Category: News

  • Choosing a Home Inspector

    I’ve had good experiences with home inspectors. I’ve had terrible experiences with home inspectors. I know people who flip homes and act like their great home inspector’s name is a state secret. I don’t blame them. The one time I couldn’t use my good home inspector because he was booked up? That was a sad, sad day. So, how do you find a good home inspector?home inspector

    In my experience, choosing a home inspector solely because he or she was recommended by your realtor is not a good idea. Now, I know that most realtors and home inspectors are incredibly ethical and would not dream of working together to cover up problems to get you to buy a home. In fact, I know realtors who won’t recommend home inspectors just in case buyers think they’re working together in this way. Unfortunately, there are some realtors who are not so ethical and will work together with a home inspector who also has flexible ethics to push a sale through by hiding a house’s flaws. I experienced this a few homes back and, unfortunately, I am not alone.

    A better way to find a good home inspector is to ask friends, family, or if you are moving to a location where no one you know lives, your future neighbors who are new to the neighborhood for recommendations. Once you have a pool of prospective candidates, ask for references, ask if they have insurance and ask the Better Business Bureau about them.

    Do you have a home inspector that does a great job?

    Photo: SXC

    Post from: Blisstree

    Choosing a Home Inspector

  • Report: Digital Music Sales Will Surpass CDs in 2012

    Forresterlogo.jpgBy now – the beginning of a new decade and well into the 21st century – it’s a story we’ve long come accustomed to: the music industry is dying a slow, painful, sputtering death at the hands of the Internet.

    According to analyst firm Forrester’s latest report, 2009 was “a lousy end to an even lousier decade” for the music industry and we shouldn’t expect much different until at least 2013. Last year, as a matter of fact, was one of the worst years yet, with a 13% decline from the year before.

    Sponsor

    For much of the report, the numbers only confirm what we’ve already come to expect over the past decade. Music industry revenues in 2009 were $6.3 billion, less than half what they were in 1999, and people spent 32% less in 2009 on music than they spent in 2008.

    Of course the economy can’t be helping these numbers, but Forrester sees this as a trend that is going to continue until it gradually starts to even out in 2013. By 2014, the company predicts music industry revenue to level off at around $5.5 billion with digital sales taking up most, but not all, of the slack.

    forrester-music.jpg

    The report also has one interesting event to note for 2012 and, no, it isn’t the destruction of the world at the hands of a Mayan death clock – digital music sales will finally surpass sales of physical media like CDs and vinyl.

    While it goes on to say that 2010 will be a better year than 2009 for the growth rate of spending on digital music, the overall numbers will likely trend downwards after that, as shown in the graph above.

    Discuss


  • KEF – KHT3005SE – Purist’s Edition

    purist-edition

    KEF is a leading innovator in home theater sound systems. One of their highly sought after models, the KHT3005SE comes in a limited edition option. The Purist’s Edition as they call it, comes in either black or white high gloss finish. According to KEF: With inert cast aluminium enclosures housing some of the world’s most advanced high end audio technologies, each satellite and the dedicated three-way centre speaker boasts the latest incarnation of KEF’s legendary Uni-Q® array for even dispersion throughout the room, with ‘tangerine’ waveguides for even sweeter HF response. The accompanying 250W subwoofer delivers massive, tightly controlled bass; and upright or horizontal, out of sight or in pride of place, SmartBass™ functionality means that it’ll be playing in minutes.

    Visit KEF for more information.


  • Does Your Teen Have a Facebook Addiction?

    Facebook has become extremly popular in the past year, so much that it has some parents questioning the health value with their kids. Parents are becoming worried that their

    IMG: Sxc.hu

    IMG: Sxc.hu

    children, most of them being teenagers are becoming addicted to it. There are several experts that have advice on the topic, but I want to ask you a few questions:

    1.  Do they spend more time on Facebook then on their books?
    2.  Do they get their homework done?
    3.  Are their grades dropping?
    4.  Are they accessing their facebook page on their cell phone when they are at school?

