Category: News

  • Considering Liposuction Surgery in Glendale, CA

    Liposuction Glendale – The first decade of this century has seen an impressive jump in the number of cosmetic procedures Glendale Plastic Surgeon performed in the U.S. According to the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery, there were over 10 million surgical and non-surgical cosmetic procedures performed in the United States in 2008, compared to just over 2 million in 1997. Does this mean that these procedures have become routine, like pulling through the drive-up window at your kids’ favorite eatery?

    Hardly. Especially where cosmetic surgery is concerned, no matter how common the procedure, there is always the unique aspect of the patient. A well-experienced plastic surgeon, such as Dr. Allan Perry, who practices plastic surgery in Glendale, CA, and received his board certification in 1994, can help you avoid the pitfalls that apply specifically to you.

  • ThermaHelm: Helmet Cools Biker’s Brains In Case of Accident [Bikes]

    Here’s a pretty simple idea that may save a lot of lives: A motorbike helmet that cools down the rider’s head in case of impact. According to the manufacturer, their new ThermaHelm prevents overheating and swelling of the brain.

    They also claim that there are head injuries in 80% of all motorbike accidents. When that happens, the brain usually starts swelling. Traditional helmets act as insulators, and the brain’s temperature may increase to the point in which it can cause death or permanent damage. The ThermaHelm prevents this by firing a chemical reaction on impact, which activates a layer that cools down the biker’s head. [ThermaHelm]







  • Verizon Decreases Price Of Voice, Pushes Data

    Verizon Wireless took an important step in the evolution of mobile device service pricing. It decreased its voice prices, but increased the push for more customers to pay for data. I expect other service providers to follow. I believe this trend will continue towards a world where voice charges vanish entirely, but usage-based data charges become more common.

    First, here’s the news, via the Wall Street Journal:

    The carrier, which is jointly owned by Verizon Communications Inc. and Vodafone Group PLC, lowered the rates for its unlimited voice plan to $70 a month from $100. It also cut its baseline voice plan, which comes with 450 minutes, to $40. Unlimited text messaging costs $20 more for each.

    First, the obvious: AT&T and others will follow. That’s how these things work. Verizon has begun a voice plan price war, which is sure to end with cheaper voice rates across the industry. But what about data?

    At the same time, Verizon is pushing payment for data plans. Customers who buy a high-end smart phone, which can run applications and surf the Web, already have to pay $30 a month for an unlimited data plan. Now, a $10 plan for 25 megabytes will be required for those with slightly less advanced phones as well.

    For some reason, most articles I’ve read on this don’t get the news exactly right. They say that the $10 plan results in a price increase on data. But the way I read Verizon’s website, and after speaking with one of its media contacts, I understand data prices staying flat or actually declining. Let me explain.

    The new pricing scheme also eliminates a $19.99 plan for 75 megabytes of usage. So that makes it appear that they’ve increased their price by 50%. But that’s false. First of all, the $9.99/25 megabyte plan was also available before. Second, the old $9.99/25 megabyte plan charged 50 cents per megabyte for data overage. That’s been slashed to 20 cents per megabyte, which means that if you use 75 megabytes, then you pay $19.99 — which is the same as before. But that old $19.99 plan also charged 30 cents per megabyte after that while the new $9.99 plan keeps it at 20 cents per megabyte even after the first 75. That means overage is cheaper.

    Of course, very heavy data users are still a lot better off with an unlimited plan for $30 per month.

    But it’s true that Verizon did push the minimum $10 data plan onto more of its phones. So it’s herding more users to pay for data along with its voice price cut.

    This makes sense. We’ve entered a technological framework where there really isn’t much distinction between voice and data — there’s only data. Applications like Google Voice allow smartphone users to make voice calls through data networks. So I would expect that voice prices will continue to decline, eventually reaching zero. Meanwhile, however, service providers will make sure that more customers are paying for data to replace those losses on voice revenue.

    And I would expect those companies to eventually begin increasing the price of data for that reason as well. We’re already seeing the relative cost of data increasing here — since the price of voice declined while data’s stayed approximately constant. I also find it notable that Verizon pushed an incremental plan onto more phones — not an unlimited plan. While a cheaper alternative, it could mark a move towards getting consumers used to paying for data based on usage. There will likely always be high-priced unlimited plans for huge data hogs to enjoy, but these companies would certainly like to make more money off light users through incremental usage plans.





