Category: News

  • Volvo Still Up for Grabs Despite Geely Agreement

    Although we all believed that Volvo is 99 percent sold, it appears that Ford is also willing to listen to other offers it might receive from various interested parties around the world. At least, this is what Volvo CEO Stephen Odell told the Dagens Industri newspaper, claiming that Ford would negotiate with any other bidder if it submits an offer.

    "I know that Ford is open to talking with others," he told the newspaper according to Reuters. "Those who say that the door is close… (read more)

  • Silverpac Silverstat 7 provides energy usage data, responds to touch

    Boy, if it’s not car dashboards, it’s thermostats — you just can’t get away from touchscreens these days. The latest 7-inch temperature regulator from Silverpac comes with a bunch of extra goodies to entice the touch control-loving generation into the energy conservation game. With WiFi built in, the Silverstat 7 can pump data out to the internet or your home network, and is equally adept at streaming photos, music and other content back from those connections. A full week’s worth of water temperature instructions can be programmed into the device, which can also inform you of weather conditions and your home’s energy consumption. The latter part is most intriguing, as you’ll be informed of power usage on a per-appliance basis, which can be mighty beneficial when a certain bit of home hardware gorges on electricity without you knowing. June 2010 is set as the release date, but the wallet damage remains unrevealed.

    Silverpac Silverstat 7 provides energy usage data, responds to touch originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 13 Jan 2010 04:38:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • All Living F1 Champions Will Attend 2010 Bahrain Grand Prix

    The Formula One fans that have bought (or will buy) tickets for this year’s season opener event in Bahrain will be offered a real treat. According to the Sakhir circuit’s boss Martin Whitaker, the Formula One representatives have worked hard in securing the presence of all living F1 champions at the Bahrain Grand Prix.

    If you’re wondering what’s the occasion, you might not be such a die-hard racing fan after all. Otherwise you’ll know that the premier automobile racing series will celebrate i… (read more)

  • Google Threatens to Pull Out of China

    Google has made one of the biggest moves in its history by saying that it wants to drop all censorship in China, even at the risk of leaving the market altogether. This is a bold move by the company and a very rare one among big foreign companies with interests in China. Some human rights activists commanded Google on the decision while others remained skep… (read more)

  • New Book: Rock Art of the Eastern Desert of Egypt

    BAR International Series, Archaeopress

    I am delighted to report that Tony Judd’s book “Rock Art of the Eastern Desert of Egypt” has been released by BAR. Based on work completed for PhD this is a comprehensive overview of the Eastern Desert’s engravings. Please note that the summary from the Archaeopress website seems to confuse this book with one focused on North America (I have informed Tony of the confusion). Instead, here’s a short extract from the Abstract from the book itself:

    Data that have recently become available on the petroglyhs of the Eastern Desert of Egypt are collated and analysed in detail. Images of wild animals, domestic animals, anthropoids and boats, together with geometric pattersns, are classified and assessed by statistical means to rech conclusions about the preferences of the artsits in terms of subject matter, style, context and geographical distribution.
  • Updated publication: Rock Art of the Libyan Desert (DVD)

    FJ Expeditions

    The Second Expanded Edition of the DVD “Rock Art of the Libyan Desert” is now available. The new edition contains over nearly 300 new rock art sites, all new discoveries in the 2005-2009 period, with approximately 12000 photos (about 4000 newly added ones).

    Andras Zboray
    www.fjexpeditions.com/

    Details are as follows:

    The Second Edition had been substantially expanded with the discoveries made by the author and others in the period 2005 to 2009. several new sites were added, and many sites have been updated with new photographs. Some of the new finds added considerably to our knowledge of the various styles and cultures, requiring some reworking of the corresponding sections. The following is a full listing of all updates and changes compared to the first edition:

    Geography
    • Added new region, “Clayton’s Craters”.