    If you answered yes to more than one of these, you most likely have a problem or a possible problem on your hands that you want to start looking at now. ABC News has an interview (which I posted below) of a girl that realized she was becoming obsessed and went as far as asking her sister to give her a new password and once a week to change it at the beginning of the week (Monday) and not give it to her until Friday so she could monitor her own time online.

    Here’s a few tips they have for you:

    To read more follow the link: Tips for Controlling your Teens Facebook time.

    Post from: Blisstree

    Does Your Teen Have a Facebook Addiction?

  • Gryphon Networks Adds $7 Million

    Erin Kutz wrote:

    Gryphon Networks, a Norwood, MA, telecommunications and marketing services company, raised $7 million in a Series C venture funding round, according to an SEC filing. The funds come from Waltham, MA-based Symmetric Capital and include a combination of cash and stock from Gryphon’s Series A and Series B rounds, says Gryphon CFO Eric Bornhofft. The company did not disclose what portion of the $7 million was cash. The company uses the Software as a Service model to deliver contact governance, compliance and contact management solutions.







  • Crinetics Enters Collaboration Agreement With Ferring Research Institute

    Crinetics Pharma
    Bruce V. Bigelow wrote:

    Crinetics Pharmaceuticals, an early stage San Diego biotech developing specialized biosensors for drug discovery applications, says it has signed a collaboration agreement with the Ferring Research Institute, the peptide research center established in San Diego by Ferring Pharmaceuticals.

    Last month, when Crinetics got a small business research grant of nearly $238,000, the startup said its technology is focused on developing biosensors that utilize a family of receptor molecules on cell walls called G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs). The biotech says it’s own work is focused on studying endocrine GPCRs that can be used in assays for drug molecules, allowing researchers to rule candidate drugs in or out at an earlier stage and thus potentially speeding up pharmaceutical R&D.

    In its statement yesterday, Crinetics says it will apply components of its GPCR Dynamics assay platform to a Ferring proprietary drug discovery target. Financial terms of the agreement were not disclosed. Stephen Betz, a Crinetics scientist and spokesman, said no further details would be released about Ferring’s drug target or the agreement itself.

    “Our strategy is to initially fund through grants and contracts, with the hope of attracting venture funding in this new year,” Betz writes in an email. “We have the first SBIR grant…and have other applications outstanding. The Ferring deal is by no means exclusive (though certainly the content of their project is) and we are also in discussions with other companies and so hope to have other ‘Ferring-type’ deals in the not-too-distant future. We think we can help a lot of people.”

    Based in Saint-Prex, Switzerland, Ferring Pharmaceuticals specializes in developing drugs in the areas of urology, endocrinology, gastroenterology, gynecology, and fertility.








  • Google Mobile Searches Get Optimized Based on Location [Google]

    Google’s location-aware features can feel creepy at times, but in the case of mobile searches they can make life a heck of a lot easier. Queries made from most mobile devices can now include suggestions optimized for your current location.

    The basic idea is to reduce how much you need to fumble with your phone and give you the most relevant query suggestions possible. Let’s say I’m sitting around in Tampa, Florida and searching for a museum. It’s more likely that I might be that I’m looking for some quick info on the Museum of Science and Industry than for Louvre and now my Google search suggestions reflect that. Then again, the entire system isn’t without flaws, unless people around my area are really more likely to search for the University of South Carolina than for a Florida college.

    Ah well, the feature is live, so check it out and see if there are any oddities like that in your search suggestions. [Google Mobile Blog]







  • Lagos | Number 24 | Office | 8F | proposed

    Quote:

    The building Number 24, is located in the burgeoning business district of high-brow Ikoyi. The structure is a Mixture of aluminium glazing and glass, with a striking no. "24"

    It serves to accentuate the building viz-a-vis its enviroment.


