Category: News

  • Panic releases Unison 2, improves binaries support

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    Panic has released a major update to its Mac Usenet client Unison. Usenet is one of those historical districts of the Internet that’s a bit off the beaten track these days, but still has its uses. It began as a global message board system and still has lots of folks doing that, but it has also become a huge repository of binaries and a good alternative to bittorrent and other peer to peer systems.

    Back in the day I was a Usenet fiend, but I’d fallen away until very recently; I returned courtesy of NewsgroupDirect, a good, Mac-friendly third-party Usenet provider that provided a review account for TUAW use (you generally have to subscribe these days for Usenet access). What I was surprised to discover on my return was the advent of NZB files and search engines which make it extremely easy to find binaries (unlike the old days when you had to look for everything manually). The new version of Unison offers native support for NZB searching within the application (via binsearch.info and others). It also automatically takes care of finding missing parts, PAR recovery, and RAR unpacking. In short, Unison is now clearly your best bet on the Mac for Usenet binaries.

    Of course Unison also retains its older message reading features and adds handy new ones like threading. There’s an updated interface and the general level of Mac goodness one associates with Panic. Unison 2.0 is $29 ($18 upgrade from version 1) and a 7-day demo is available. If you need a Usenet subscription, Panic is offering the companion service Unison Access for $9 a month; NewsgroupDirect offers a range of plans from $8 to $20 per month.

    TUAWPanic releases Unison 2, improves binaries support originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Wed, 06 Jan 2010 16:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Found Footage: Bose headphones grafted onto Apple inline remote

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    Our buddies over at Engadget turned us on to this short video, in which modder Freddy Deeble created a sonic hybrid — a pair of Bose headphones using an Apple inline remote.

    If you’re handy with a pair of wire cutters, a small screwdriver, and a soldering iron, then you can mimic how Mr. Deeble achieved the best of both worlds with his little mod. Not only does he get better audio quality from the over-the-ear Bose ‘phones than he would from a standard pair of Apple earbuds or in-ear headphones, but he also gets to keep that sweet little inline “squeezably soft” remote.

    TUAW, of course, takes no responsibility for any damage you may cause to your Bose headphones, your Apple earbuds with remote, or yourself if you do this. And your warranties? Consider ‘em gone… Enjoy the video, and stay safe, kids.

    TUAWFound Footage: Bose headphones grafted onto Apple inline remote originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Wed, 06 Jan 2010 16:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Parrot unveils the AR.Drone, an iPhone-controlled microcopter, at CES

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    Probably the coolest iPhone-related product to come out of the festivities at CES so far this week is the AR.Drone, created by a company called Parrot. It’s a little working microcopter that’s remote-controlled by an iPhone app, and it’s decked out with all sorts of interesting gadgetry, including an accelerometer, gyroscope, and two cameras. A key feature is Wi-Fi integration, so the AR.Drone can actually be controlled by any Wi-Fi device, not just an iPhone.

    Release is rumored to happen as early as March of this year, although the product itself is still somewhat surrounded in mystery — we don’t know a price, and even some of the features sound a little fantastical. Apparently the drone has an “autofly” setting, in which it’ll follow certain visual stimuli in the environment, and it apparently also watches the floor for flight stabilization. The features go even further than that, with the cameras on the real-life drone providing an augmented reality game feed (like shooting robots around your house as you explore with the drone) back to the iPhone.

    Like I said, the features are fantastical. Parrot hasn’t actually been able to show off controlling the copter with the iPhone in anything but the video above — apparently there’s too much Wi-Fi permeating the air around CES. But this is the most-hyped item coming out of the first few days of CES for sure. It’ll be interesting to see how the actual product looks and works as we get closer to the expected release. Boy, a price would be nice to hear, though it’ll probably be high!

    TUAWParrot unveils the AR.Drone, an iPhone-controlled microcopter, at CES originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Wed, 06 Jan 2010 15:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • If You Think AT&T Has Network Problems Now, Just You Wait … [Digital Daily]

    death-star-attFor AT&T, 2010 will be all about Android and Palm’s WebOS– at least that’s the impression one’s left with after the company’s CES event this morning which featured a lot of talk about devices based on those operating systems and little mention of Apple’s (AAPL) iPhone, which has overstuffed the company’s wallet almost as obscenely as it has its network. Evidently AT&T (T) thought it best not to mention the iconic super-smartphone too much, lest its executives be driven offstage by a mob of iPhone users complaining of dropped calls, lousy service, delayed text and voice messages and testudine download speeds.

