Well doesn’t this look familiar? The i.wakeup Sunrise Clock from Oregon Scientific looks quite similar to the Philips Wake-Up light we reviewed sometime ago. The i.wakeup Sunrise Clock also gently wakes you up in a soothing way to begin the day. Thirty minutes prior to the desired wake-up time, the i.wakeup Sunrise Clock gradually increases illumination with a 300-lux light to simulate a natural sunrise. Users can enhance their morning ritual with a choice of five different nature sounds or their favorite FM radio station. I will say that the display on the the i.wakeup Sunrise Clock is certainly alot more impressive than the Philips version. The i.wakeup Sunrise Clock will retail for $129.99 and be available February 2010.
Category: News
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CES 2010: Oregon Scientific i.wakeup Sunrise Clock Takes Design Cues from Philips Wake-Up Light
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Drinking rules revisited
Stanford’s one-year exemption from Santa Clara County’s social host ordinance to crack down on underage drinking is up for re-evaluation by county officials later this month.
The ordinance, which went into effect in January 2009 and applies to unincorporated areas of the county such as the University, holds accountable parents and those over 21 who host parties where underage drinking occurs. The penalties are civil, not criminal, and one warning can be issued before violators are fined.
Because of Stanford’s pre-existing “extensive” program to curtail underage drinking, the University was granted a one-year exemption from the ordinance to continue efforts free from the county’s new regulation. The results of the past year will be presented to the county’s board of supervisors for evaluation at its board meeting on Jan. 26.
Stanford officials suggested that the language changes they will propose would make the exemption more permanent; the past year’s exemption, they said, was successful.
“[The current set-up] has worked very well this past year,” said Jean McCown, Stanford’s director of community relations. “Obviously we have an extensive set of alcohol policies on campus, and the original intent [of the ordinance] was already being upheld by Stanford.”Liz Kniss, president of the county board of supervisors, whose district includes Stanford, said as much. “As far as I can say, there haven’t been any incidents that show a problem with the current exemption Stanford has from the ordinance,” she said. “We’ve worked well with them in the past, and I have faith we’ll find an agreement for the future.”
McCown said that this time, however, Stanford isn’t hoping for an extension of the exemption, but would rather have the language of the ordinance changed to accommodate Stanford’s unique situation in a more permanent way — a change she said was very “technical.”
“Our suggestion [a year ago] was for a change in the ordinance language,” she said. “[The county] found it simpler to just exempt us, but it never quite felt like the best way.”
Both McCown and Substance Abuse Prevention Program Manager Ralph Castro said the University is planning to meet with county staff to sketch out possible language changes for the next year. But supervisors say they are not sure what the outcome will be.
“It’s too early to say,” Kniss said. “Stanford is a particular aspect of dealing with this, and it needs to be dealt with as a particular segment.”
Kniss echoed McCown in emphasizing that no matter the outcome of the meeting, the goals of the county and the University are the same: to reduce underage drinking.
Stanford’s exemption was scheduled to be considered at the Dec. 15 supervisors’ meeting, but was postponed because Stanford spokespeople weren’t yet ready to present their case.
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Senate, 15 strong, hears Gobaud’s plan
Andy Parker ’10, newly-appointed ASSU vice president, will maintain his position as executive chief of staff while juggling his new appointment as right-hand man for President David Gobaud ’08, M.S. ‘10.
That was the announcement at last night’s Undergraduate Senate meeting, where Senator Shelley Gao ‘11 returned after a quarter in Washington, D.C. and Daniel Limón ‘12 from a fall quarter leave of absence.
Parker announced that he and Gobaud made the decision during winter break based on the time constraints of the term and a need to move quickly this quarter. At the end of fall quarter, Gobaud was still trying to get an earlier nominee, Farah Abuzeid ‘10, approved by the Senate.
“It’s not an ideal situation, but right now we don’t feel that we have the time to get someone new up to speed,” Parker said Tuesday.
Gobaud will now shoulder much of the executive team’s spring sustainability event as the pair continue to adjust to the sudden resignation of former Vice President Jay de la Torre ‘10 in November.
Gobaud’s handling of de la Torre’s resignation drew fire in December. Last night, senators pushed forward talks on ASSU ethics reforms.
Gao suggested forming a task force to address ASSU integrity as well as the potential for a conflict of interest or bias for officials who serve on judicial panels, as Gobaud was at the time of de la Torre’s case. (Gobaud was involved in hearing other students’ cases, not de la Torre’s.)