    Project Name: Number 24
    architects: ACCL
    status: proposed
    # of floors: 8

  • Biosphere 2

    Oracle, Arizona | Outsider Architecture

    With dreams of colonizing Mars, John P. Allen, who made his millions in oil, funded the building of Biosphere 2 in the middle of the Arizona desert. (Planet earth is Biosphere 1.) The 3.15-acre sealed glass house is a dazzlingly attempt to completely recreate the conditions and environment of Earth including a rain forest, desert, marsh, and an mini-ocean.

    In September 1991, seven crew members walked into Biosphere 2, which was sealed behind them. They were charged with the task of growing their own food and conducting environmental experiments while sealed for two years inside the complex.

    What started as a science experiment turned into a psychological experiment. The body masses of the scientists fell over time, as did the biosphere’s oxygen levels. “Confined environment psychology” set in. Crew members grew to despise each other and found conflict in even the smallest decisions. The media and scientific community criticized the two-year, $150-million-dollar experiment, calling it “tamper-prone” and a “stunt.”

    The crew stayed in Biosphere 2 for the full two years, but when they emerged, their experiment was largely dismissed as a scientific failure. It was, from a monetary perspective, a total disaster. Despite this discouraging news, a second crew entered in April of 1994 and exited prematurely in September of the same year as the management of Biosphere 2 dissolved.

    Unused for many years, the facility was bought by the University of Arizona in 2007 and is now the home of many university experiments and educational programs. Visitors can now take a tour of the now non-sealed biosphere and learn about the over 3,500 exotic species growing in the dome, as well as the experiments currently taking place in it – none of which involve living inside the dome.

  • test results A1c

    A1C- 8.9! It’s getting there.
    FBG – 118 Much better than 382!

    I hope in 3 mths they will be lower

  • The Difference Between the US and Europe

    When Paul Krugman said “Europe’s economic success should be obvious even without statistics. For those Americans who have visited Paris: did it look poor and backward? What about Frankfurt or London? You should always bear in mind that when the question is which to believe — official economic statistics or your own lying eyes — the eyes have it.” I had roughly the same reaction that Matt Welch did:  having lived in London for intermittent (short) periods, I found it noticeably poorer than the United States.

    It is not noticeable to tourists, mind you.  London, like any
    European city that wasn’t actually flattened in the war, is rich in
    architectural assets that make it feel very posh–low rise buildings
    older than thirty or forty years are a luxury in most American cities. 
    Walking around a European city, the diversity and beauty of the
    architecture is dazzling.

    But the standard of living in any
    given profession is much lower.  Preserving London’s dazzling antique
    architecture has meant that most of the people I knew had much longer
    and more expensive commutes than their American counterparts would. 
    They lived in smaller quarters that were hotter in summer and colder in
    winter.  At any given professional level, you found British people
    doing things that only much poorer Americans would do, like bringing
    lunch, hanging their clothes to dry, or going without cable (though the
    Americans I knew said the cable wasn’t worth it anyway).  People in
    Britain are not poor.  But they have a noticeably lower standard of
    living than Americans do.  If they were doing it in 1960’s vintage
    apartment buildings and tract homes, it would be quite obvious.  When I
    lived there, I literally could not afford to eat meat regularly or take
    the tube to work, and as a consequence wore holes in my shoes.  (In
    fairness, I was being paid in dollars and the exchange rate was
    awful–but I wasn’t the only one walking to save money.)

    I
    don’t want to sound as if I’m saying Britain’s a terrible place–it’s
    lovely, and I miss it.  But the amount that people are able to consume
    is much less than the amount Americans are able to consume, and many of
    the things they forego make real difference in things like personal
    comfort.  (Based on my admittedly limited sample of British mattresses,
    they must be unimaginably hardy sleepers).  Consumption isn’t
    everything.  But it is something, and that is what’s being captured in
    the GDP differences.