    Anyway, as I was saying … AT&T said it would be adding two as of yet undisclosed Palm (PALM) WebOS phones to its line-up this year, as well as five Android devices. Among the latter, a mysterious new HTC phone (hmm … wonder what that could be …) and Dell’s Mini 3 — a device that shares the same basic design as the smarphones Dell (DELL) already sells in China. Oh, and the company has adopted an “Apps for All” strategy that will see it supporting not just the iPhone App Store, but Palm’s App Catalog, the Android, Windows Marketplace and Nokia’s (NOK) Ovi Store

    So, AT&T is adding five new data-guzzling “Superphones” to its 2010 line-up, along with 4 new app storefronts. How does it propose to handle the resulting data demands considering the difficulties it’s had supporting the iPhone? Said AT&T Mobility CEO Ralph de la Vega, “How is our network going to support this growth? We’re continuing to add thousands of new cell sites and backhaul connections and preparing for the move to LTE. We’re confident that our industry leading investments and upgrades will help us maintain our position as the nation’s fastest 3G network.”

    Whatever you say Ralph.

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  • El Passat EcoFuel, con gas natural, supera al Toyota Prius en bajas emisiones

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    La FIA desarrolla cada año unas pruebas de emisiones en donde se califica al vehículo menos contaminante en producción. Mientras en otras ediciones de los Eco Test el Toyota Prius fue el rey de la “ola verde”, esta vez el galardón le tocó a un combustible que ya es viejo conocido en Europa y Sudamérica, el gas natural.

    El Volkswagen Passat EcoFuel resultó ser menos contaminante que el híbrido Toyota Prius en los Eco Test de la FIA. El Passat, equipado con un motor dual a gas natural que también se ofrece en otros modelos de Volkswagen en Europa, lleva el motor 1.4 TSI, turbocargado y con inyección directa, además de funcionar alternativamente con gas natural.

    Lo cierto es que el gas natural es un combustible al que no se le ha prestado la debida atención, siendo económico para el usuario y mucho menos contaminante, además de que no es necesaria una gran inversión para que el gas pueda ser usado. Es cierto que en el caso del Passat tiene mucho que ver la tecnología usada en el mismo motor que da como resultado una autonomía de unos 900 kilómetros con gasolina y gas, pero también es cierto que las cualidades “verdes” del gas no son nada nuevas.

    Una pena que en España no haya más puntos de repostaje de gas, como en otros lugares de Europa o América. Y ya que el Prius fue la medida contra la cual medir las emisiones del Passat: si el gas fuera más popular de lo que es, el Toyota Prius tendría más de un rival de cuidado y quizás no tuviera la aceptación que tiene.

    Vía | Autoblog Green



  • CES: Honey, I Shrunk the Thumb Drives [Voices]

    By Andrew LaVallee, Reporter, The Wall Street Journal

    Coming soon: flash drives even smaller than the ones you already have.

    Lexar Media, a memory-products unit of Micron Technology, is launching a line of what it calls “ultra-portable” USB flash drives at CES. Chief among them is the Lexar Echo ZE, a mere 20.1 by 15.1 millimeters (roughly 0.8″ by 0.6″) in size.

    Lexar is calling it “one of the smallest USB flash drives in the world” and marketing it to netbook and laptop users.

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  • Former Napster CEO’s “Dream” More of a Nightmare When You Really Think About It [Digital Daily]

    imagesBest Buy said this morning that it is “streamlining Napster’s executive structure” — corporate parlance for sacking the faltering music service’s leadership which has had a tough time finding a winning business model in a digital music world dominated by Apple’s (AAPL) iTunes store. CEO Chris Gorog and president Brad Duea are both leaving Napster which was acquired by the big box retailer a little over a year ago.

    Gorog announced his departure in a farewell post to the Napster blog.

    “We began with a simple idea – “legalizing Napster” – and spent almost a decade trying to perfect that dream,” Gorog wrote in a farewell post ot the Napster blog. “It wasn’t always easy. We were criticized at times for “renting” music. But we thought then – and still believe quite strongly – that we had a better approach to digital music. Why buy downloads – when for a small monthly fee you can have access to – everything? Well after a lot of years of chasing this dream of – unlimited access, anytime, anywhere – it seems to be catching on.”

    Erm, not really. Napster had 760,000 in 2008. Today it has about 700,000. That’s not catching on, it’s holding on — for dear life … And, to be fair, the dream to which Gorog refers is a tough one to chase when your service doesn’t work on the dominant media hardware of the day — even after Best Buy acquires you for $121 million. At this point, it’s been eclipsed by a nightmare reallity in which Napster’s legal subscription service stagnates as rivals like Apple’s iTunes and Amazon continue to push it to the periphery of the digital music market.

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  • eVoter, Sun-Times Media Announce Partnership Ahead of 2010 Illinois Primary Election

    eVoter (evoter.com) and Sun-Times Media, LLC, today announced a partnership that will link Illinois voters to election information, candidate profiles and organization endorsements in preparation for the Feb. 2, 2010, primary election.

    eVoter is the first online destination where voters, candidates and endorsing organizations make direct connections.