Senator Lee Jackson ‘12 announced that he and Adam Creasman ’11 may co-author a conflict of interest bill that would prohibit dual service on the ASSU and Judicial Affairs panels or the Constitutional Council.
A similar plan to ease potential biases was considered by the 10th Undergraduate Senate last year, Gao reported, but was ultimately shot down.
“Some senators felt very strongly about how ASSU senators are in very good positions to make a very substantial contribution to those committees,” she said.
Gao suggested the formation of a task force or a brainstorming session, at the very least.
“I think that we need to take some steps into investigating and constructing positive measures in terms of the ethical conduct of ASSU officials,” she said.
With winter quarter’s start, Elections Commissioner Quinn Slack ’11 is in the midst of setting up the elections Web site for this spring. With three months until elections, Slack on Tuesday announced a trial version.
“The main change is that it will show candidate profiles on the ballot,” he said.
Two bills to confirm funding for publications Vox Clara and The Claw were unanimously passed at last night’s meeting. A bill to confirm co-chairs of marketing and chair of health and wellness will be put to vote next week.
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Self-powered Safe Hump lets you ride safe in the dark

Eco Factor: Concept speed bump powers built-in LEDs with mechanical energy.
Roads humps aren’t noticed easily by drivers at night, especially cyclists, due to the weak light of the reflective strip, which is dangerous for both the driver and his vehicle. Industrial designers Zhang Yakun, He Siqian, Zhu Ningning, Chen Chen and Mu Zhiwei have come up with a green solution, in the form of a self-powered speed breaker dubbed the Safe Hump.
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Sackboy gets snowed
The sackboy upgrades to snow! Just as adorable as ever, but unfortunately, much more terminal. TheMethod of the Offiical PlayStation forums shared his homemade Snowboy Sacksnow snowy Sackboy.
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Former Facebook CTO Launches Quora, Competes with Yahoo Answers, Aardvark, Hunch
Quora, a new startup from ex-Facebook employees including former CTO Adam D’Angelo, wants to inspire a massive user-created question-and-answer site to compete with Yahoo Answers and Wikipedia. It’s currently in closed beta. We had a chance to talk to co-founder Charlie Cheever (who previously led Facebook Platform and Facebook Connect) in Palo Alto today.
Quora is a very nicely designed site that requires users’ real identities (via their Facebook accounts) to participate, and uses a system of authority (via peer endorsements and personal bios) and voting to inspire good contributions. Once a question is asked and tagged into categories, users with that subject knowledge are alerted to answer it and even revise the question itself for clarity. Users can sign up to follow individual questions, each other and topic areas, and each time they check into the site see the latest updates from each in their feed.The goal of Quora is not objectivity, said Cheever, but canonical consensus. Quora’s self-defined measure of success will be the number of pages that provide better information than anywhere else on a topic.
In the way that Facebook can be attributed for democratizing the personal web page — which 10 years ago was only available to someone with the chops to put it up — Quora wants to inspire a much broader group of contributors than Wikipedia, said Cheever. At first, it is managing its growth to establish a high standard of contribution. It’s not including any gaming elements, or the concept of a closed (aka satisfactorily answered) question. Everything on the site is very structured — though at the moment it’s somewhat hard to browse.
Along with Wikipedia and Q&A sites, Quora will compete with a range of products trying to provide authoritative or crowdsourced information rather than patching people through to the web to answer their search queries, such as Mahalo, Hunch, Aardvark and Microsoft’s Bing.
Right now Quora is weighted towards information about tech, startups and Palo Alto. It’s rich gossip for a tech journalist — for instance, it was through the site (verified elsewhere) that I learned Mixer Labs, the geo startup recently acquired by Twitter, had been funded by Sequoia Capital. To the extreme, there’s also a page about “How many intra-Facebook marriages have taken place since the company launched?”
However, Cheever described more mainstream (and competitive) uses of Quora such as restaurant and consumer electronics recommendations, as well as even more obscure uses — for instance, he is personally interested in professional players of the video game StarCraft, and asked on Quora “Which non-Koreans have made serious attempts to become professional StarCraft players in the Korean Proleague since 2005?” (At the moment, he’s also provided the site’s only answer to his question.)
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Instant Coffee made with Organic Gendarma Still Tastes Like Instant Coffee

I am a coffee addict, snob, connoisseur, etc., so when I was approached to try “organic” instant coffee by OrGano Gold, I agreed with some trepidation. I was recently offered coffee at a friend’s house and was served a cup of instant. I did not want to offend, so I grimaced and drank the “coffee”.OrGano Gold comes in several flavors, such as Black Gold, Mocha, and Latte, none of which resemble their true namesakes. Sure, they are a little better than Nescafe, but it is still instant coffee, and it is not even organic.