    Rock Art Sites
    • General: all scans of pre-2002 slides have been removed, and have been replaced with digital camera shots of the same scenes. In the few cases where the slides contained scenes that were not available in digital duplicate, the slides were re-scanned with a Minolta Dimage Scan Dual IV scanner and reproduced in 1024×683 pixels resolution, in a much improved quality compared to the first edition.
    Gilf Kebir Plateau
    • Added new photographs to sites EG 1 and EG 2 (North-eastern Gilf Kebir).
    • Added new photographs to sites WH 1, WH 2, WH 3/A, WH 3/B, WH 3/C and WH 4 (Gilf Kebir, Wadi Hamra).
    • Added new sites WH 3/D, WH 3/E and WH 3/F (Gilf Kebir, Wadi Hamra).
    • Added new photographs to sites AM 2/A, AM 2/B and AM 4 (Gilf Kebir, Wadi Abd el Melik).
    • Split Wadi Abd el Melik (Gilf Kebir) into five areas.
    • Re-numbered sites AM 1, AM 2/A, AM 2/B, AM 3 to AM 11, AM 12/A, AM 12/B and AM 13 (Gilf Kebir, Wadi Abd el Melik, Area 1).
    • Added new sites AM 12/C and AM 12/D (Gilf Kebir, Wadi Abd el Melik, Area 1).
    • Re-numbered site AM 4 to AM 38 (Gilf Kebir, Wadi Abd el Melik, Area 3).
    • Added new sites AM 31, AM 32, AM 33, AM 34, AM 35, AM 36 and AM 37 (Gilf Kebir, Wadi Abd el Melik, Area 3).
    • Added new sites AM 41, AM 42 and AM 43 (Gilf Kebir, Wadi Abd el Melik, Area 4).
    • Added new site AM 51 (Gilf Kebir, Wadi Abd el Melik, Area 5).
    • Added new photographs to sites WG 21, WG 31/B, WG 32, WG 33/A, WG 34, WG 41/A, WG 42/A, WG 45/A, WG 46, WG 48, WG 51 and WG 52 (North Western Gilf Kebir, areas 2, 3, 4 & 5).
    • Re-numbered site WG 44 to WG 44/A, and added new photographs (North Western Gilf Kebir, area 4).
    • Added new sites WG 41/D, WG 42/D and WG 44/B (North Western Gilf Kebir, area 4).
    • Added North Western Gilf Kebir, Area 8 (Gilf Kebir) with 2 new sites.
    • Added new photographs to site SG 1 (Southern Gilf Kebir).
    • Re-numbered site SG 2 to SG 2/A (Southern Gilf Kebir).
    • Added new site SG 2/B (Southern Gilf Kebir).
    “Unnamed Plateau”
    • Added new photographs to site UP 1 (“Unnamed Plateau”, SW Egypt).
    • Added new site UP 2 (“Unnamed Plateau”, SW Egypt).
    “Clayton’s Craters”
    • Added new region, “Clayton’s Craters” (With four areas, total of 16 sites).
    “Elephant Rocks”
    • Added new sites ER 3/A and ER 3/B (“Elephant Rocks” area).
    Jebel Uweinat
    • Added Karkur Ibrahim, Area 6 (Ain Duarmé, Jebel Uweinat) with 4 new sites.
    • Added new region, Emeri Highland, to the Jebel Uweinat area (With three areas, total of 20 sites).
    • Added new sites AZ 2, AZ 3/A and AZ 3/B (South Western Uweinat, Ain Zueia area).
    • Added South Uweinat, Area 4 (Jebel Uweinat) with 17 new sites.
    • Added new site WW 13 (Jebel Uweinat, Wadi Wahesh, Area 1).
    • Added new photographs to site WW 23 (Jebel Uweinat, Wadi Wahesh, Area 2).
    • Re-numbered site WW 25/A to WW 25 (Jebel Uweinat, Wadi Wahesh, Area 2).
    • Merged (mis-identified) site WW 25/B with WW 45/C (Jebel Uweinat, Wadi Wahesh, Area 4).
    • Added new site WW 26 (Jebel Uweinat, Wadi Wahesh, Area 2).
    • Added new photographs to site WW 31 (Jebel Uweinat, Wadi Wahesh, Area 3).
    • Re-numbered site WW 32 to WW 32/A, and added new photographs (Jebel Uweinat, Wadi Wahesh, Area 3).
    • Added new site WW 32/B (Jebel Uweinat, Wadi Wahesh, Area 3).
    • Added new photographs to site WW 43 (Jebel Uweinat, Wadi Wahesh, Area 4).
    • Re-assigned three photographs (04n_1502, 04n_1503, 04n_1504) from WW 45/C to WW 45/B (Jebel Uweinat, Wadi wahesh, Area 4).
    • Added new site WW 46 (Jebel Uweinat, Wadi Wahesh, Area 4).
    • Added Wadi Wahesh, Area 5 (Jebel Uweinat) with 13 new sites.
    • Added Wadi Wahesh, Area 6 (Jebel Uweinat) with 1 new site.
    • Added new region, Karkur Delein, to the Jebel Uweinat area (With five areas, total of 28 sites).