    The non-partisan website provides voters with the accurate, up-to-date information they need to make informed decisions on Election Day, from statewide races for Governor and U.S. Senator all the way down to candidates for County Board and Precinct Committeeman in every district in Illinois.

    Through the partnership, Sun-Times Media will provide direct links from each of its newspaper Web sites to co-branded voter information services powered by eVoter.

    In the months leading up to the primary and 2010 general election, eVoter will power a search field on each of Sun-Times Media’s Web sites that allows voters to search for more information quickly on a specific candidate or race.

    “eVoter is pleased to announce its partnership with a respected, well-known news organization like the Chicago Sun-Times,” said Adam Kravitz, CEO of Political Technologies LLC, owners and operators of eVoter.

    “Now, when voters turn to any of Sun-Times Media’s websites to catch up on the latest local election news, they’ll also have easy access to the powerful election resources provided by eVoter. This is an exciting new service that is unique to voters in Illinois.”

    “Sun-Times Media is excited to work with eVoter and bring eVoter’s valuable voter tools to our marketplace, which will link Illinois voters with accurate and important election information,” said Hunt Kingsbury, Vice President and General Manager of Interactive Media for Sun-Times Media.

    eVoter allows voters to locate their polling place, generate and print a customized ballot, access an absentee ballot, look up endorsements from registered organizations, and donate to campaigns.

    In addition to the voter tools, candidates can purchase and customize an online profile, and endorsing organizations can publicize their candidate endorsements for a low cost.

    Searches on the co-branded sites will highlight candidates endorsed by the editorial staffs of the Sun-Times Media’s newspapers.

    Illinois, which has the nation’s first primary election in 2010, is the first state where eVoter is available.

    Political Technologies plans to provide the service in more than a half-dozen states by the 2010 general election and all 50 states by 2012.

    For more information, visit eVoter.com or suntimes.com. Candidates or endorsing organizations that are interested in creating a profile should visit eVoter.com or call (866) 976-0555.

    ABOUT EVOTER

    eVoter is the unbiased, non-partisan election information site where voters can generate a personalized sample ballot instantly, view candidate profiles, make contributions, view organizational endorsements, find polling places, request absentee ballot applications, and more.

    Owned and operated by Florida-based Political Technologies LLC (politicaltechnologies.com), eVoter is designed with the goal of providing voters with concise unbiased information on every candidate and measure on their ballot.

    With 7000+ Illinois Primary Election Candidates listed and 11,000+ polling places, eVoter is the destination for 2010 Illinois Primary Election information.

    ABOUT SUN-TIMES MEDIA

    Sun-Times Media is dedicated to being the premier source of local news and information for the greater Chicago area.

    Its media properties serve more than 300 communities across the region and include the Chicago Sun-Times and Suntimes.com; seven suburban daily newspapers, including the Beacon-News (Aurora), Courier-News (Elgin), Herald-News (Joliet), Lake County News-Sun, Naperville Sun, Post-Tribune (Merrillville, Ind.) and the SouthtownStar; 39 weekly newspapers published by the Pioneer Press and 12 weekly Sun newspapers, as well as Web sites for those newspapers, centerstagechicago.com, RogerEbert.com and YourSeason.com.


  • My Yellow, Two-door Crosley

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    National Public Radio’s Car Talk guys, Tom and Ray Magliozzi, asked listeners to vote for “the worst cars of the millennium.” The top three losers were the Yugoslavian Yugo (sold 1985-92),Chevrolet Vega (sold 1971-77) and Ford Pinto (sold 1971-80).

    Not even mentioned was my very first car: the Crosley. What a disappointment — for me, for Frank Lloyd Wright, if only he were alive, and for all who are left of the 70,000 or so people who innocently bought Crosleys in their heyday, the brief span from 1946 to 1952.

    This car was the brainchild of Cincinnati’s Powel Crosley Jr., the man who in the 1920s made radios so inexpensive he became known as “the Henry Ford of radio.” He also built the first car radio, owned Cincinnati’s Station WLW (in its day the world’s most powerful radio station) and the Cincinnati Reds baseball club (in 1935, he made sure they played the first night game), and created the Crosley Shelvador (the first refrigerator with shelves in its door).

    Long before the Volkswagen Beetle arrived here, Crosley was determined to give post-World-War-II America what he was sure we needed: a cheap small car. Shorter and narrower than the VW, his Crosley tracked only 40 inches between its 12-inch diameter wheels. The car was an improvement on his smaller prewar Bantam, a two-cylinder, 13.5-horsepower job without universal joints but with a hand-powered windshield wiper.

    My bright-yellow two-door Crosley convertible seated four. It cost less than $800 and got its promised 50 miles per gallon. The canvas roof was held on by four snap-buttons front and rear and supported by a couple of flimsy metal racks that sat in the edges of the car’s walls, which rose to roof height. The windows didn’t roll up and down, they slid back and forth.