NOTE: Organo Gold coffee is not organic at this time, we are planning on introducing an organic version in the near future. All Organo Gold product contain 100% pure organic ganoderma.
The only coffee made with 100% certified ganoderma lucidum. Organo Gold Contains the most pure Certified Organic Ganoderma: A Red Mushroom that dates back over 4,000 years. Ancient generations prized this mushroom for its medicinal properties, promoting health and well-being.
Even when backpacking or traveling, I can’t drink instant coffee. I carry a Mini Espresso Maker. I really can’t sacrifice a good cup of joe for convenience sake.
Disclosure: I was sent free samples of these products to review. No prior assurances were given as to whether the review be positive or negative.
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The Slippery Slope Of Internet Censorship In India
Slashdot points us to a WSJ article that focuses on how Google is dealing with censorship laws in India, by taking down certain content and complying with local laws. While it is disappointing that Google appears to be willing to simply accept, rather than question, some of those laws, the bigger issue may be with the laws themselves. As the WSJ details:
The nation of 1.2 billion is the world’s largest democracy and in principle affords free speech to its citizens. But the country has a volatile mix of religious, ethnic and caste politics and a history of mob violence. So, the government has the authority to curtail speech rights in certain cases. India’s Constitution encapsulates that gray zone: Free speech is subject to “reasonable restrictions” for such purposes as maintaining “public order, decency or morality.”Authorities say Internet companies in India, including Yahoo Inc., Facebook Inc. and Twitter, are expected to help government enforce those standards online by removing objectionable material and, occasionally, helping to track down users. Under a law that took effect in October, corporate officials from any Web site that fails to comply with requests to take down material or block sites can face a fine and a jail sentence of up to seven years.
But how is a site like Google to know when speech is “objectionable” or when it’s just “disliked by someone in power”? That’s why “reasonable restrictions” on free speech often present a pretty dangerous slippery slope. It’s hard to blame Google for this, however. It’s likely that most internet companies in India are complying with the law. The real question should be whether or not the law itself makes sense.
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Gordon Wins Stage 4 of Dakar Rally by One Second
As we’ve said yesterday, a new day brings a new stage winner in the 2010 Dakar Rally. Today, it was American racer Robby Gordon to take his Hummer to the top of the time classification in the car category, as he clinched his first win in the South American event this year. Although the stage win seemed to have already been sealed by yesterday’s winner and overall leader of the rally Stephane Peterhansel, Gordon’s late effort got him a worthy win, only one second ahead of the Fren… (read more)
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SNOW CHAOS: AND THEY STILL CLAIM IT’S GLOBAL WARMING by Martyn Brown, Daily Express
Article Tags: Front Page News, Met Office, UK Winter Forecast 2009/10

AS one of the worst winters in 100 years grips the country, climate experts are still trying to claim the world is growing warmer.With millions of Britons battling through snow and ice to get to work today, scientists claim that the cold conditions should not be used as evidence against man-made climate change.
Blizzards, ice and sub-zero temperatures that have gripped the UK for almost a month in a record deep freeze are not “robust” indicators of global weather patterns, they say.
Their claims come despite the fact that the rest of the northern hemisphere, from America to Europe and Asia, is suffering some of the worst winters in living memory.
Huge snowfalls are being witnessed from China and South Korea, across eastern, central and western Europe and to America where even Florida is struggling to record temperatures above freezing.
Last night critics of the global warming lobby said the public were no longer prepared to be conned into believing that man-made emissions were adding to the problem.
Source: express.co.uk -
Bill Would Require Flaws in Global Warming Theory Be Taught by Bob Ellis, Dakotavoice.com
Article Tags: Bob Ellis
You knew our public school children were being indoctrinated in anti-capitalist dogma being passed off as “science,” right?
Well, in case you didn’t, they are. Â For years public schools around the world have been showing Al Gore’s propaganda film “An Inconvenient Truth” and exposing impressionable children with other misleading information in order to fool them into believing evil capitalists, along with their SUVs and energy sources, are destroying our fragile planet.
South Dakota Representative Don Kopp of District 35 is ready to do something about that. Â The Rapid City Journal reports he has pre-filed legislation for the upcoming legislative session which would require both sides of the debate to be presented in the classroom.