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  • Traveling Man in the Rain Editorial from FUDGE Magazine

    traveling-main-

    Even if your’re jumping the rail yards to travel cross country, one must still have a fashionable and functional attire in mind. For their January issue, Japanese magazine FUDGE puts out an editorial featuring travel worthy garments.

    Continue reading for more images.





    Source: Mens Model Talk


  • Honda Insight Sports Modulo Concept to debut at Tokyo Auto Salon

    Honda Insight Sports Modulo Concept

    Tomorrow in Japan, the curtains will open on the Tokyo Auto Salon 2010. At the show, Honda will show a lineup of modified and customized vehicles. Joining the lineup will be the Insight Sports Modulo Concept.

    “Leveraging the Insight hybrid vehicle’s advanced aerodynamic performance and fun, comfortable driving, the Insight Sports Modulo Concept expresses the joy of driving with the theme of ‘Exciting Eco,’ Honda said in a statement. “With its advanced styling featuring chiseled lines, the Modulo concept vehicle demonstrates the new value that Sports Modulo customization has to offer a next-generation hybrid.”

    Check out the high-res image gallery posted after the jump.

    Honda Insight Sports Modulo Concept:

    Honda Insight Sports Modulo Concept Honda Insight Sports Modulo Concept Honda Insight Sports Modulo Concept Honda Insight Sports Modulo Concept

    Press Release:

    Overview of Honda Exhibition at Tokyo Auto Salon 2010

    TOKYO, Japan, January 13, 2010 – Honda Access Corporation*1, manufacturer of genuine Honda aftermarket parts and accessories, announced that it will feature a new Modulo*2 concept vehicle and new styling study models in its exhibition at the Tokyo Auto Salon 2010 with NAPAC*3, to be held from Friday, January 15, to Sunday, January 17, 2010, at Makuhari Messe in Chiba, Japan.

    *1 Honda Access Corporation is a wholly owned subsidiary of Honda Motor Co., Ltd.

    *2 Modulo is an original Honda customization brand.
    *3 Sponsored by the Tokyo Auto Salon Association with the cooperation of the Nippon Auto Parts Aftermarket Committee (NAPAC).
    *4 Gathers is a genuine audio and navigation system brand exclusively for Honda vehicles.

    Tokyo Auto Salon 2010

    • Honda vehicles on exhibit
    < Concept model automobile(1) >
    Insight Sports Modulo Concept

    < Study model automobiles (2) >
    Freed Styling Study
    Life Styling Study 2010

    < Competition automobile (1) >
    Touring Modulo Insight (participated in 2009 Enjoy Endurance Race at Twin Ring Motegi)

    < Production automobiles (5) >
    Modulo Insight, Modulo Step WGN, Modulo Stream, Sports Modulo Civic Type R, Civic Type R Euro (vehicle with dealer options)

    < Navigation system concept model (1) >
    Gathers Advance

    – By: Kap Shah


  • Facebook Requires McAfee Scan If There’s A Security Breach? Is This Security Or A Marketing Program?

    sinsi was the first of a few to send in the news that Facebook has new rules if your account is suspended due to a security breach. You will now be required to use McAfee’s security software to scan your computer. Have perfectly good security software from Symantec? Too bad. Use Linux? Not sure what you do. While McAfee is offering a free tool for scanning, it’s only free for six months and then you have to pay — meaning that this is really an upsell plan. Facebook claims it chose McAfee after a “competitive review process,” but that makes no sense. Why not offer up a list of ways that you can prove your computer is safe that is vendor neutral?

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • LG Incite, other phones cruelly tortured

    [See post to watch Flash video]

    PCWorld calls this a scientific test of the durability of 4 different form factor phones – slider, flip phone, touch screen (our LG Incite) and candy bar QWERTY. We on the other hand would call it gratuitous violence against some defenceless phones, and like the movie SAW, there comes a point when you just cant look away.

    Commiserate with the LG Incite, which managed to cling to life, if terribly crippled, until the very end. Of course the iPhone died even before it go to the test site.

    Do you feel sorry for these phones?  Let us know below.