    I bought my Crosley in June 1947 while working in New Brunswick, New Jersey, as a radio announcer. I soon found it helped my work, which included a street-interview program that asked passers-by their opinions on current topics. The Crosley never failed to attract the curious, whom I trapped into talking to my wire recorder, the precursor of the tape recorder.

    July brought a vacation. I headed my Crosley for my hometown in western New York, up through the Delaware Water Gap and Binghamton and Ithaca. Surprise! The Crosley, used to central New Jersey’s flatlands, didn’t like climbing those long hills of the Poconos and New York’s southern tier. It could race along at 55 or 60 mph on the level, then drop right down to 18 or 20 on inclines that ran several miles uphill.

    I reported this to my Crosley dealer. A mechanic showed me how to adjust the tiny needle valve for a richer mixture in the carburetor. Good idea, he said, if you’re where there’s lots of hills. He also noticed the engine didn’t sound quite right, and took off its cover. Yup — a cracked valve. But it was Friday, and the expert on valve jobs wasn’t there. He was busy writing his sermon for Sunday — he was a Presbyterian minister who had somehow become a Crosley buff and worked for the dealer on special assignments. The next week, for $23, he replaced the valve, proudly telling me how he could single-handedly lift out the lightweight four-cylinder COBRA engine (named for its copper-brass alloy). The car had under 3,000 miles on it.

    I met Jean Bramwell, the girl I was destined to marry. Once, while visiting my brother at his school in Connecticut, we three sat chatting after dark in the car. Without warning, his schoolmates picked up the Crosley. I said, “Keep calm,” resisting the temptation to start the engine and put the car in gear in midair. They turned us 90 degrees and set us down.

    My fiancee, my two brothers (one is 6 foot 5, and I’m 6-2½ myself), and I once were parked in front of Manhattan’s Museum of Modern Art. Pedestrians stopped, gawking as we four un-jackknifed out of the Crosley. “We thought you were a circus act,” said one. “Is it going into the museum?” asked another.

    I moved to Buffalo, New York, and a regional radio station. The engine began producing the same kind of knocking the Presbyterian minister had cured. I found the nearest Crosley dealer in North Tonawanda. Another valve job, this one at fewer than 7,000 miles.

    The Crosley had been mine for a year when I drove to New Jersey to pick up my fiancee, thence to Connecticut for my brother’s graduation. On the way, something beneath the gear box began a grinding growl. Next day, after the ceremony, I dropped Jean off in Peekskill, New York, for her train ride back to New Jersey, then headed up the Hudson and west along the Cherry Valley route (no Interstates then, remember) toward Buffalo. As the grinding increased, my speed decreased. At a maximum 30 mph, I plodded 375 miles across New York state through the night and into the dawn.

    The diagnosis in North Tonawanda? My Crosley had burned out its universal joint and drive shaft. I gave the dealer my strong opinion. “Listen,” he said, “did I sell you that car?”

    “No,” I said. “But I wrote a letter and a half to Powel Crosley after the valve job, and I got back a form letter saying to see my authorized dealer, and that’s who you are.” I bought a universal joint and drive shaft and wrote Powel Crosley another letter, telling him lemons were yellow and so was my Crosley. The Crosley company sent me $38.

    Jean and I were married that September in New Jersey. After honeymooning in New York City and before we headed uphill into the Poconos, I adjusted the needle valve for a richer mixture. Somewhere west of Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania, as we rode a curving two-lane highway up a mountainside, the Crosley coughed. It slowed and coughed again. I pulled onto the shoulder as it died.

    Out of gas? No. I raised the hood and looked first at the carburetor, then told Jean I’d return in a minute. I hurried back down the highway to about where the Crosley first coughed. The 18-wheelers zoomed by as I studied the pavement. There it was — just on the edge of the concrete — a tiny T-shape an inch long, threaded at one end, its cross-bar maybe half an inch. I picked up the needle valve, screwed it back into the carburetor, and we drove to Buffalo.

    Winter brought foot-deep snow. No problem once I put old-fashioned chains on the bright red Crosley wheels. But the Buffalo wind drove snowstorms under the edges of the canvas roof. A convertible-roof specialist drilled into the narrow wooden frame that topped the walls and installed four snap buttons on each side — as Cincinnati should have done on the assembly line.

    By now, the 20th century was at mid-point. In Wisconsin, world-famed architect Frank Lloyd Wright, who knew a thing or two about design and who had dreamed of building for the common man in his Usonia community, liked Powel Crosley’s idea of tiny, cheap runabout cars. Obviously, he had not heard about the Crosley needle valve or its drive shaft, universal joint or cracked valves. In 10 minutes at a Madison Crosley dealer, Wright bought a half-dozen — all bright red — for the use of students at his architecture school, Taliesin Fellowship. For the next three or four years, the Wright Crosleys caravanned back and forth between Wisconsin in the summer and Scottsdale, Arizona, where Taliesin West was flourishing, in the winter. The students, young, eager and idealistic, apparently put up with the vagaries and cranky behavior of the Crosleys. Word got around Madison that the mechanics who benefitted from the cars’ steady need of repairs regularly placed tires beside them, then tipped them on their sides to get at the underparts.