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  • PolyTune: The Violet Femmes tune all their guitar strings at once on the bus

    You know how when you play someone’s guitar for the first time at a party and one string is way high or low and you start to tune it and find that the guitar is total garbage and can’t be tuned anyway and so you play “Closer to Fine” on an untuned guitar in the corner of the part and people are all like “Who’s the douche playing Indigo Girls in 2010? I think his guitar is out of tune.” Has that ever happened to you? Definitely, right?

    Well Polytune tunes all your strings at once. You strum and it tells you which strings are out of tune. You fix those strings, strum again, and then people will never make fun of you again.

    The Polytune is shipping in March from TC Electronic and there’s no pricing but I would totally buy this.

    via DVICE via Giz


    Buy This Item: [Click here to buy this item]

    Read Original Article

  • Free Wi-Fi at McDonald’s starts today. Buh, buh, bup, buh, bah, I’m lovin’ it!!!

    hamburglar

    Ah yes. Nothing better than toting your laptop into McDonald’s and going through a handful of napkins every time you need to type something or move the mouse cursor. The food there is greasy, I guess would be the main takeaway from that sentence.

    Wireless internet access is free, starting today, at 11,500 out of 14,000 McDonald’s locations throughout the country. It had previously cost $2.95 for two hours of access — roughly an hour and 45 minutes longer than just about anyone has ever spent inside a McDonald’s.

    McDonald’s to start free Wi-Fi at most U.S. stores [Yahoo!/Reuters]


    Buy This Item: [Click here to buy this item]

    Read Original Article

  • Can an iPhone App Clear up Your Acne? | Discoblog

    acne-appA Texas doctor claims that you can now kill your acne while you chat on the phone with your friends. Houston dermatologist Greg Pearson says that his AcneApp, available at Apple’s app store for $1.99, is a great way to clear your mug of unseemly spots.

    Fox TV, Houston reports:

    The AcneApp emits alternating bursts of red and blue light from the iPhone’s screen. All users have to do is run the program then hold the phone up to their faces.

    Dr. Pearson says the phone needs to be held to the face for about two minutes a day, and callers have to remember to switch sides for maximum benefit. He isn’t quite sure of the results, and he can’t promote the app’s medical benefits because it hasn’t been FDA-approved. Nevertheless, Pearson told Fox TV that the app has been designed with “some science” in mind.

    The New York Times explains how the app is supposed to work:

    The AcneApp emits an alternating blue (antibacterial) and red (anti-inflammatory) light technology, believed to kill bacteria associated with acne and promote healing, and even act on wrinkles by stimulating collagen growth.

    Dr. Pearson also claims that light treatments have been shown to be more effective in treating acne than over-the-counter meds.

    Discoblog claims that without any testing of the light’s wavelength, intensity, duration, coverage, and orientation, it’s a laughable attempt to sell a snake oil iPhone app. But give him points for creativity.

    Related Content:
    Discoblog: True Crime, Real Time: Live Streaming Mug Shots To Your iPhone
    Discoblog: Texting and Walking Made Easy With iPhone App

    Image: AcneApp


  • Noah Wyle & Wife Tracy Separate

    Former ER doc Noah Wyle and wife Tracy, a makeup artist, have separated after almost 10 years of marriage. While neither has filed for divorce, the couple is currently in mediation.

    A rep for Noah and wife Tracy issued a statement saying: “Tracy Wyle and Noah Wyle, who separated in late October 2009 have confirmed they have entered into a mediation process. Tracy and Noah live in separate residences, however their two children (Owen, 7 and Auden, 4) see both parents daily.”

  • The Obama Green Roof Dog Home

    I’ve written about Sustainable Pet Design often. Sustainable Pet Design makes green roof dog and bird homes that are absolutely gorgeous. I love this company because of their innovative design savvy, their eco-friendly materials, and why go boring when you can have a totally awesome pet home?

    obama dog house

    It’s time for an update though because Sustainable Pet Design has some new killer styles available, including one home made just for the first family. Sustainable Pet Design created The Obama Dog Home. Summa Canum (Latin for “Top Dog”), “Not only to provide an appropriately sustainable and stylish home for the new leader of the free canine world, but to introduce eco-friendly practices and materials to the American people.