    Share/Bookmark

  • Someone Needs To Sell The Android Plush Bag [Android]

    What you are looking at is a lovingly-crafted Android robot plush bag created over the course of two weeks as a birthday gift. And you can totally rip this idea off.

    “On and off it took about, I guess, two weeks? I needed to pick the materials, figure out the design and of course, a lot of sewing and testing. The hardest task was to come up with a design that makes it both a fully functioning plush and a fully functioning bag, while conforming to the mascot as closely as possible. The head was a big trouble also, being a hemisphere and thus required some mathematics to calculate the right size of each piece of felt. The internal space should just be enough to hold your D40 w/ lens should you wish. The external shell is very strong though so it certainly won’t drop your camera.”

    The whole thing falls under Creative Commons, so if anyone wants to sell something like this, by all means, go ahead. [Flickr via nicesoda via phandroid)







  • Anti–school garden campaigner Caitlin Flanagan, on Colbert back in ‘06

    by Tom Philpott

    The Colbert Report
    Mon – Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c

    Caitlin Flanagan

    www.colbertnation.com

    Colbert Report Full Episodes
    Political Humor
    Economy

    Okay, this post means nothing in the grand scheme of things. I really should have my nose buried in a report on consolidation in the agriculture sector, or be working on a real article. But ever since I read Caitlin Flanagan’s oh-so-contrarian rant against school gardens and the women who volunteer for them (which I responded to here), I’ve become a bit (a very little bit) obsessed. Flanagan, as anyone who cares now knows, has made a career out of tweaking women for leaving home and hearth to work when they could be feathering some (presumably well-off) bloke’s nest. Above, bedecked in pink, she spars with Colbert back in 2006, promoting an anti-feminist book called To Hell With All That. Colbert demands to know precisely what pre-feminist golden age she pines for. She tentatively settles on the ‘50 and ‘60s, but seems much less than convinced. Then there’s this hilarious Gawker slam, also from ‘06, that offers insight into Flanagan’s rep in New York publishing circles. It refers to her as “the rich lady who’s made a career of telling you what a bad wife and mother you are for needing to work.”

    Related Links:

    Coal power plant timelapse

    Stephen Colbert on mountaintop-removal mining

    Raj Patel on Colbert






  • Tila Tequila Fired By Publicist

    Tila Tequila has been dismised — by her own publicist. Tila’s representative, Jessica Cohen, has joined the rest of the world in the assertion that the petite minx’s is absolutely bonkers. Cohen severed ties with the unstable former reality star in a press statement issued Thursday afternoon, after claiming discomfort with some of Tequila’s recent public behavior.


    “This is to inform you that I am no longer representing Tila Tequila as her publicist. Some matters need to remain private and away from media attention and due to recent events, I realized that we need to part ways while she deals with the loss of her fiancée,” Cohen wrote in the statement.

    The always resourceful Tila will be reppin’ herself until she hires a new mouthpiece.

    The PR ace was likely put off by Tila’s recent declaration to seek custody of late fiancee Casey Johnson’s three-year-old adopted daughter Ava, even though she’s only met the child once. Tila — who probably couldn’t keep sea monkeys alive — is convinced that Casey would want her to take care of her daughter:

    “Her last wish was to have Ava, have me have Ava… She’s not resting in peace right now. She has come to me in my dreams!”


  • What the cyber-attack from China means

    Gregory Fayer opened an e-mail on Monday night that looked like it was from a fellow lawyer at Gipson Hoffman & Pancione. Instead, it was a message that placed Fayer and his firm in the middle of what might be the biggest international cyber-conflict to date.

    This week, search engine giant Google disclosed that it had also been a victim of cyber-attacks from China, and has taken the bold step of threatening to shut down the Chinese version of its search engine.  On Thursday, computer security firm VeriSign said it had traced the Google attacks back to "to a single foreign entity consisting either of agents of the Chinese state or proxies thereof," and that 30 companies were targeted.