    Meantime, the Siberian western New York winter gave my Crosley its finest moment. Under the noontime sun in a cloudless sky at about 5 above zero, my bride and I were driving east toward Rochester. We had just passed through Batavia and were zooming along between high banks of dazzling plowed snow. Suddenly the Crosley shuddered and shook. I pulled over and looked under the hood. Idling, the little engine was bouncing around like a basketball in a too-big box. I stepped back to the door, turned off the engine, ducked under the hood again. A streak of light caught my eye. I looked up at the hood’s underside, seeing sky through a gash 4 inches long and a half inch wide. The metal bent outward. I looked back at the engine. The culprit? The fan, normally four-bladed, now had three blades.

    We shuddered our way back to a gas station. “Is there a Crosley dealer in this town?” I asked.

    “Yeah, turn right at the next corner, then he’s on the left. Can’t miss it.”

    The dealership was announced by a small sign hanging from a bracket on a tree in front of a house. Down a long driveway, we found a barn embellished with signs for Pennzoil, Coca-Cola and Crosley. “You got a fan for that car?” I asked the proprietor, a pipe-smoker in greasy overalls who needed a shave.

    “Git you one from Cincinnati in about two weeks,” he replied.

    “Got a hacksaw?” I asked.

    He took the fan off the engine, cut off one blade, and reinstalled it. As the COBRA purred like its old self, the Crosley dealer asked, “Like your Crosley?”

    I looked him in the eye. “I need that car,” I said, “like I need a hole in the hood.”

    The Crosley ran fine from then on. It was going strong three months later when we traded it for a used Chevy.


    Bernard Ryan Jr. has written, co-written and ghost-written more than 30 books. His Tyler’s Titanic, the story of a boy who finds a way to visit the great wreck, and his biography, The Wright Brothers: Inventors of the Airplane, were published in 2003. He lives in Southbury, Connecticut.


  • First light for WISE! | Bad Astronomy

    The Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) has seen first light — in other words, taken its first image from space!

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    [Click to embiggen and get access to a big TIFF version.]

    Nice. It may not look as pretty as a Hubble or Spitzer shot at first glance, but to an astronomer it’s the Mona Lisa. The images are sharp (it’s in focus), the stars are not overexposed, diffuse sources are detected, and the diffraction spikes (the crosshairs centered on stars) are clean.

    In other words: bingo!

    This is an engineering image, not a science one. So it’s not supposed to be gorgeous or ready for publication or anything like that. It’s more like an aliveness test, to make sure the spacecraft is operating as expected. And it is!

    This image is an 8-second exposure of a region in the constellation Carina. Normally, WISE will always be on the move, constantly sweeping the sky and taking data. But in this case, they pointed it at one spot to make sure everything was working. WISE works in the infrared, and this picture is actually a composite of three images: blue represents light at 3.4 microns (about 5 times longer than what we can see with our eyes), green is 4.6 microns, and red is 12 microns. This is well into the IR, and shows stars and warm dust in that region.

    To give you an idea of the scale, the image covers the same area of the sky as three full Moons, so WISE takes big swaths of the sky when it looks around. That’s why it’s called a survey explorer. It will take millions of images of the sky, which can be stitched together to make mosaics.

    WISE launched last December, and we’ve been waiting for news that it’s working. This image shows it is, so we can expect very cool stuff coming from the orbiting observatory in the future. The mission is actually quite short, only 10 months long. In October, it’s expected run out of the frozen hydrogen (!) being used to cool the detectors — warm objects emit infrared light, and you don’t want your telescope glowing in the light you want to see. In this case, the hydrogen keeps WISE’s cameras at a bone-crushing 8 Kelvin, or -445° F.

    You can read more about this in my earlier post about WISE. My congrats to the team!


  • Hubble Shows Oldest Galaxies Ever Seen [Space]

    Want to see something old? Something really old? Take a gander at this shot, which shows galaxies between 12.9 and 13.1 billion years old. For reference, the universe is estimated to be about 13.5 to 14 billion years old.

    The images here were taken during August 2009 over the course of 4 days and 173,000 total seconds of exposure times. Hubble used the newly installed Wide Field Camera 3, which allows it to see near-infrared wavelengths in the electromagnetic spectrum. This allowed the telescope to observe light from the very beginnings of the universe.This is because the expansion of the universe distorts the ultraviolet and visible light from these galaxies over the course of their unimaginably long journey, pushing them into near-infrared wavelengths.