    Here are some stats:

    The First Greenrrroof Dog Home is constructed from the wood of Tennessee Aromatic Cedar trees that our 7th President, Andrew Jackson, planted along the driveway of his estate, The Hermitage. After a tornado felled these trees in 1998, EarthSource Forest Products reclaimed the wood for lumber and has donated the last of it to Summa Canum.

    Architectural Coatings and Design Center provided the zero-VOC paint and varnish that will ensure that the First Dog will not become ill from toxic fumes.

    Emory Knoll Farms, a Maryland nursery specializing in green roof plants, is supplying vegetation. The dog home will arrive at The White House unplanted in order to provide the Obama kids with the opportunity to get their hands dirty in their own little garden.

    Very cool. In other news, Sustainable Pet Design has a great new couture collection of pet homes. These homes, like all their homes are made with sustainable materials and a cool green roof. The difference is in the design aspect.

    green doghouseI love the Andrew Jackson Plantation which is constructed using Tennessee aromatic cedar, milled from 200-year-old trees that were felled during a tornado on Andrew Jackson’s estate. There’s a sweet graffiti print on the home, but it’s up to you if you’d like a less radical paint job. This is a limited edition item, so if you love it, I’d contact Sustainable Pet Design stat.

    wright house

    Another terrific new design is the 15° Wright, commissioned by architect Eric Lloyd Wright (Frank’s grandson) to be displayed with one of his prefab human homes at the Green West Expo. This is a beautiful modern dog home with all angles at 15°. Nice!

    To learn more about these amazing one-of-a-kind dog homes visit Sustainable Pet Design.

    [images via Sustainable Pet Design]

    Post from: Blisstree

    The Obama Green Roof Dog Home

  • Creative Recreation Select – Autumn 2010

    creativerec-select-main

    The Select line from Creative Recreation looks promising with all new styles that are truly unique from the main line. With a set drop for Autumn of 2010, be on the lookout for Select footwear that are made up of quality leathers and new details. Models that are new for the season are the Lioni, Lanza, and the Sacco, and are sure to please who are already loyal to the original Creative Rec releases.

    Continue reading for more images.




    Source: Selectism

    Creative Recreation drops an early preview of their forthcoming “Select” line for Autumn 2010. Full collection previews will be of course made available to the buyers at shows across the globe in the coming weeks. “The Lioni,” “The Lanza” (both new for this season) as well as “The Sacco,” are previewed here. “Comprised of rich leathers, material upgrades and sleek, contemporary silhouettes, Select by Creative Recreation creates the perfect shoe for the sophisticated and savvy consumer.” We’ll have more from the “Select” collection in weeks/months to come.

    http://www.selectism.com/news/2010/01/08/first-look-creative-recreation-select-for-autumn-2010/





  • In Haiti’s time of need – ACT NOW

    Dear Vancouver Quadra,

    It’s time to stand with Haiti.

    The scenes of devastation beamed from Port-au-Prince and elsewhere have shaken all of us. But they have also reminded us that our first instinct as Canadians is to ask “How can I help?”

    Our ties with Haiti are strong. We have a Haitian community in Canada that has contributed so much to our national life, and Canadians across our country are connected to Haiti through friends and loved ones living and working there.

    I know that you were just asked to donate on Monday. But this is not about politics.

    In these exceptional circumstances, now is a time to come together as people. Now is a time to act.

    That’s why I am asking you to please support the relief effort in Haiti by clicking on one of the links below. Yesterday, we asked the government to match funds given to charitable organizations for relief efforts and today the government announced that it would – which means that your giving power is now twice as strong.

    Canadian Red Cross
    Doctors Without Borders
    Oxfam Canada
    Oxfam Quebec
    Centre for International studies and Cooperation (CECI)
    CARE Canada

    The Humanitarian Coalition

    Let’s show that we care. Let’s help Haiti in this time of need.

    Thank you,
    Michael Ignatieff

  • Report: GM’s Mark Reuss ponders return of VE Commodore to U.S.