Source: dakotavoice.com -
Facebook’s 1st CTO Launches His Next Company (Screen Shots)
Adam D’Angelo was a programming genius who knew Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg in high school, became the young company’s first CTO and has just begun to unveil his new startup company, Quora. Built by D’Angelo and a team of crack young engineers, Quora is a real-time enabled Q&A site. The company calls itself “A continually improving collection of questions and answers.” In our very early testing it’s a pleasure to use, but we’re going to share screen shots with you tonight and write about it in depth after more extensive use tomorrow.Is this the next Facebook? Probably not – but it does look pretty fabulous. The service is still in closed beta (we’ve been trying to get in for months) but here’s some screenshots that show some key features.
Quora is a little like Aardvark, the social Q&A service founded by ex-Googlers and rumored to be in Google’s acquisition sites, and it’s a little like Stack Overflow, the carefully crafted Q&A site for programmers that’s shot through the roof with reader interest. It’s definitely different though.
Co-founder Charlie Cheever says it’s built on Tornado, the real-time infrastructure built by FriendFeed, then bought and open sourced by Facebook. That’s a nice touch.
Here’s what we’ve seen so far. Click these screenshots to get a bigger view of each of them. There are more coming up. We’ll do our best to offer invites tomorrow morning.
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Sling Receiver 300 catches broadcast TV over WiFi
Already have a TV and don’t need the Sling Monitor 150? Sling’s filling out its roster of potential products for some friendly OEM TV provider to offer with the Sling Receiver 300. This box is, like the monitor, meant as a companion to SlingLoaded hardware like the (still unreleased) 922 or T2200S, picking up streamed broadcast TV over WiFi at up to 1080i and delivering it to a connected TV via HDMI, component or composite, in-home SlingCatcher style. Want to try it out? We figure a call to the local cable/fiber/satellite conglomerate couldn’t hurt.
Sling Receiver 300 catches broadcast TV over WiFi originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 Jan 2010 01:17:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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15-inch Sling Monitor 150 makes in-home placeshifting look good
Sling Media has brought back the Sling Monitor it first revealed during last year’s CES press conference, now dubbed the Sling Monitor 150 and aimed at attracting television service providers to offer the company’s suite of hardware. We can think of a few places to fit his 15.6-inch 720p display that picks up HD broadcasts over its WiFi antenna for that in-home placeshifting love. The only difficulty? Getting cable, telco or satellite operators that have so far failed to bring SlingLoaded hardware to market since the original announcement to actually sell us one. Good luck with that.15-inch Sling Monitor 150 makes in-home placeshifting look good originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 Jan 2010 01:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Kodak deals Slice touchscreen camera, Pulse digiframe and Playsport camcorder

Just in case you had any doubts, CES is in full swing. Kodak just blurted out a galleria of new goods, starting with the all-new Slice touchscreen camera (shown above). As you likely expected, this is the outfit’s first touchscreen P&S, boasting a 3.5-inch rear display, a search function to sift through “up to 5,000″ photos on the internal memory, a direct tag feature, 14 megapixel sensor, 5x optical zoom, built-in optical image stabilization and 720p (30fps) video capture. It’ll ship this April in black, nickel and radish (yeah kids, radish) for $349.95. Next up is the April-bound Pulse digital photo frame, which boasts a 7-inch display (800 x 600 resolution), integrated WiFi, 512MB of storage and a $129.99 price tag. Rounding out the bunch is a load of new EasyShare cameras (all detailed in the press release below), as well as a Playsport camcorder, which offers up waterproof 1080p action with electronic image stabilization, a 2-inch LCD, 5 megapixel still shots, smart face tracking technology and an SD / SDHC card slot. There’s also an HDMI output and USB connectivity, and you’ll find black, blue and purple editions shipping this April for $149.95. You’re stoked, aren’t you?
Continue reading Kodak deals Slice touchscreen camera, Pulse digiframe and Playsport camcorder
Kodak deals Slice touchscreen camera, Pulse digiframe and Playsport camcorder originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 Jan 2010 00:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Amazon Kindle DX with global wireless: ships January 19th for $489
Well, what do you know? Seems that Amazon’s Kindle DX will indeed be offered in a Global Wireless flavor, and it’ll soon be shipping to over 100 nations for the tidy sum of $489. Bezos and Company confirmed an earlier slip tonight by trumpeting the impending release of its 9.7-inch e-reader around the world, where we presume it’ll work exactly like the recently released International Kindle. ‘Course, you overseas folks will probably need to budget for a power converter and import duties, but you can get your pre-orders in right this moment.