    • Identified Fig. 70 among van Graziosi’s unidentified sites as KDL 24 (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Delein, Area 2).
    • Added new photographs to sites KM 12 and KM 17 (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Murr, Area 1).
    • Site KM 31 (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Murr, Area 3) was identified to be the same as site WW 31 (Jebel Uweinat, Wadi Wahesh, Area 3).
    • Added new sites KM 31/A, KM 31/B, and KM 32 (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Murr, Area 3).
    • Added new photographs to sites KT 23/B, KT 23/C, KT 23/G, KT 23/I and KT 23/J (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh, Area 2).
    • Identified Fig. 74 among van Noten’s unidentified sites as KT 23/C (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh, Area 2).
    • Added new sites KT 31/C, KT 31/D, KT 32/D, KT 32/E and KT 35/C (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh, Area 3).
    • Added site overview photograph to sites KT 34/A, KT 34/B, KT 35/A and KT 38 (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh, Area 3).
    • Added new photographs to sites KT 33/A, KT 33/B, KT 36/C, KT 36/D, KT 36/E, KT 39/A and KT 39/B (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh, Area 3).
    • Added site overview photograph to sites KT 42/A, KT 42/B, KT 42/D, KT 43/A and KT 43/B (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh, Area 4).
    • Identified Fig. 7 among van Noten’s unidentified sites as KT 45 (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh, Area 4).
    • Added new photographs to sites KT 46/B and KT 46/C (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh, Area 4).
    • Added new site KT 46/F (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh, Area 4).
    • Added new photographs to site KT 61/B (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh, Area 6).
    • Added new photographs to sites KT 71/A, KT 71/B, KT 73/B, KT 75, KT 76/A, and KT 76/C (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh, Area 7).
    • Added new photographs to sites KT 83/A, KT 83/B, KT 83/C, KT 84/A, KT 84/B, KT 85/A, KT 85/C, KT 86/B, KT 87/A, KT 87/B, KT 87/C, KT 88/A, KT 88/B, KT 88/C and KT 88/D (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh, Area 8).
    • Added new sites KT 83/D and KT 83/E (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh, Area 8).
    • Identified Fig. 59 among van Noten’s unidentified sites as KT 83/E (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh, Area 8).
    • Added new photographs to sites KT 97, KT 98/B, KT 98/C and KT 99/C (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh, Area 9).
    • Added new sites KT 95/E, KT 95/F, KT 98/D and KT 99/E (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh, Area 9).
    • Identified Winkler’s photo M1008 (assigned to unidentified site KTN 22/B) as belonging to site KTN 21 (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh North, Area 2).
    • Added new sites KTN 22/B and KTN 25/C (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh North, Area 2).
    • Added new photographs to sites KTN 25/A, KTN 25/B, KTN 26/A, KTN 26/C and KTN 27 (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh North, Area 2).
    • Added new sites KTN 45/A, KTN 45/B, and KTN 46 (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh North, Area 4).
    • Added Karkur Talh North, Area 5 (Jebel Uweinat) with one new site.
    • Re-numbered site KTE 15 to KTE 15/A, added new site KTE 15/B (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh East).
    • Added new photographs to sites KTS 15/A, KTS 15/C and KTS 16/A (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh South, Area 1).