    Filed under: , , , , , ,

    Holden VE Ute – Click above for high-res image gallery

    As if General Motors hasn’t endured enough turmoil in the last year, Pickuptrucks.com is reporting that GM North America president Mark Reuss is championing the idea of a stateside Holden VE Ute. Pardon us for thinking this issue was dead and buried in 2009, interred in the graveyard of stillborn ideas. Reuss, who ran Holden for GM during the VE’s development, has a soft spot for the admittedly excellent platform that we only shortly knew as the Pontiac G8. While that dalliance was only marginally longer lived than Jay Leno’s move to prime time (the promised G8 Sport Truck was announced and then canceled before birth), Reuss thinks that GMC or Chevrolet could proudly park the Ute in U.S. showrooms.

    Rather than let all the hard work done to bring the G8 to fruition go to waste, Reuss is also reportedly looking for a slot for that car, as well. If GM can get the Ute classed as a truck in North America, it might play a significant role in Corporate Average Fuel Economy ratings, and that may be enough reason alone to offer a neo-El Camino. A revised G8 popping up under another GM moniker would be welcomed by the auto punditry, though may still fail to move enough units to make an impact. There’s no denying that niche vehicles such as the Ute and G8 have a following, but we wonder how much focus these efforts are stealing from the pivotal vehicles that must launch and continue to sell without a hitch. As exciting as a Ute might be, a flawless and successfully marketed launch of the new Chevrolet Aveo is likely far more important to GM’s financial health at this point than some hoon sled.

    Gallery: Holden VE Ute

    [Source: Pickuptrucks.com]

    Report: GM’s Mark Reuss ponders return of VE Commodore to U.S. originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 15 Jan 2010 13:34:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Marvin M112

    marvin-m112-main

    In a time where most watch companies today are flaunting either excess or decadence, Marvin comes through with a design that is classic, and will surely stand the test of any changes in the world of watches. There are no fancy dials, experimental mechanics, or strange shapes for the M112. Simple and sophisticated, this watch is the epitome of the everyday watch that is ideal for work, leisure, travel, and sport. The watch is available in two versions: silver or black dial with a steel or PVD-coated rose gold case.

    Source: Watchluxus


  • Landmark University Study of Chicago Public Schools Points to “Five Essential Supports” for School Reform

    Leaders looking for ways to improve learning in urban schools can depend on five key factors which, when working together, have proven to boost student achievement, according to a landmark study that led to a new book, Organizing Schools for Improvement, Lessons from Chicago.

    The results emerged from a study of 390 Chicago public elementary schools over a seven-year period following the implementation of a 1988 law that increased decision-making at the local school level.

    The authors of the study, current and former researchers with the Consortium on Chicago School Research, part of the Urban Education Institute at the University of Chicago, said those five essential supports are school leadership, parent and community ties, professional capacity of the faculty, a student-centered learning climate and a coherent instructional plan.

    They were effective in a wide variety of schools, including especially troubled ones. By looking closely at the social context in which schools are embedded, the book provides new insight into why schools in communities with high rates of crime and poverty struggle with improving student outcomes.

    These findings are helpful as states vie for billions in federal “Race to the Top” funds designed to spur school reform. They are drawn from the kinds of robust data that U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan has encouraged states to use in developing their reform plans.

    The authors suggest that when looking for ways to improve learning in urban schools, leaders should resist the temptation to look for “silver bullets” and think instead about “baking a cake.” Just as several ingredients are needed in the right proportions to bake a cake, so too are several ingredients ― the “five essential supports” ― required to boost student achievement.

    The research team will present their findings to educators on Thursday, Jan. 14 at a symposium at the University’s Gleacher Center, 450 N. Cityfront Plaza Drive.

    The study team found some improvements since Chicago decentralized its public school system in 1988. More than 80 percent of the system’s elementary schools showed at least some gains in mathematics, and close to 70 percent gained in reading.

    More importantly, schools that were strong in all five essential supports were at least 10 times more likely to show substantial improvement in reading and mathematics than schools that were strong in only one or two of the essential supports. Follow-up studies conducted from 1997 to 2005 validated the findings of the first round of research.

    The book, published by the University of Chicago Press, was written by:

    • Anthony S. Bryk, president of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching and founding senior director of CCSR;
    • Penny Bender Sebring and Elaine Allensworth, interim co-executive directors at CCSR;
    • Stuart Luppescu, chief psychometrician at CCSR; and
    • John Q. Easton, Director of the Institute of Education Sciences in the U.S. Department of Education, and former executive director of CCSR.