    These are some of the final images the Hubble will send back, as it’s being replaced by the James Webb Telescope in 2014. Which is both sad an exciting, as the Hubble has shown us so much of the universe but the Webb will show us even more. [HubbleSite via io9]







  • AT&T Addresses 3G Woes With Massive Backhaul Build

    LAS VEGAS — Even as AT&T publicly dodges responsibility for the well publicized iPhone congestion woes, the company Wednesday spelled out in detail how it is trying to alleviate the problem: By massively beefing up its “backhaul” to cellular towers, putting in 13,500 new T-1 lines and 238 DS-3 optical connections in New York and San Francisco alone.

    AT&T Chief Technical Officer John Donovan also said the company added 2,000 new cell sites over the past year, with 900 of those in New York City and another 850 in San Francisco, two cities where iPhone woes were felt the strongest. AT&T’s “aggressive backhaul project” is ongoing, Donovan said, and will target Chicago, Dallas, Houston, Los Angeles, Charlotte, N.C. and Miami in the coming year. While the T-1 lines can bring fast relief in the form of approximately 1.5 Mbps of bandwidth in each line, the DS-3s are workhorses, adding 45 Mbps or so with each fiber connection.

    Donovan’s comments were part of Ma Bell’s developer summit held here at the Palms Resort Wednesday, where AT&T also announced plans to add a wide mix of new smartphone handsets including Android-based devices from Motorola and Palm OS devices, alongside plans to make it easier for developers to build web-style apps and widgets for midrange or “feature” cellphones. All that pending activity, however, means that Donovan and AT&T’s technical crew will be working overtime to get the network in shape for the expected continued expansion of mobile data use.

    By adding to backhaul — the description for the bandwidth being brought from the core network to the cellular radio towers — AT&T should be able to alleviate some of the iPhone congestion problems. But AT&T still has some concerns about its available wireless spectrum, which Donovan said is at a premium.

    While AT&T will be able to use its recently purchased 700 MHz spectrum assets for its planned move to Long Term Evolution (LTE) in 2011 (where he said AT&T will also use its dormant AWS spectrum for LTE uplink traffic), for the next year or so Donovan must make AT&T’s 3G network stable on its existing holdings, which range from about 25 MHz to 50 MHz in most markets. Upgrading its 3G network to HSPA 7.2 technology will help some, though not much since the balance of AT&T’s devices aren’t compatible with the newer, faster service that will be coming online soon.

    “If you do the math [on the cell site expansion] we’re burning through spectrum pretty quickly,” Donovan said. “I’m restless about it, but I’m not losing sleep… yet.”

  • New Fast Company: Innovation as Resource

    I’m back to blogging at Fast Company, and my latest piece is now up: Innovation as Resource and China’s New Magnetism.

    The U.K.’s Independent reports that China has been gradually cutting the amount of rare-earth elements it exports, now down 40% from seven years ago. China now exports only 25% of the rare-earth elements it mines. […]

    So what are our options? We (as in, the non-China parts of the industrialized world) could try to pressure China to sell more, but that’s unlikely to work–and China tends not to respond well to even mild criticism. We could try to rapidly reopen the now-closed rare-earth element mines, but mining is, frankly, an environmental nightmare and incredibly dangerous–hardly a sustainable practice.

    Our best option is to innovate our way out of the problem.

    China, and to a lesser (but increasing) extent India, can be seen as “leapfrog superpowers” — undergoing a rapid shift in global status, a shift which remains incomplete. China has more influence and importance on the global stage than it is willing to admit (preferring to call itself a developing nation), but not nearly the power that some fear.

    The question is, does the immense potential power of China (and India) make a leapfrog transition easier or harder?

  • Report: Senator calls for audit of Cash-for-Clunkers program

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    Remember that insane list filled with great cars that were reportedly crushed under the Cash-for-Clunkers program? We were wondering if and when the federal government would thoroughly audit dealers who cashed in products like a 2006 Cadillac STS, an Audi S6 or a 2008 Foose F-150. That still may or may not happen, but apparently isn’t the chief concern of Iowa Senator (R) Charles Grassley.

    The senator has reportedly asked Department of Transportation chief Ray LaHood to look for evidence of fraud in the C4C program’s $110 million administrative costs only. Grassley noted the exceptionally quick turnaround time of the program in his letter to LaHood and added “the DOT had only 30 days after the date the legislation was enacted into law to engage contractors and stand up the Program before the first rebates were issued.” Grassley added that the original clunkers program accounted for $50 million in administrative costs but no additional money was allocated when the government approved an additional $2 billion for the program. It’s clear Grassley wants answers, and he may have a point.

    “To date the Administration has not provided an accurate accounting of the administrative costs related to the Cash for Clunkers program and I believe that the American taxpayer deserves more information, not less, and that information needs to come sooner rather than later.”