    • Added a previously unreported panel (Cluster 1. right) and new photographs to site KTS 15/B (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh South, Area 1).
    • Re-numbered site KTS 21 to KTS 21/A, added new sites KTS 21/B and KTS 21/C (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh South, Area 2).
    • Added new photographs to sites KTS 23/A, KTS 23/C, KTS 23/D, KTS 23/E, KTS 24/A, KTS 24/B, KTS 25 and KTS 26/C (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh South, Area 2).
    • Added new sites KTS 23/F and KTS 23/G (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh South, Area 2).
    • Re-assigned two photographs (02o_025, 02o_026) from KTS 23/C to KTS 23/D (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh South, Area 2).
    • Re-numbered sites KTS 31 to KTS 31/A, KTS 32 to KTS 31/B, added new sites KTS 32/A, KTS 32/B, KTS 32/C, KTS 34/C, KTS 34/D and KTS 34/E (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh South, Area 3).
    • Added new photographs to sites KTS 35/A and KTS 37 (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh South, Area 3).
    • Added new site KTS 64 (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh South, Area 6).
    • Re-numbered sites KTW 12/A to KTW 11/A, KTW 12/B to KTW 11/B, KTW 13/E to KTW 12 (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh West, Area 1).
    • Added new photographs to site KTW 11/A (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh West, Area 1).
    • Added new sites KTW 11/C and KTW 11/D (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh West, Area 1).
    • Re-numbered site KTW 15 to KTW 15/B (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh West, Area 1).
    • Added new sites KTW 15/A, KTW 15/C and KTW 16/C (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh West, Area 1).
    • Added new photographs to sites KTW 21/A, KTW 22/A, KTW 23/A, KTW 23/B, KTW 24, KTW 26/A, KTW 26/B, KTW 27/A, KTW 28/A, KTW 28/B and KTW 28/C (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh West, Area 2).
    • Re-numbered site KTW 23/C to KTW 23/D, added new site KTW 23/C (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh West, Area 2).
    • Re-assigned three photographs (03f_0943, 03f_0944, 03f_0945) from KTW 27/B to KTW 23/C (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh West, Area 2).
    • Added new photographs to sites KTW 23/C and KTW 23/D (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh West, Area 2).
    • Re-numbered site KTW 25 to KTW 25/A, added new sites KTW 25/B, KTW 26/C (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh West, Area 2).
    • Added new sites KTW 27/F and KTW 27/G (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh West, Area 2).
    • Added Karkur Talh West, Area 3 (Jebel Uweinat) with five new sites.
    • Re-numbered site KTW 11 to KTW 31 (Jebel Uweinat, Karkur Talh West, Area 3).
    • Added new photographs to sites HP 12, HP 21/A, HP 21/B and HP 42 (Jebel Uweinat, Hassanein Plateau).
    • Added new site HP 43 (Jebel Uweinat, Hassanein Plateau, Area 4).
    • Added North Western Plateau area (Jebel Uweinat) with 1 new site.
    • Added Wadi Handal area (Jebel Uweinat) with 3 sub-areas and a total of 9 new sites.
    • Re-numbered site KTN 18 to UWH 24 (Jebel Uweinat, Wadi Handal).
    Rock Art Styles
    • Revised “Uweinat Roundhead” Style among paintings to reflect new finds.
    • Added Elongated “Roundhead” Style to the recognised paintings styles.
    • Added Wadi Wahesh Style to the recognised paintings styles.
    • Revised Cattle Herders Style among paintings to reflect new assessment of animal faced human figures (named “Karnasahi Style” in first edition).
    • Removed the Karnasahi style from the recognised paintings styles (which is now considered a sub-style of the Cattle Herders).
    • Added Dynastic Egyptian to the recognised engravings styles.