    For nearly 20 years, CCSR has built a massive, one-of-a-kind longitudinal data archive on Chicago public schools, and that archive made the research possible.

    The CCSR team visited schools, interviewed principals and did extensive surveys of principals, teachers and students to get behind what was leading some schools to progress and others to remain stagnant.

    In addition to measuring local demographic characteristics, CCSR investigated community characteristics like community cohesiveness and crime rates to uncover reasons for success or failure.

    In taking this approach, which looks at neighborhood effects and the influence of parents, the book draws heavily on the work of other scholars currently or formerly at the University of Chicago.

    Sociologist William Julius Wilson, now at Harvard University, did seminal work on poverty at the University of Chicago and coined the expression “the truly disadvantaged” in a book by the same name. James Colemen contributed definitive thinking on the role of social capital in schools to show the value of parents working with teachers to improve learning.

    Sociologist Robert Sampson, now at Harvard, and Steven Raudenbush, the Lewis-Sebring Professor in Sociology and chair of the University of Chicago’s Committee on Education, studied the dynamics of Chicago neighborhood interactions to identify differences in dealing with crime and other issues.

    In assessing student performance, the team devised a “value-added” approach. Rather than simply looking at the percentage of students in each class who met or failed to meet state standards, the team looked at the progress of each student.

    The authors also identified 46 very low-performing schools, serving more than 40,000 students, which they labeled “truly disadvantaged schools.” Even in a school district where disadvantage is the norm, these schools stood apart, serving neighborhoods characterized by extreme poverty and extreme racial segregation.

    On average, 70 percent of residents living in these neighborhoods had incomes below the poverty line. The schools had virtually no racial integration.

    But demographics tell just part of the story. Moving beyond an analysis of racial and economic descriptors, the authors examined these communities against other social indicators.

    They found the communities of truly disadvantaged schools had the highest crime rates and the highest percentages of children who were abused, neglected or living in foster care.

    Residents of these communities were the most likely to live in public housing and the least likely to attend church regularly or believe they could bring about positive change in their community.

    A small number of these schools improved in reading and math, primarily because they were strong in the essential supports. But nearly half of them proved nearly impervious to systemic reform and had a lack of progress that contrasted sharply with many other schools.

    These schools were seven times more likely than racially integrated schools, for instance, to stagnate in math and two times more likely to stagnate in reading.


  • Safari Alternatives: What’s Your Primary Browser of Choice and Why?

    Macworld’s Joe Kissell observes that there are many fine Mac Web browsers to choose from, and there’s no reason not to have several installed so that you can switch among them as needed. Indeed, I virtually always have at least three up and running at any given time.

    Safari vs. Firefox

    However, most folks are inclined to rely primarily on one main browser, and for that purpose, Kissell recommends using one of the two most popular ones — either Apple’s Safari or Mozilla’s Firefox  – which he says both make excellent all-around choices and work well as a default browser, which I don’t dispute, although neither are my own choice as my number one browser. Kissell notes that certain situations may make one or the other of these two browsers an especially good choice, outlining several areas where in his estimation they respectively excel. Of course such evaluations tend to be somewhat subjective.

    For example, Joe likes Safari’s built-in PDF support. I’m personally not a big fan. While the built-in facility means you don’t have to switch to Preview or Adobe Reader to launch a PDF file you still have to wait while it loads in the browser window, and saving it is another step. I prefer the download and view mode, but that’s just me. Joe mentions that if you like inline PDF viewing, a free extension called Firefox-Mac-PDF will add similar functionality to Firefox.

    Another Safari feature Joe likes is the ability to resize text area controls (multi-line text fields) by dragging the handle in the lower right corner of the field. This is indeed handy, but not a killer feature, in my opinion.

    How Often Will You Want to Do That?

    I do agree that Safari’s full-text history searches (Safari’s Top Sites view>History -> Show Top Sites) and search field for words that appeared on Web pages you viewed recently even if they’re no longer open is pretty cool, and he likes Safari’s ability to display graphics in non-Web TIFF or JPEG 2000 formats, although how often will you want to do that?