    The U.S. government contracted several agencies to handle C4C administrative duties including Citibank, Vangent and the IRS. The program reportedly accounted for a total of 690,000 transactions at an administrative cost of about $144 per vehicle.

    [Source: The Washington Independent | Image: Justin Sullivan/Getty]

    Report: Senator calls for audit of Cash-for-Clunkers program originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 06 Jan 2010 15:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Nissan to display nine cars at Tokyo Auto Salon including GT-R Nismo with data-logging

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    With everything going on in January (Detroit Auto Show and CES, just to name two), it’s easy to overlook one of the largest tuning expos in the world: The Tokyo Auto Salon. As it’s done in previous years, Nissan will have have a large presence at Japan’s aftermarket extravaganza, bringing nine vehicles in various states of tune, along with a new variant of the venerable GT-R.

    Nissan hasn’t divulged exactly what’s included in the updated NISMO Club Sports Package for the GT-R, only saying that it boasts “a high level of sports performance.” It’s safe to assume that a tweaked ECU, reworked suspension, new aerodynamic components and a set of wheels are part of the package, but the most compelling part is a new data logging system. Developed by Nissan’s in-house tuning arm, the NISMO Data Logger Kit allows drivers to download performance data from the GT-R to their computers via a USB cable. Nissan hasn’t released pricing or availability yet, but this strikes us as something that could make it to the States in due time.

    Joining the tweaked GT-R, Nissan will show off the Roox Highway Urban Selection concept, a sport-pack equipped Skyline coupe and sedan, a few Autech-tweaked models and the NISMO 370Z (known in Japan as the Fairlady Z). You can get a sneak peak at Nissan’s booth, along with some of the models it plans to display, at Nissan’s Tokyo Auto Salon minisite, and make the jump for all the official details.

    Continue reading Nissan to display nine cars at Tokyo Auto Salon including GT-R Nismo with data-logging

    Nissan to display nine cars at Tokyo Auto Salon including GT-R Nismo with data-logging originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 06 Jan 2010 15:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Tidbits From FOMC Minutes for Fed Wonks

    There were a few interesting tidbits from the Fed’s December 15-16 meeting minutes, beyond the now-widely-covered details about its improving economic outlook and divisions among officials about whether to keep buying mortgage backed securities.

    1) As Stephen Stanley, from RBS, points out in a research note, some of the mortgage backed securities and Treasurys that the Fed has purchased in the past year have begun to mature or get prepaid. For now, the markets group at the New York Fed has marching orders to let these securities mature without reinvesting the cash proceeds it gets in return. That’s interesting. Some Fed officials are arguing that the Fed should consider buying more mortgage backed securities. However, the default position for now at least is to let the program run off. As the minutes note, Fed officials will be revisiting that issue in the months ahead, as they come up with a broader strategy for this mortgage backed securities program. This shows that Fed officials have a very complex set of choices to make in the months ahead about their mortgage portfolio. It’s not just about whether to keep buying. They also need to come up with a plan for handling the securities they’ve already got and there are many debates to come about how to do that.

    2) The New York Fed is still a ways off from being ready to use its mortgage backed securities portfolio in “reverse repo” operations, in which it uses the securities as collateral for cash loans. The Fed has been experimenting with this repo program for months. It is one of many ways the Fed has to drain cash from the financial system. (In a reverse repo, it’s a borrower instead of a lender, and thus it is taking cash out of the system.) The minutes noted that Fed staff won’t be ready to use their biggest asset class — mortgage backed securities — in reverse repos until the spring. Another reason not to expect a quick change in Fed policy.

    3) Fed staff gave officials several presentations on what determines inflation — a source of much internal debate in the past year. One issue is whether lots of slack in the economy — like high unemployment and low factory utilization — can be expected to drive down inflation. The more you believe in slack as the key inflation driver, the longer you’d like to keep interest rates near zero and ramp up other stimulative programs like mortgage backed securities purchases. Here’s one interesting takeaway from the staff reports: “The anchoring of inflation expectations in recent years likely had damped somewhat the response of actual inflation to the recent economic downturn and to fluctuations in the prices of energy and other commodities.” Put another way: Inflation hasn’t moved down as much as one might have expected given all of the slack in the economy, in part because inflation has a lot of inertia. People and businesses have been conditioned to expect inflation won’t change much, and that expectation has helped to keep it in place in the face of a terrible shock. It supports the idea that the Fed can’t rely on slack alone to decide where to put interest rates and is a little helpful to hawks.


  • One in three U.S. businesses has no anti-virus protection

    titlephotoA study released today by security software maker Symantec raises an alarm: One in three American businesses doesn’t have basic anti-virus software installed.

    Last week, the FBI and the American Bankers Association partnered on an advisory to small businesses: Dedicate a separate PC from workers’ machines, and use that machine alone for online banking.