    Bibliography
    • 2005 saw a major addition to the bibliography of the rock art of the Libyan Desert: du Sahara au Nil by Jean-Loïc le Quellec, Pauline and Philippe de Flers (Soleb Fayard, Paris, 2005). This monumental work, illustrated with hundreds of photographs, discusses all aspects of the rock art of the Gilf Kebir and Jebel Uweinat area. The bibliography of individual sites was updated to include a reference to the photographs in this work.

    In the period 2006-2009 several new articles appeared in the Sahara journal (numbers 17-20) related to the rock art of the Gilf Kebir & Uweinat region, which have all been incorporated into the bibliography and individual site bibliographical references.

  • Interview: Unesco – Connecting Culture and the People

    The Guardian, UK (Florence Evin and Brigitte Perucca)

    Last September, after political infighting on a scale rarely seen at Unesco, Irina Bokova, 57, originally from Bulgaria, was elected as the first women to head the organisation. Last November she travelled to Egypt to rebuild connections with Farouk Hosni, her rival for the job. “The election is behind us, we have turned over a new leaf and I am very optimistic”
  • Baidu.tw Wasn’t Hacked To Show Google (And How You Can Tell)

    Lots of interesting commentary in the wake of Google’s bombshell blog post from yesterday about its decision to stop censoring its search results and possibly withdrawing from the Chinese market all together after being hit with severe cyber attacks on its core infrastructure. You can follow the conversation on Techmeme, but there’s one item that just hit the news aggregator that I felt compelled to set straight.

    Thomas Crampton correctly notes that Baidu.tw, supposedly owned by Chinese search leader Baidu, is currently getting forwarded to the Google Taiwan homepage (albeit only when you put www in front of the domain name). But it’s false to assume that the site was hacked, and there’s a number of ways you can tell.

    Just to be clear, I’m not criticizing Crampton here. After all, the Baidu.com domain name was hacked just yesterday so his assumption isn’t that far-fetched.

    However, a simple WHOIS search reveals that the domain name isn’t owned by Baidu but by another entity, either an individual or an organization. The identity (Zheng Xiaodo) and contact details that were given for registration are likely fake, and I seriously doubt the owner really lives in China.

    The person who registered Baidu.tw, back in 2005, has used the generic contact e-mail address for at least 99 other domain names in the past. He or she signed up for a generic email account on Chinese portal 21cn.com, an ISP under ownership of a holding called Century Dragon Information Network, which can be perfectly done by anyone outside of the country.

    Furthermore, this person used Malaysian registrar (Web.CC) to secure the domain name, and the nameservers that are currently configured for the Web address are also located in Kuala Lumpur, capital of Malaysia. For its other domain names, Baidu uses its own nameservers. It also uses taiwan.baidu.com for its Taiwan operations, although the site is currently offline for me.

    Also, when you look at the cache for Baidu.tw, you can see that just a couple of days ago the domain led to Szhot.com, another domain name registrar.

    Finally, when you go to Baidu.tw right now and click around (apart from the top menu), you’ll see that there was simply a change in domain name record settings, likely following the flurry of news about Google’s China stance and the role Baidu plays in all this from yesterday.

    In conclusion: Baidu.tw was not hacked; someone is just trying to play a number on Baidu.

    (Image via Thomas Crampton)

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  • Quick Tip: Add V8 to Soup!

    2010-01-14-V8Soup.jpgDo you drink V8? We like it in savory smoothies, the occasional bloody mary, and lately, soup! Thanks to a tip in a recent issue of Cook’s Illustrated, we’ve started substituting a cup or two of this all-vegetable juice to the broth in our soups, stews, and braises this winter.

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  • Feature: A history of the world in 100 objects

    Radio Times

    Includes a number of ancient Egyptian items.

    In what marks a unique public service partnership, the BBC is joining forces with the British Museum to tell humankind’s story through the things we have made, from the Mummy of Hornedjitef to the modern credit card.

    A History of the World in 100 Objects will be broadcast on BBC Radio 4 weekdays from Monday 18 January (9:45am/7:45pm/12:15am). Written and presented by Neil MacGregor, director of the British Museum, each of the 100 editions (which are split into three tranches over the course of the year) focuses on a particular object.

    Here we reveal the list of 99 objects – the 100th is still to be selected. “We’ll leave choosing it until the last moment, so that it’s as relevant as possible,” says MacGregor.