    When Firefox May Be a Better Choice

    However, Joe thinks there are also instances where Firefox is a better choice than Safari, such as when using Google Toolbar — another free extension for Firefox that adds a long and user-configurable list of features to the browser, including quick access to various Google Gadgets.

    He also likes Firefox’s more flexible and versatile privacy setting configuration that lets you configure many privacy settings per domain, as opposed to Safari’s all-or-nothing privacy setting limitations, and praises the vast range of choice in Firefox add-ons and plug-ins compared with the lack of an officially supported plug-in API for Safari. For folks who like to tweak their browser functionality, Firefox is the way to go.

    Firefox (and its sibling Gecko-based browsers like Camino and SeaMonkey) can also display inline mathematical equations, while Safari and other WebKit-based browsers only support display of linear strings of characters.

    Why I Use Opera and Chrome More Than Safari and Firefox

    Personally, I use Firefox more than Safari, but Opera 10 and lately Google’s Chrome for Mac each respectively get more hours of surfing on my machines than Firefox and Safari combined, and both Opera and Chrome have features I miss when using the more mainstream browsers, such as their superior download managers, Opera’s up-front and versatile Zoom menu, and Chrome’s raw speed, fast startup, and “right now” Finder response. Opera and Chrome both seem more nimble and less inclined to be memory hogs than Safari and Firefox (although the latter has cleaned up its act in that regard somewhat in recent iterations). I prefer the looks of Opera and Chrome as well, but as Joe Kissell noted, we have an embarrassment of choice in browsers these days, and everyone should be able to find a browser (or two or three) that suits their needs and tastes to a tee.

    What’s your favorite OS X browser, and why?

    Related GigaOM Pro Research: What Does the Future Hold For Browsers?

  • ARTICLE: Sprint offers update for Samsung Moment, requires store visit

    Samsung Moment

    Sprint today announced a “maintenance update” for the Samsung Moment, complete with several system tweaks.

    Here’s what the update offers:

    • Network Assist GPS to allow indoor location fix
    • Updates to several third-party apps, including Visual Voicemail, NFL, NASCAR and Sprint TV
    • Change to Emergency Dial on lock screen
    • Hard reset available in recovery mode: remove and reinsert battery; press volume down, send and end keys until reboot option pops up; scroll to wipe data/factory reset; press OK
    • Various improvements to battery life

    The kicker?  The update is only available at Sprint retail locations with a Repair Center, so you’ll have to venture out of the house to get it.  Given how busy the service and repair locations tend to get, I would highly recommend making an appointment before going in.  If you prefer not to brave the crowds, rest assured – Sprint says an OTA version will be available soon.

    I’ve used the Moment, and I can attest that battery life is less than desirable.  Here’s to hoping that the update solves the problem!  If you decide to get your device updated, let us know how it goes.

    Via Sprint, AndroidCentral


  • Volkswagen Caddy TDI de carreras, para la Volkswagen Racing Cup de Gran Bretaña

    Volkswagen Caddy

    Si ves un Volkswagen Caddy en la calle, seguramente ni siquiera merecería una segunda mirada. Concebido como un vehículo comercial que brinda economía y capacidad de carga al mismo tiempo, le prestarías más atención si necesitaras un vehículo de carga para tu trabajo o empresa. ¿Pero qué me dices de poner uno en pista para competir en uno de los torneos más populares de Gran Bretaña?

    El real automóvil club de Gran Bretaña, el RAC, va a patrocinar a un Volkswagen Caddy TDI para participar en la Volkswagen Racing Cup, una categoría bastante popular en aquel país. Es sabido que en las islas, Volkswagen es una de las dos ó tres marcas más populares con mucha ventaja sobre el resto, pero no deja de ser una curiosidad que un Caddy se atreva contra los Golf o los Jetta que regularmente animan el torneo.

    Para la ocasión, el Caddy se vestirá con los colores oficiales del RAC, incluyendo una preparación que le darán 256 caballos y un par motor de 368 libras/pié. Supongo que la suspensión recibirá un tratamiento extensivo, al ser un vehículo con un centro de gravedad tan alto, propenso a los vuelcos.

    Lo mejor de todo, es que un Caddy puede llevar muchísima más publicidad que un Jetta o un Golf, por ejemplo. Una verdadera atracción.