Amazon Kindle DX with global wireless: ships January 19th for $489 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 06 Jan 2010 00:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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The CO2 Lie from Investors.com
Article Tags: Opinion
Climate Change: A new study shows that Earth’s ability to absorb carbon dioxide from all sources, including man, has remained unchanged for 160 years. As it turns out, there may be no carbon to offset.
A major tenet of the global warming religion, straight from the Book of Gore, has been that the ability of the earth to handle increasing CO2 emissions is finite and that once the “tipping point” is reached, the earth will warm uncontrollably. Well, another climate domino has fallen — the myth that man-made CO2 is leading to climate catastrophe.
This “settled science” has been upended by an unsettling (for warm-mongers) new study out of the University of Bristol in England. Unlike the Climate-gate charlatans at the Climate Research Unit at the University of East Anglia, Wolfgang Knorr of Bristol’s Earth Sciences Department followed the data where it led instead of trying to manipulate it to “hide the decline” in global temperatures the earth has experienced in the last decade.
Source: investors.com -
Выборг. Декабрь 2009.
Выборг, один из самых необычных малых городов России,
как по своему расположению, почти у финской границы
(даже на вокзале все надписи на финскоми на русском)
так и по истории, причем не только древней – так например
этот город в XX веке три раза (!) полностью эвакуировали.Архитектуру центра города можно смело называть уни-
кальной – в рф я больше нигде не видел такого сочетания
самых разных стилей, особый восторг вызывают здания
скандинавского типа, реально выглядит как Швеция или
Финляндия какая-нибудь, что впрочем и не удивительно,
хотя у меня это может и заложено с рождения, детство
прошло в одной из прибалтийский стран, в городке где
также была схожая архитектура. Если бы за Выборг
взялись, могла бы получиться конфетка просто, пока же
большая часть зданий, даже на центральной площади,
выглядит не очень хорошо, многие в аварийном состоянии.Большая часть населения города живет, как несложно
понять, в спальных советских кварталах, у которых тоже
есть своя "северная" специфика, очень мало 9-этажек,
дома в основном из голых бетонных плит с кирпичными
вставками, при этом очень много берез – город как в лесу.
Вообще же зимой, в пасмурную погоду (а другой на с/з
в это время видимо и не бывает) Выборг выглядит также
мрачно и серо, как и Питер. Кстати, только в этом году
понял отчего Спб выглядит неживым и неестественным –
расположенный на Балтике, в нем нет ничего балтийского,
в смысле скандинавского, я про архитектуру разумеется,
даже соседний Псков куда гораздо более "уМестен" что ли.Сердцем города является старинный замок, к нему я не стал
подходить, там шел ремонт, да и время было еще раннее,
вряд ли смог бы зайти на территорию. Старый центр очень
заброшен, какая-то динамика и свежие фасады появляются
ближе к центральной площади, вообще планировка Выборга
довольно приятная – проспекты, бульвары, система площадей,
сложно заблудиться, как впрочем и в новых районах, грубо
говоря почти весь город можно проезать по кольцу на одном
автобусе от жд вокзала. Разумеется, ощущается что город
морской и военный – многие здания советской эпохи просто
поражают своими формами, да и так, сам народ серьезный.В центре города, помимо множества старых зданий северного
типа встречается и деревянная архитектура, карелия близко,
в традиционном бледном окрасе, и совеременные новоделы,
причем что интересно – советских зданий в центре крайне
мало, уплотнять историческую застройку начали не так давно.
Честно сказать, чаще всего все это выглядит не очень красиво.
В общем и целом город для поездки на день очень даже ничего,
от Питера 2 часа на электричке или 1,5 на автобусе до Парнаса,
сам ожидал гораздо более скучных и малоинтересных ощущений.



























































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Iomega iConnect Is a Scalable NAS Solution on the Cheap [Storage]
Looking for a cheap, easy NAS solution that also lets you access your data away from home? Iomega’s $100 iConnect might be the gizmo for you.Endowed with four USB ports, plus ethernet and 802.11b/g/n connectivity, setting up the iConnect is as simple as plugging in any USB-based storage device and letting the device do the rest. Iomega’s new product also allows you to set up a print server, OS X Time Machine backups, a Bittorrent client, and DLNA streaming. And while it may not possess the open linux platform or remote web-streaming abilities of the Pogoplug, it pretty much does everything else (plus Time Machine!) for $30 less.
Expect to get your hands on Iomega’s OS-agnostic iConnect sometime in February. [PR Newswire]