    Browse the list below and let us know what you think the 100th object should be…

  • post-operative skin necrosis

    Hi everyone!
    I haven’t been here for a while, but now I need your support and advice:)
    I wanted to get in a really good shape before my 40th bday, so I first lost 5 kg with a diet/exercise, then I went for a dermolipectomy to fix my tummy (as a type II i had a belly, not to mention 2 pregnancies and a hernia) so it was 2 kg in addition, then I lost 5 kg more – 12 in total. Now I love how I look, I have a shape that I had 20 years ago, BUT there is a problem. The scar from the surgery was at least 50 cm long, and a part of it, maybe 15 cm was necrotic, so I had to go to a second surgery to fix that. But it happened again, only much smaller this time, but still, it’s ugly even though absolutely painless…. And I don’t know what to do now, I don’t want to see that doc again, because all he knows is to blame me, as if I’m guilty to be a diabetic? I do try to my best to keep the gluc level OK (it’s usually 6 – 8, which is really the best i can do. It rarely drops below 5 even if i don’t eat anything at all).
    So the Q is: is there a good natural remedy or a regular medicine, whatever, to speed up the skin regeneration, epitelization, wound healing, etc… I have tried a number of things like panthenol etc, but it doesn’t seem to do much.
    Anyone here that had a similar problem?
    Many thanx, and all best in 2010!
    srpkinja
  • Feature: Sandro Vannini’s Photography – The Theban Tomb of Montuemhat and his son Nesptah (TT34)

    Heritage Key

    As Dr Gomaa and his team progress deeper into the Tomb of Montuemhat, Sandro’s lens captures the work that archaeologists put into the digs, documenting their finds and making notes about the wall paintings.

    Sandro Vannini is an established photographer of Egyptology artefacts and ancient tombs, having spent that past decade capturing some of the world’s greatest treasures, including the Golden Mask of King Tutankhamun. Working with Sandro, Heritage Key is working to bring these images to the internet and give an insight into our fascinating past. To watch a slideshow of the photographs of the Tomb of Montuemhat, click any of the thumbnails below.

    Inside the Tomb of the diplomat Montuemhat, Sandro used a Kodak DCS Pro SLR/n to capture photographs of the archaeologists as they excavate the tomb, and try to understand more about the discoveries they make. These front line images, coupled with the video, gives a fantastic insight into the archaeological dig at TT34.

  • Telefonica Will Reboot Its App Dev Strategy Next Month


    O2 Palm Pre

    Telefonica (NYSE: TEF) will next month announce it’s building a new mobile apps developer network on top of its UK subsidiary O2’s existing programme, despite admitting it hasn’t been a great success.

    Litmus launched in December 2008 to let savvy subscribers test and rate the newest in apps across various operating systems.

    “If I gave Litmus a scorecard grade, it would be a six out of 10,” Litmus’ own head James Parton tells paidContent:UK, adding it’s has been a “challenge” to execute.

    But Telefonica isn’t canning Litmus; quite the opposite – it’s promoted Parton to group level to oversee developer programmes worldwide, and will relaunch Litmus under a new name and with a new business model at Mobile World Congress in February.

    The new scheme will offer APIs to develop apps not just for O2 in the UK but across the rest of the operator’s footprint in Europe and Latin America.

    Right now, Litmus is a world away from the likes of iPhone’s app store, which numbers about 100,000 apps: “We don’t have any active app (being sold through our retail channels),” Parton said. People can buy apps through the Litmus site, though. “We have one (retail app) in development in the next two months.”

    Currently, Litmus developers get 70 percent of revenues from any apps that have been purchased; this could well change, Parton says. Additionally, the changeover will include partnerships with other companies like handset makers – names also to be announced in February. This will be in line with a new-look app store that Telefonica wants to implement across its operations. This project is being overseen by Tanya Field, O2’s mobile data chief.

    Parton claims Litmus has had a “solid” start, having gone from “no credibility” among developers to having 925 of them, across 64 countries, sign up to the service. In total, 663 apps have been developed on O2’s APIs.

    But the slow-moving process of getting those apps into a more retail environment rather than a specialised developer area, points to some of the challenges that operators still have in capitalising on the current craze for mobile data services. Indeed, when asked for a good example of the kind of app he would like to see coming out of Litmus – or whatever it will be called post-February – Parton points to one app, myO2, a customer account management tool that was developed at O2 itself.

    There is some evidence of developer programs for mobile apps in some of Telefonica’s markets already, such as Spain and Mexico, but this will be the first time that Telefonica will try to coordinate these activities in a kind of uber-developer pool.

    Separately, O2 UK opened project that pleges to buy for up to £1 million ($1.6 million) the developer of a successful web service for small enterprises.