    Vía | Jalopnik



  • Bill Stetar

    Bill Stetar
    Human Performance Technology Consultant
    Center for Industrial Services

    Expertise:
    Bill Stetar can discuss human resources, organizational effectiveness, change management and leadership development.

    Expertise Categories: Human Resources | Effectiveness | Management | Leadership

    Contact Information

    E-mail: [email protected]
    Web: http://www.cis.tennessee.edu/productivity/hpt/

  • Nike Launches Impressive Hyper-Local iPhone App

    Nike launched a new iPhone app yesterday called True City (iTunes link) with the slogan “Make the hidden visible.” The app provides hyper-local, real-time information for 6 European cities. It combines expert curation of news and events info, crowdsourced information discovery (with a chance to become an official guide), push notifications, QR codes printed and posted around the city and apparently a little Augmented Reality. Of course True City also lets you learn about shoes you can buy.

    It was built by AKQA, the same design firm that made the truly useful Augmented Reality app for the US Postal Service that lets you see if an object you’re holding up to your computer will fit in a postal shipping box.

    Sponsor

    Design blog PSFK says that with the app, Nike appears determined to build “an army of hyper-local, mobile-connected advocates.

    Can an apparel company’s app compete with local content from companies specializing in that kind of work? As one reviewer wrote on the iTunes store, “Do you want bar recommendations from Nike? Nice app but no content. Will never compete with the likes of Yelp. Pointless really.”

    Presumably the expert contributors for each city will try to help overcome these limitations. Would you be interested in a handful of select people recommending places, events and news for your local area? As one component of a larger hyper-local news and events source that sounds great to me. In fact, I think it’s a model that would serve any location based social network well.

    The Downside of Corporate Portals Into Your True City

    Nike may very well be able to dazzle a substantial number of users into using the app with its remarkable design, but there is still some concern about building your connection to your local area through the sterile lens of a marketing campaign. There are certain important but unpleasant things that seem unlikely to be served up on such a platform. Nike’s app makes the hidden visible, right?

    Nike’s home town of Portland, Oregon for example, is a major hub of international sex trafficking. Matters like that are far more likely to be reported about by institutions that place the public interest of their communities, namely newspapers, than they are by mobile marketing apps, no matter how cool, hyper-local, curated, crowdsourced and augmented they may be. The True City campaign says it’s performed “all with Nikeʼs unmistakable irreverence” – but I think that just means it’s sassy advertising.

    None the less, the technology and strategy is an interesting data point in the unfolding history of hyper-local, mobile technologies.

    Discuss


  • TV Industry Turns Blind Eye To Non-3D Viewers [3dTv]

    When it comes to 3D television, I don’t see it. Literally. The technology that’s supposed to convince me that a 3D image exists when I look at a 2D screen doesn’t work for me.

    Nor does it work for a small but significant percentage of the population—4 percent to 10 percent, depending on which expert you ask. Millions of people like me are being left behind by content and hardware companies as they move to 3D.

    I don’t mean to complain. It’s not the end of the world. Flat-viewers, like me, can watch 2D versions of 3D content. I saw “Avatar” in the non-3D version. As a bonus, the theater was nearly empty—the 3D showing down the hall was more crowded. Plus, we didn’t have to wear those dorky glasses.

    Of course, we are social beings, and not being able to view 3D means that group or family outings to 3D showings are awkward for the flat viewers, who may have to sit through a showing that will cause headaches or just look bad to them. But the flat-viewer’s experience with 3D imagery can vary. While I find viewing 3D imagery uncomfortable, Daniel Terdiman, another person at CNET who can’t see 3D, saw the 3D version of Avatar and wore the 3D glasses. It looked fine to him, just not 3D.

    Manufacturers are mute
    At CES this year, the trend toward 3D in home television sets was unmissable, but there was no mention by the manufacturers of how this move would affect flat viewers. I was curious how the hardware companies, which fight for every point of market share jealously, could cavalierly ignore the large number of us who won’t like this new direction. It’s a lot of market. How are they planning to deal with losing it?

    Oddly, none of the HDTV manufacturing companies I reached out to could provide a direct comment on this topic, but I did talk with people familiar with the industry and with an optometrist who has a vested interest in promoting the growth of 3D content viewing.