    Fayer's law firm is likely one of those victims, as the technique used against it is similar to the Google attack.  The e-mail Fayer received was laced with a computer virus intended to allow the sender to spy on Fayer's computer; a blatant act of espionage, he said.  But Fayer wasn't terribly surprised. Last week, his firm filed a blockbuster lawsuit against the Chinese government on behalf of CyberSittter LLC, which makes parental control software.  CyberSitter says the Chinese stole its computer code while creating the infamous Green Dam censorship program, which was designed to be placed on every Chinese citizen's PC last year. After a backlash, the government decided to make installation optional.

    "Our law firm was certainly on high alert because of the lawsuit," he said.  "This is somewhat to be expected when you file a high-profile lawsuit against the government of China.”

    Fayer said he couldn't share much information about the e-mail, as FBI officials are investigating the incident. But it was designed to look like part of a normal electronic chat with a colleague. 

    "I was the first recipient at the firm," he said. "But there have actually been three waves of these customized e-mails.They'd each been made to look like they had a different sender, and a different pretense for the links or attachments embedded in the e-mails." The cybercriminal was clearly moving down a list of potential contacts at the firm, looking for someone to take the bait, he said.

    "The program was designed to go in and get information from our servers and computers and sent it back to the sender," he said.

    Computer researchers call the technique "spear phishing."  Rather than flooding a firm with thousands of spam-like phishing e-mails hoping to dupe dozens of victims, the new technique involves very specific, targeted notes designed to fool one victim at a time – and then use that computer to spy on the target agency or steal data.

    While Fayer could say little about the potential agent behind the attack, he said the firm assumed that "the timing of the e-mail attacks are not a coincidence."

    No lawyers fell for the trick, Fayer said, and he did not believe any information had been stolen.

    The alleged attacks from China are troubling on many fronts.  On Thursday, security firm McAfee released a report saying the program used to target U.S. firms involved a so-called "zero day" vulnerability — one that was to this point unknown to the security community, and thus indefensible by anti-virus software. The flaw involved Microsoft's Internet Explorer, McAfee said. Microsoft says it is working quickly to provide a software patch. 

    But the malicious software attacks other software flaws too, McAfee said, adding this ominous note: "There very well may be other attack vectors that are not known to us at this time."

    "These highly customized attacks known as advanced persistent threats were primarily seen by governments and the mere mention of them strikes fear in any cyberwarrior,” wrote McAfee's George Kurtz in a blog post today.  “They are in fact the equivalent of the modern drone on the battle field. With pinpoint accuracy they deliver their deadly payload and once discovered – it is too late…All I can say is wow. The world has changed. Everyone's threat model now needs to be adapted to the new reality of these advanced persistent threats. In addition to worrying about Eastern European cybercriminals trying to siphon off credit card databases, you have to focus on protecting all of your core intellectual property."

    Mark Rasch, former head of the Department of Justice computer crime unit, called the attacks “cyberwarfare,” and said it was clearly an escalation of digital conflict between China and the U.S.

    “At least it’s an escalation of the rhetoric, and that’s an escalation,” he said. “War is the extension of politics by other means, and the Internet is the extension of politics, and this is a form of cyberwarfare.”

    While isolated examples of government-sponsored hacking have popped up through the years, Rasch – who now runs Bethesda, Md.-based security consulting firm FTI – says this week’s incidents of alleged Chinese attacks are “new in the sense that they’ve been so  blatant,” and apparently so widespread, ranging from attempts to read dissidents’ e-mails to spying on a legal adversary.

    “We’ve had attacks in the past but by and large they were done in a way that gave the country plausible deniability,” said Rasch. “But this was different. This was fairly clearly a government-run operation.”

    China has yet to directly address the allegations. At a regular press briefing in Beijing on Thursday, Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said only “The Chinese government administers the Internet according to law and we have explicit stipulations over what content can be spread on the Internet,” according to the Bloomberg news service.

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