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  • Prysm Hopes Laser-Driven Screens Will Outshine LCD, LED Displays

    Prysm displays in a public space
    Wade Roush wrote:

    If you’re seeing electronic displays on every wall, window, billboard, and passing dirigible, it’s a sure sign that you’re stuck in a science-fiction movie. While a few real-world destinations like New York’s Times Square and Tokyo’s Ginza district are plastered with outdoor displays, such technology is still too expensive and electricity-hogging to put everywhere.

    But this might not be true forever. In fact, Prysm, a San Jose, CA, startup that came out of stealth mode yesterday, is working to ease the biggest limitations on large-screen displays, especially their power requirements. The company says that screens using its new laser phosphor display (LPD) technology suck up only one-quarter as much electricity as screens using today’s dominant liquid-crystal display (LCD) or light-emitting diode (LED) technologies.

    Moreover, Prysm’s LPD screens—which the startup plans to manufacture at a plant in Concord, MA—can be built in any size or shape, from square tiles to long, thin ribbons, meaning they could turn up almost anywhere someone wants to convey information or advertising, day or night. “We can make it as big and bright as you can imagine,” says Roger Hajjar, Prysm’s co-founder and chief technology officer and the primary inventor of the company’s LPD technology. “That’s the goodness here—the size and brightness are scalable. If you need more brightness, you just add more laser power.”

    Prysm displays in a theaterHajjar and Prysm CEO Amit Jain, who have been friends since their undergraduate days at Boston University, co-founded the startup under the stealth name Spudnik back in 2005, with venture funding from Artiman Ventures of East Palo Alto, CA, and Partech International of San Francisco. Hajjar says large LPD-based screens—which actually have more in common with old-fashioned cathode ray tubes (CRTs) than they do with LCDs—became practical for the first time in the 2000s thanks to the development of new phosphor materials by the LED industry and the increasing power and efficiency (and declining cost) of laser-light sources. Unlike many hardware startups, Prysm won’t merely license the intellectual property it has developed to other equipment makers, but plans to manufacture and sell LPD products under its own brand.

    The company isn’t saying yet exactly which applications or markets it will pursue first, and it’s only showing off its prototype displays in private, invitation-only settings such as a booth at the Integrated Systems Europe audio-video trade show in Amsterdam next month. But a glimpse at the Prysm website shows where the company’s thoughts are heading. In Prysm’s glossy version of the future, LPDs will light up theaters, casinos, trade shows, stadiums, shopping malls, broadcast studios, train stations, airports, command centers, financial exchanges, hotel lobbies, museums, even churches.

    LPD screens may initially cost more to install than LCD or LED screens, but Prysm vice president of sales and marketing Dana Corey says they’ll cost far less to operate, since they use less power and …Next Page »







  • Exhibition: Journey through the Afterlife

    Heritage Key (Ann Wuyts)

    Never before the Book of the Dead has been the focus of such a major exhibition as the one upcoming at the British Museum in November this year. Rumours of the exhibition started to surface (or at least, reach my ears) ever since the Colloquium on the Book of the Death last year, but was only recently confirmed. ‘Journey through the afterlife: the ancient Egyptian Book of the Dead’ will focus on how the ancient Egyptian Book of the Dead was thought to guide the deceased safely through the dangers of the underworld, ultimately (hopefully) ensuring eternal life. The Book of the Dead is not a single text, but a compilation of spells – often with illustrations of the underworld – of which the content evolved over time.
  • Fifth of Armed Forces Doomed

    Defence cuts ‘will shrink UK armed forces’

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/8455754.stm

    The British armed forces could be forced to shrink by up to a fifth because of a lack of money, a military think tank has predicted.

    The Royal United Services Institute said the number of trained military personnel could fall from 175,000 to little more than 140,000 by 2016.

    Its report said the cost of troops and equipment was rising, and major cuts were "inevitable".

    The Ministry of Defence said budgets would not be cut at all next year.

    The report’s author, defence expert Professor Malcolm Chalmers, warned hard choices lay ahead and efficiency savings would not be enough to put Britain’s defences on a sustainable footing.

    He said even being "cautiously optimistic", intense pressure on government finances meant the MoD’s budget was likely to fall by 11% in real terms by 2017.

    And he said a much deeper reduction of about 15% over the next three years could not be ruled out.