    The idea is to prevent the installation of “banking Trojans” on workers’ desktops and laptops. Workers unwittingly install the malware while Web surfing. If they also bank from that computer, the Trojan program may capture account numbers and passwords. Small businesses are at risk, the ABA warned, because they can be held accountable for financial transactions conducted surreptitiously from infected PCs.

    Even then, it’s shocking that 33 percent of businesses don’t even have anti-virus software installed on their PCs. Small businesses on a budget don’t need to spend tall dollars on security. They can install the free AVG software, one of Download.com’s more popular titles. Symantec sells both individual and corporate solutions. The easy way to buy in is Norton Internet Security 2010, which lists for $70.

    I got a lot of grief from New York Times readers last year for uninstalling Symantec’s software to speed up my PC. But it sure did get a lot faster. A Symantec spokesman told me that in response to customer feedback, they’ve made the latest version of the all-encompassing Norton 360 suite much less of a system hog than its predecessor.

    [Image: CBC News]


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  • China’s Baidu launches premium video co., aims to staunch piracy

    Screen shot 2010-01-06 at 1.11.07 PMThere’s a gap in the online video market in China: extremely high-quality videos for users looking for a better experience. Now Chinese search engine Baidu is stepping in to fill that role, launching an independent venture that will focus on delivering copyrighted, quality video supported by ads, like television shows, movies and sports broadcasts, through an array of different content providers.

    With demand for online video going through the roof, especially in 2009, the number of companies looking for a piece of the market is also on the rise. But Baidu, the No. 1 search engine in the country — even trumping Google’s China property — has a definite leg up on potential competitors, enjoying the name recognition and customer loyalty built up over years.

    The one hurdle standing between Baidu and total dominance of the Chinese online video space is rampant piracy. The country has been afflicted by intense video theft and copyright violations, especially when it comes to movies and television shows, almost since the technology became available. Enforcement measure so far have been completely unable to stem this tide — one from which many average Chinese citizens draw a un-taxable, unmonitored income.

    The piracy has grown to such an extent that it’s becoming a problem on a national level. Even U.S. consumers looking for free, fairly high-quality versions of their favorite television shows, ranging from Friends to Fringe, can find them on through Chinese video platforms Youku and Tudou through English portals like TVShack and Project Free TV. But even lawsuits filed against these companies haven’t slowed them down.

    As CNet notes, new technology that makes it easier to watch internet and streaming video on living room television screens will probably make this problem even worse. The opportunity is too great for people to simply watch free content like they would any other show actually broadcasted on digital cable.

    In order for Baidu to be as successful at video delivery as it is at search, it will need to urge the government to take a stronger position on piracy. It can’t turn back the tide on its own. Until then, it will have to rely on the premium quality of its offerings, and its ability to monetize them with advertising,you to attract users and build as much cred as sites like Hulu and YouTube have here in the U.S.


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  • Top 10 Best Selling Cars in December 2009

    2010 Ford F-150

    As we just noted, a jump in sales in December 2009 are creating optimistic outlook for this year. Sales in December totaled 1,010,003, up 1.9 percent from the same period in 2008. The top 10 best sellers list saw a little change from previous months; however, the Chevrolet Malibu did end up topping the Ford Fusion.

    Here are the Top 10 sellers of December 2009:

    1. Ford F-Series: 48,209
    2. Toyota Camry: 34,946
    3. Toyota Corolla: 34,220
    4. Chevy Silverado: 33,301
    5. Honda Accord: 28,238
    6. Honda Civic: 22,319
    7. Chevy Malibu: 19,374
    8. Ford Escape: 19,156
    9. Ford Fusion: 18,852
    10. Honda CR-V: 18,686

    – By: Omar Rana

    Source: KickingTires


  • Egypt, Sudan firms sign accord on Cape-to-Cairo road

    Quote:

    Egypt, Sudan firms sign accord on Cape-to-Cairo road

    06 Jan 2010 09:04 AM

    CAIRO- An Egyptian and a Sudanese company signed an agreement on Tuesday to build a key section of the Cape-to-Cairo highway, an Egyptian official said.

    The road has been a dream since the late 19th century, when British officials planned a road to connect their colonies in Africa. Under the agreement, a 400-km (250-mile) stretch of highway will be built between Aswan in Egypt and Dongola in Sudan at a cost of $500 million, Osama Saleh, chairman of the General Authority for Investment, told reporters.

    This is the last section to be built between Khartoum and Cairo, although major gaps remain unfinished in East Africa.

    "The project aims to connect Egypt’s Alexandria and Cape Town in South Africa," Saleh said.

    Egypt’s state Holding Co. for Building and Construction and Sudan’s privately owned Zawaya Group for Development and Investment signed the memorandum of understanding.


    Finally our countries will be connected by hgihway, and now one can travel, by road, from Cape Town to Alexandria :cheers: