz, Blogger and Columnist, Barron’s, Tech Trader Daily

    Intel (INTC) last night reported Q4 results that were, by any measure, well above expectations. Q4 revenue was up 28 percent year-over-year, and EPS beat by a dime, even before backing out the company’s one-time payment to settle its litigation with Advanced Micro Devices (AMD). The big beat figured to set up the market to rally this morning; but as it often does, the market has defied expectations, and tech stocks are selling off big time.

    Several of the more bearish Intel analysts noted this morning that the company’s impressive Q4 gross margin – 64.7 percent, up 7 points sequentially and 12 points year over year – may be as good as it gets. Auriga analyst Daniel Berenbaum this morning wrote in a research note that “gross margin arguably peaked for the cycle in Q4, which could prove a headwind for the stock.”

    Read the rest of this post on the original site

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  • Marc Jacobs’ USB Hub Has Love For You If You Were Born In The ’80s, The ’80s [USB]

    For the more fashionable readers at Gizmodo (someone? Anyone? Bueller?) comes these Marc Jacobs USB hubs, disguised as ye olde mixtapes. MIXTAPES. You remember them, right? [The Malcolm via Hypebeast]







  • A.P.C. – Spring/Summer 2010 Lookbook

    apc-springsummer2010-main

    You can always count on A.P.C. to present us fashion that’s always sensible, timeless, and classic. Whenever I look at new collections from the label, I’m immediately reminded of the French new wave cinema era, but I’m sure it’s not just me. If ever someone in Hollywood were to recreate the films of Godard and Truffaut, I suggest that any costume designer or wardrobe personnel look to A.P.C. for inspiration. For Spring/Summer 2010, A.P.C. looks to dress you up in simple designs, patterns, and basic silhouettes. However, camouflage is introduce for those who dare to go beyond the brand’s simplistic nature.

    Continue reading for more images.





















  • Susan Bysiewicz Responds

    Dear Attorney McKeen,

    Thank you for the invitation to respond to your comments and questions.  While I’ll be the first to admit that this was not how I planned to spend my first few days as a candidate for Attorney General,  I believe the question was reasonable given the very vague wording of the statute.   I am pleased to have the opportunity to respond.  My only regret is that there were several media outlets that ran with a “story” before they had all the facts – before they did the proper research and before they gave me time to respond.

    The office of Attorney General is one of the most active and professionally demanding in our state government. Connnecticut’s legal system has been fortunate to benefit from twenty years of outstanding service by one of the nation’s premier Attorneys General, my friend Richard Blumenthal.  After two decades of such strong service, we need an Attorney General capable of filling the shoes left by Richard, an Attorney General not just qualified for the office, but ready for its challenging blend of legal practice and large organizational management. I am the only candidate with the experience we need to take on that role starting on Day One.

    For over twenty years, I have been honored to actively practice law in Connecticut as a member in good standing of the Connecticut bar. My strong and diverse legal qualifications include 8 years in private practice, and 16 years in public service as an attorney, first as a state legislator and later, as Secretary of the State. There is no legal basis to conclude that “active practice at the bar of this state” excludes those attorneys who are practicing in the public or corporate arenas.  To interpret “active practice” to mean only private practice would be a mistake.

    Over the years I have made all filings and paid fees consistent with the filings and fees paid by other practicing attorneys in the state, including the client security fund payment and the attorney occupational tax return. I am also registered on the State of CT Judicial web site as an active attorney in the State.

    This makes me eligible for the office of Attorney General. Furthermore, please review the definition of the “practice of law” in the Connecticut Practice Book, which governs attorney conduct in the state which demonstrates that, in my service as Secretary of the State, I am clearly practicing law. The relevant section is: Sec. 2-44A(a)(2), which includes as “practice of law”:

    Giving advice or counsel to persons concerning or with respect to their legal rights or responsibilities or with regard to any matter involving the application of legal principles to rights, duties, obligations or liabilities.

    My daily and active role in counseling businesses, voters, candidates, and elections officials on their rights and duties easily qualifies me as subject to bar discipline for these aspects of my Secretary of the State role.  That is to say, I am practicing law when I do this. This is not to suggest that this means only a lawyer can be the Secretary of the State; rather, what it means is that any member of the bar who becomes Secretary of the State will be considered by the bar authorities to be “practicing law” and thus needs to go above and beyond a non-attorney Secretary in terms of adhering to the bar rules in his or her work. This is standard; the bar authorities often impose additional ethical and other obligations on attorneys who are doing things that ordinary citizens also might do.

    The subject of this question has become a perfect illustration of a key part of the job of the Attorney General: interpreting the practical application of the law of the State of Connecticut.  I view this as an opportunity to preview the comprehensive, measured responses that I will provide the people of Connecticut when serving them as Attorney General and I thank you for that opportunity.

    Throughout the campaign, I invite a thorough review of both my qualifications for office, as well as my technical eligibility.  I am confident that, upon close examination, the voters of Connecticut will see that I am the best qualified candidate to serve as their next Attorney General.

    by Susan Bysiewicz

    Secretary of the State of Connecticut

    Candidate for Attorney General

  • Miguel Correia | Guess The City

    This GTC will be all at this thread.

    Rules:
    3 guesses per post;
    If you are from the area of the city please do not guess.

    Points Rules:
    1 point for the country;
    3 points for the city;
    4 points if the country was not said and you guess the right city.

    Ranking:
    SanMiguel – 4
    el_norte – 1

  • Cielo de fuego

    A ver que les parece esta … :colgate:

  • Pay It (Fast) Forward: Man reportedly gives away his Audi R8 V10 to pair of valets

    Filed under: , , ,

    2010 Audi R8 5.2 FSI V10 – Click above for high-res image gallery

    It isn’t everyday that you see a beautiful black Audi R8 V10 on the road. But it happens. What never happens is a guy driving up to you in an Audi R8 V10 and walking up to you and handing you the keys. For keeps. That was probably true before a couple weeks ago, but we can’t say that is the case anymore. According to New Zealand’s Independent Online, an unknown businessman has literally given the keys to his R8 to a pair of men he had never met before because he had a dream telling him to take the vehicle to Table Mountain in South Africa.

    The generous man’s only request was that the two men, who were given the cars because they had drivers licenses, use the German luxury vehicle to help others without wanting anything in return. To make good on their end of the bargain, Fabrice Manganga Mugala and Desire Shima are delivering food to the homeless and needy people. The two have also cut a slit into the hood of the R8 (since the engine is out back) so others can place donation money and messages therein. The slit appears to have been professionally added to the bonnet, and the inscription around the opening reads “a better future for all.” We’re thinking Fabrice and Desire are already reaping the benefits of a better future, and if the two pay it forward as instructed, they won’t be the only ones to win out.

    Photos by Drew Phillips / Copyright (C)2010 Weblogs, Inc.
    [Source: Independent Online]

    Pay It (Fast) Forward: Man reportedly gives away his Audi R8 V10 to pair of valets originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 15 Jan 2010 18:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Report: 2011 Chevrolet Silverado HD to debut in Chicago

    Filed under: , , , , , ,

    According to our friends over at PickupTrucks.com, Chevrolet will show off the latest iteration of its Heavy Duty pickup truck at the Chicago Auto Show next month. The 2011 Chevy Silverado 2500 and 3500 (2010 model shown above) are expected to be equipped with a new version of the well-regarded 6.6-liter Duramax diesel V8 engine that will almost assuredly use a urea solution to curb nitrogen oxide emissions. General Motors continues to partner with the diesel experts at Isuzu for the Duramax engine.

    Under what’s sure to be somewhat revised sheetmetal will reportedly be an all-new chassis along with some “other surprises,” surmises PickupTrucks.com. We expect a GMC Sierra HD to also be on display, but we can’t say for sure. We’ll be on hand in Chicago to see how GM reacts to the 2011 Ford Super Duty pickups and their all-new 6.7-liter diesel V8 engine, so stay tuned.

    [Source: PickupTrucks.com]

    Report: 2011 Chevrolet Silverado HD to debut in Chicago originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 15 Jan 2010 18:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Elísio Medrado/BA – Um Paraíso de beleza e tranquilidade

    Elísio Medrado/BA

    Antigo nome: Paraíso
    Fundação: 20 de julho de 1962
    Gentílico: medradense
    Prefeito: Everaldo (2009 – 2012)

    Localização
    12°56’45"S 39°31’19"W
    Mesorregião Centro Norte Baiano IBGE/2008
    Microrregião Feira de Santana IBGE/2008
    Municípios limítrofes: Castro Alves, Santa Terezinha, Varzedo, São Miguel das Matas Milagres e Amargosa.
    Distância até a capital 240 km

    Características geográficas
    Área: 199,541 km²
    População: 8.183 hab. (IBGE/2009)
    Densidade: 39,5/km² (2002)
    Altitude: 390m
    Clima: Tropical úmido
    Temperatura média: 24°C
    Bioma: Mata Atlântica

    Indicadores
    IDH: 0,655 médio (PNUD/2000)
    PIB: R$ 30.038,00 (IBGE/2006)
    PIB: per capita R$ 3.799,00 (IBGE/2006)
    Frota: 638 veículos.

    Economia:
    Pecuária: bovinos, eqüinos e suínos,
    Agricultura: café, mandioca, castanha de caju, laranja, banana, uva e maracujá.
    Indústria: Café e Farinha de mandioca.

    Espero que gostem!

    Abraços!

  • Qual o prédio mais alto da sua cidade??

    Qual o prédio mais alto da sua cidade???

    Aqui em Sertãozinho o prédio mais alto é o Via Condotti, com 26 andares…ele será inagurado em 2012…:D

    POR ENQUANTO o prédio mais alto é o São Francisco com seus 19 andares…

    1 – Residencial Via Condotti (Construtora Habiarte Barc)

    2 – Residencial São Francisco (Construtora Stefani Nogueira)

    :tiasd:

    _________________________________________________________________

    E NA SUA CIDADE…QUAL É O PRÉDIO MAIS ALTO??

    😆

  • AT&T goes head to head with Verizon, drops prices on its unlimited plans

    new-att-logo2

    You knew it was coming but, wow, that was fast. The same day Verizon Wireless announced its new unlimited plans (and a day after we leaked it), AT&T also announced that it is dropping its Unlimited Talk plan to $69.99 monthly for individuals and $119 for Family Talk customers (two lines), matching Verizon’s latest unlimited offerings to a tee. Unlimited Talk & Text plans for its Quick Messaging devices will also match Verizon’s offering, coming in at a competitive $89.99 monthly for individuals and $149.99 for two lines on a Family Talk plan. Last but not least, AT&T will offer its Unlimited Voice and Data plan for smartphone customers, including iPhone owners, at a monthly cost of $99 for individuals and  $179.99 for two lines on a Family Talk plan. Unlimited texting plans remain the same at $20 per month for individuals and $30 per month for Family Talk customers. All prices go into effect Monday, January 18th. Press release after the jump.

    Thanks, Rich!

    AT&T Announces New Unlimited Plans

    Smartphone Leader Increases Value of Nation’s Fastest 3G Network and Wide Selection of Industry-Leading Devices

    DALLAS, Jan. 15 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ — AT&T* today announced new unlimited plans across all devices –including its industry-leading lineup of smartphones — to provide more value and choice for customers who want to talk, text and surf on the nation’s fastest 3G network.

    “With more than twice the number of smartphone customers as our nearest competitor, we are committed to offering great value and choice for customers who want to talk, text and surf on the nation’s fastest 3G network,” said Ralph de la Vega, president and CEO, AT&T Mobility and Consumer Markets. “Our new plans reflect customers’ continuing desire to do more with their phones – including talking and browsing the Web at the same time.  Plus these new plans make it even more attractive to choose AT&T which already offers customers the best 3G experience and the industry’s most popular and innovative devices.”

    The new plans, which will be available beginning Monday, Jan. 18, can be ordered at AT&T’s 2,200 company-owned retail stores and kiosks, through convenient online service at www.att.com, or at one of the thousands of authorized AT&T retail locations.

    • Feature Phone customers may choose unlimited talk for $69.99. Family Talk customers (prices assume two lines) may choose unlimited talk for $119.99 per month.  Texting plans remain unchanged at $20 for unlimited plans for individuals and $30 for Family Talk plans.
    • Quick Messaging Device customers may choose unlimited talk and text for $89.99 per month. Quick Messaging Device customers with Family Talk plans may choose unlimited talk and text for $149.99 per month (for two lines). These prices include a required minimum of $20 per month for individual plans and $30 per month for Family Talk plans in texting and/or Web browsing plans for new and upgrading customers.
    • All smartphone customers, including iPhone customers, may now buy unlimited voice and data for $99.99.  For smartphone customers with Family Talk plans (prices assume 2 smartphones), unlimited voice and data is now available for $179.99. Texting plans remain unchanged at $20 for unlimited plans for individuals, $30 for Family Talk Plans.

    Beginning Monday, existing AT&T customers can change to any of the new plans without penalty or contract extension with the online account management tool at www.att.com/wireless.

    AT&T customers enjoy the ability to talk and browse the Web at the same time on AT&T’s 3G network, the nation’s fastest, which covers more than 230 million people across the nation.

    For customers who do not choose an unlimited voice plan, AT&T offers Rollover, which lets customers keep the minutes they don’t use.  In addition, AT&T offers A-List, which offers unlimited calling to up to 10 domestic phone numbers.

    For the complete array of AT&T offerings, visit www.att.com.

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  • Harvard mobilizes relief fund

    Harvard University will create a relief fund for faculty and staff who have been directly affected by the devastating earthquake in Haiti.

    The University’s executive vice president, Katherine N. Lapp, announced the fund Friday (Jan. 15), broadening Harvard’s on-campus response to the crisis in the beleaguered Caribbean nation. Members of the Harvard community will be encouraged to contribute to the fund, and any employee struggling with a personal loss from the disaster can apply for financial assistance.

    “We want to be sure that we are responding to this catastrophe on a personal level as well as at an institutional level,” Lapp said. “Many members of the Harvard community are coping with this tragedy, and we want to make sure that we are supportive of them.”

    Details about eligibility and administration of the fund were being worked out by a Central Administration team.

    Additionally, Harvard Human Resources was reviewing paid leave policies to provide affected staff members with more scheduling flexibility and financial support. An early census of Harvard employees revealed there are at least four dozen with direct ties to Haiti.

    In addition, Harvard College Dean Evelynn M. Hammonds posted a letter to students on the Faculty of Arts and Sciences Web site, expressing sadness for the people of Haiti, while acknowledging that undergraduates are eager to help.

    But for the time being, she wrote, students are better off helping at home rather than heading for the Caribbean.

    “The most effective thing that Harvard students can do in the immediate term is to support relief efforts through fundraising and other activities,” said Hammonds, who is also the Barbara Gutmann Rosenkrantz Professor of the History of Science and of African and African American Studies.

    In the letter, she mentioned three ways that students can help: Harvard’s Office for the Arts, which is exploring the idea of a benefit event or concert; the Phillips Brooks House Association, which will help to coordinate public service aid for Boston-area Haitian communities; and Harvard’s dedicated Web site for Haitian financial help.

    The situation in Haiti remains dire, said Arrietta Chakos, director of the Acting in Time Advance Recovery Project at the Harvard Kennedy School.

    In an e-mail Friday, she outlined the first priorities for a ravaged Haiti: water, communications, fuel, and power. All are lifelines that must be in place for relief operations to work in the crucial next several days.

    “The humanitarian response now has to be swift, decisive, and coordinated,” wrote Chakos. “The incoming responders must be self-sufficient, collaborative, and focused on immediate need because the Haitian authorities are not yet able to manage the situation.”

    She called the aftermath of the 7.0-magnitude earthquake a “landscape-scale” disaster that only magnified Haiti’s “pre-event systemic vulnerabilities.”

    Haiti is one of the poorest nations in the world. Even before the quake, few homes had reliable power, sewage disposal, or safe drinking water.

    After water, fuel, and other basics, other needs “must follow close on,” said Chakos, including medical services, emergency housing, and a continuity of Haitian governance.

    In the long term, “strengthening the social connections among people is crucial to rebuilding hope and purpose,” said Chakos.  “The disaster literature shows that typically 10 years is the period for a region to recover from catastrophe. Haiti will likely follow this trajectory.”

    Longer-term recovery “will emerge with support from responding nations,” she said, “in the form of governance guidelines, social institution building, and development of safe building practices.”

    Meanwhile, a common Haitian phrase tells the story:  ”kenbe fem,” which means “hold on” – as in, “Keep the faith, don’t despair, help is on the way.”

    Help has raced toward earthquake-shaken Haiti from many nations this week, as well as from groups of experts and medical personnel affiliated with Harvard University, which has several institutional ties to the country. A 7.0-magnitude earthquake struck the island nation Tuesday (Jan. 12), radiating shock waves from an epicenter 10 miles southwest of Haiti’s crowded capital of Port-au-Prince.

    Harvard President Drew Faust announced today (Jan. 14) a dedicated Web page to make it easier for members of the Harvard community to respond to the crisis.

    “Scenes of such suffering remind us of our own humanity, and our natural reflex is to reach out to help,” she said. “The destruction in Haiti has shocked and saddened us all. Our thoughts and prayers are with the Haitian people, the men and women who are working to help them recover from the earthquake that has devastated their nation, and the members of the Harvard community who are anxious for word from friends and loved ones living on the island.”

    Assistance was en route in other ways as well.

    Massachusetts General Hospital has deployed the International Medical Surgical Response Team (IMSuRT). It will go to Haiti within days.

    The Harvard Humanitarian Initiative (HHI) is coordinating a roster of medical, surgical, and public health personnel within the Partners HealthCare System who are available for deployment to Haiti.  (Interested volunteers can contact Brian Daly at [email protected].)

    Harvard’s Joia Mukherjee left for Haiti Wednesday (Jan. 13). She is chief medical officer of the Harvard-affiliated Partners In Health (PIH), a not-for-profit aid group with community-based clinics in Haiti and eight other countries.

    Going to Haiti also is David Walton, an internist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston who is associated with PIH and is an instructor in medicine at Harvard Medical School. In 2008, he helped to set up a 54-bed hospital in La Colline in Haiti’s rugged Central Plateau.

    Mukherjee and Walton are the vanguard of Harvard-affiliated assistance. Their reports will help focus future relief efforts in the form of supplies and personnel.

    Already laboring in a temporary Port-au-Prince field hospital is physician Louise Ivers, an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School. She sent a pleading e-mail Wednesday. “Port-au-Prince is devastated,” it said, “lots of deaths. SOS, SOS. … Temporary field hospital … needs supplies, pain meds, bandages. Please help us.”

    Ivers is clinical director in Haiti for PIH, which opened its first clinic in rural Haiti in 1985 and has since opened eight more that are run by PIH’s sister organization Zanmi Lasante, which means “Partners In Health” in Haitian Creole.

    PIH also has community-based medical operations in Peru, Russia, Lesotho, Malawi, Rwanda, Mexico, Guatemala, and the United States. The clinics are staffed by local medical personnel as well as by Harvard faculty and students.

    The group’s main hospital is L’Hôpital Bon Sauveur in Cange, about 20 rugged miles outside Port-au-Prince. It “experienced a strong shock” from the quake, according to the PIH Web site, “but no major damage or injuries.”

    Zanmi Lasante and its satellite clinics already can call on more than 120 doctors and nearly 500 nurses, impressive numbers that are being used to leverage efficient and rapid medical relief for what already was the Western Hemisphere’s poorest nation.

    PIH issued a call yesterday for more experienced medical personnel to help in Haiti, especially surgeons who specialize in trauma and orthopedics. Also needed are emergency room doctors and nurses, and full surgical teams, including anesthesiologists, scrub and post-op nurses, and nurse anesthetists.

    PIH is employing a two-part strategy to speed medical care to devastated Port-au-Prince, where thousands are believed dead and thousands more hurt. Field hospital sites in the capital city, linked to a supply chain from the Dominican Republic, which shares the island with Haiti, are being used for triage and immediate care. PIH sites in the Central Plateau — two hours from the wrecked capital of 2 million people — are being readied to serve a flow of patients from the capital.

    A church in Cange has been converted into a large triage site. There and in Hinche, another PIH medical location, a “steady flow” of injured people from the capital are receiving medical care.

    In the capital alone, “tens of thousands” will need medical care, according to the PIH Web site, a situation that makes financial assistance a high priority as well.

    “Haiti is facing a crisis worse than it has seen in years, and it is a country that has faced years of crisis, both natural disaster and otherwise,” according to a post earlier this week by PIH executive director Ophelia Dahl. “The country is in need of millions of dollars right now to meet the needs of the communities hardest hit by the earthquake.”

    Jeffrey S. Flier, dean of the Faculty of Medicine at HMS, said that all faculty and students involved with PIH in Haiti are reported safe. But the situation on the ground in Haiti is an “overwhelming tragedy,” he said. “We all share in the shock and grief over yesterday’s devastating earthquake in Port-au-Prince. Our hearts go out to the millions who have been affected, both in Haiti and closer to home.”

    Flier also expressed concern that some members of the Harvard community “may be experiencing personal losses, and we want to offer them our compassion and to provide them with the support they may need.” Members of the Harvard community who would like counseling services or referrals are asked to call Harvard’s Employee Assistance Program at 877.327.4278 or to contact their Human Resources representatives.

    Other Harvard-related relief efforts are also rolling out. The HHI, a University group of disaster-relief specialists, is working with nongovernmental organizations to assess immediate medical needs and other required assistance, according to spokesman Vincenzo Bollettino. HHI will offer regular updates on its Web site and on Twitter concerning Harvard’s relief partners and affiliated programs and hospitals, he said.

    Brigham and Women’s Hospital has dispatched an emergency response team, including HHI’s director of education, Hilarie Cranmer, who is a physician and clinical instructor. The team will work with United Nations and Dominican officials to address the immediate needs of displaced people.

    HHI fellow and physician Miriam Aschkenasy, a public health specialist at Oxfam America, is also working on Haitian relief. HHI is in touch with Alejandro Baez, a physician and former faculty member at Brigham and Women’s who now runs disaster services in the nearby Dominican Republic. They will assess the needs for further disaster response.

    Zanmi Lasante is one of the largest nongovernmental health care providers in Haiti and the only provider of comprehensive primary care.

    It has a 104-bed hospital with two operating rooms, adult and pediatric inpatient wards, an infectious-disease center, an outpatient clinic, a women’s health clinic, ophthalmology and general medicine clinics, a laboratory, a pharmaceutical warehouse, a Red Cross blood bank, radiographic services, and a dozen schools.

    Zanmi Lasante employs about 90 community Haitian health workers and serves an estimated 500,000 people in the Central Plateau.