    Professor Chalmers warned the problem would be made worse because the costs of employing troops and civilian personnel have been rising in real terms, as has buying and running equipment.

    Cuts to the available budget combined with growing costs meant the next six years were likely to see a reduction of about 20% in the number of service personnel, the report said.

    Military capabilities in terms of ships, aircraft and ground formations would also be reduced by a similar amount.

    Professor Chalmers indicated that major cuts would be inevitable whichever party was in power later this year.

    He said there would be a strong temptation for a new government to postpone making tough, potentially unpopular choices, perhaps by only looking a few years ahead, rather than a whole decade, when reviewing defence.

    He warned ministers would face the choice between suffering the "political pain" of defence cuts all at once, or in "successive small doses".

    Professor Chalmers told the BBC: "Defence is something you have to plan on a long-term basis, and it’s much better to plan it long-term than year to year because the implications of that is more and more waste and inefficiency.

    "Given the fact that we all know there is going to be a severe squeeze in the overall government budget, unless defence is ring-fenced it will face cuts of the sort of magnitude we’re talking about."

    Former Liberal Democrat leader Sir Menzies Campbell said spending cuts would be painful.

    "One thing is certain, there has to be a review because the present arrangements have resulted in very considerable overstretch, procurement has had a pretty shabby history in truth," he said.

    "And against the background of the general economic situation there’s a very strong argument that says we should be protecting frontline services in health and education, and defence has to take its share of the damage."

    The institute’s predictions come ahead of defence minister Bill Rammell’s keynote speech on the future of the armed forces.

    He is expected to focus on "the impact of modern society on defence" such as the Freedom of Information Act and 24-hour news.

    Responding to the report, an MoD spokesman said it welcomed the RUSI’s contribution to the debate, and said "like all departments, the Ministry of Defence is facing challenging financial circumstances".

    "We routinely review spending to ensure we focus on Afghanistan and live within our means," he added.

    The MoD said the chancellor had already said not a penny would be cut from the defence budget next year – but it was not possible to give a meaningful assessment beyond 2011 as future spending plans had not been set.

    The Conservatives and Labour have said they will hold strategic defence reviews after the general election. The last was held in 1998.

  • Exhibition: The Metropolitan Police Service’s Investigation of Fakes and Forgeries

    Victoria and Albert Museum, London

    23 January – 7 February 2010

    Rooms 17a & 18a
    Free admission

    In this display, The Metropolitan Police Service’s Art and Antiques Unit will showcase some of the investigative methods involved in detecting and preventing the increasingly sophisticated crime of art forgery. Using historical and contemporary criminal cases, the broader financial and cultural impacts of art forgery on modern society are considered. Exhibits will include the diverse body of work assembled by the forger, Shaun Greenhalgh, who executed such fake “masterpieces” as the Egyptian Amarna princess and paintings purporting to be the work of the English artist, L.S. Lowry.

  • Photo: Dr Hawass inside the Osiris shaft

    drhawass.com

    The photo is on the above page. Here’s the caption.

    Dr. Hawass stands in the Osiris Shaft. During his excavations of the Osiris Shaft in 1999, Dr. Hawass found the remains of four pillars surrounded by a wall. Inside the pillared area was part of a large, granite sarcophagus with the lid thrown off. This discovery reflected the words of Herodotus when he said that Khufu was buried inside a granite sarcophagus and there was water near Khufu’s pyramid. People have always wondered about these words, but no one ever discovered the exact location. Even Herodotus admitted that he never saw the burial with his own eyes, because he was never able to go down into the shaft; he must have based his writing on the words of guides. (Photo: SCA)
  • Photo for Today – Battlefield Palette

    Battlefield Palette at the British Museum
    There’s a description of the palette at the British Museum’s website

  • Polk Automotive Loyalty Winners Announced

    Automotive information provider Polk announced during one of the 2010 North American International Auto Show (NAIAS) events the winners of its 14th Annual Automotive Loyalty Awards. For this edition, four new awards were presented, as well as three new ethnic loyalty awards.

    The manufacturer which got it all is Toyota, who outdone GM and received the Overall Loyalty to Manufacturer award, a prize given based on he manufacturer’s ability to retain previous customers (for Toyota, the fact that … (read more)