    Bruce Berkoff of the LCDTV Association and formerly a marketing executive at LG, noted that for all the hype around 3D, the television manufacturers are not really investing much in putting products on store shelves, nor are they expecting consumers to pay for it yet. Adding the capability for televisions to display alternating images for stereoscopic viewing through electronic shutter glasses is not expensive. It’s the glasses themselves that are, and only a few 3D-capable sets actually come bundled with them. So consumers will be able to soon buy televisions ready for 3D without spending much.

    Berkoff, and everyone else I talked to about 3D TV, reminded me that a good 3D TV is also a good 2D TV. You should be able to turn off the 3D display features and view content designed specifically for 3D but in 2D: You just show the view for only one eye. If the refresh rate of the program is high enough, you should not notice much of a difference in picture quality.

    Get your eyes examined
    From the optometrist’s perspective, the inability to process stereoscopic imagery is, for many people, a treatable condition. Dr. Brad Habermehl, president of the College of Optometrists in Vision Development, told me, “You don’t have to be a 3D refugee if you get to the root of the problem. The majority of stereo-blind people really can be helped.”

    Habermehl says that there are methods to teach people to see in 3D. Using graduated methods and physical aids (lenses) as “training wheels,” he says, people can eventually learn how to “point both eyes to focus on the same space.” It’s like riding a bike. Once you learn, the training wheels come off and you can’t imagine not doing it. “Vision is definitely learned,” he says. “That’s what vision training is.”

    The doctor sounded to me suspiciously like a spokesperson for the 3D television manufacturers, or at least a recipient of some marketing dollars from them. But he’s not. “It would be nice if they would fund us,” he said. But after reminding me that “Avatar” had already made $1 billion in box office receipts, he added, “I don’t think the industry is worried about this.”

    Personally, I have no interest in undergoing medical treatment just so I can spend more money on consumer electronics. Although Dr. Oliver Sacks, in a compelling New Yorker article, Stereo Sue, did make me wonder what my kind is missing. (Related reading: Fixing My Gaze, by Sue Barry, a subject of Sacks’ story.)

    And regardless of whether you see in 3D or not, the technology is inexorably changing the visual language of movies and television shows. When directors create shows for 3D, they can’t rely on cinematic methods viewers are used to in 2D for conveying action, depth, and movement. Hard cuts and swooping camera moves can disorient viewers new to 3D. The new standard of practice is to lock down the camera and move the action around it, instead of the reverse, which is the case in today’s 2D movies. Good 3D movies today will appear subtly more stately and cinematic than 2D shows.

    The future of the 3D feature
    For all the hype at CES, 3D for the next few years is likely to be a “feature” in the new crop of TVs, according to Gary Merson of the HDGuru3D site. “It’s not black-and-white to color,” Merson says. “It’s a feature, like Internet connectivity and stereo.” He also points out that the content is not there yet, and that many consumers have only recently upgraded their tube televisions to HD flat screens.

    For people like me, for whom the world is flat, this feature can not roll out slowly enough.

    This story originally appeared on CNET







  • China Now Has Enough Cash Built Up To Buy 20% Of The S&P 500

    Chinese Army Soldiers

    Chinese foreign exchange reserves jumped 23.3% in 2009, hitting a mind-blowing $2.4 trillion notes 24/7 Wall St..

    To put this into perspective, the S&P 500's total adjusted market cap is just $13.5 trillion according to the latest data sheet from Standard & Poor's. That means China's forex reserves could buy 18% of the S&P500.

    Furthermore, if they were to keep growing at the current rate (even though they probably won't), within five years they could theoretically buy half of the S&P500. Now that could be some seriously massive fund flow, even if it isn't likely to happen or even possible.

    The funny thing though is that if somehow it did happen, and wasn't blocked, such a major purchase would essentially be the union of the American economy with China's. Imagine that. It would probably make war an even dumber notion between the two nations even if it lead to some massive political clashes.

    Note that it wouldn't be a 'takeover of America' either. The oft-ignored statistic is that American households have over $50 trillion of private net wealth alone, far more than the U.S. government has debt and far more than China has reserves. So it's not like Americans wouldn't be able to still own the majority of their country either.

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