Category: News

  • Now THAT is a SuperPhone!

    Check out the Nexus One that was on display today at the Android event.  Built precisely to scale, the phone is 12 times bigger than an actual Nexus One and features a 1920×1080 46-inch LED-backlit display.

    It’s CNC milled to the exact specs of the phones original CAD model multiplied 12 times it’s original size. 46″ LED display screen with HDMI connection to a MAC mini running Windows. 1080 x 1920 HD video played back on Obscura’s proprietary video playback software.  It does not have touch-screen capabilities at this time. – SearchEngineLand

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M_NYWTkR4lQ&feature=player_embedded


  • Man

    Why does my favorite lancet lancets have to be so expensive!!
    Mutliclix is the best I have used but my insurance only pays for OT.

    Is there any place that they can be found cheaper??

    Sorry I always disappear, life as a college student is busy.

  • CES 2010: HP ProBook 6440b & 6540b Sport Spill Resistant Keyboards with Drains

    HP ProBook 6440b - Angle_lowThe new HP ProBooks 6440b and6540b Notebook PCs aren’t just for business professionals, they’re also suitable for anyone clumsy. That is because, not only are both systems built to last, but both systems feature a spill resistant keyboard with drains. The ProBook 6440b sports a 14 inch display and has a 5lb weight while the 6540b touts a 15.6″ display and a 5.5lb weight. The systems also come with a 2MP webcam (optional), HP QuickWeb, HP QuickLook3, and a touchpad or the optional pointstick input device. Under the hood the systems are powered by Intel Core i7 and future Intel processor-based mobile platforms. Pricing begins at $949.

    6440b CES 2010: HP ProBook 6440b & 6540b Sport Spill Resistant Keyboards with Drains

     CES 2010: HP ProBook 6440b & 6540b Sport Spill Resistant Keyboards with Drains


  • HP Mini Netbooks with CloudDrive Have Nearly Limitless Storage

    I haven’t bumped into the ZumoDrive folks just yet, but they did give me a heads-up on some big news. The cloud storage and synchronization company worked a deal with HP to power the CloudDrive service on the HP Mini netbook line starting this month. Essentially, owners of HP Mini netbooks have built-in web storage that virtually expands the local, physical storage. All content is stored centrally on Amazon S3 servers and pulled down as needed.

    What I like best about ZumoDrive’s approach is how data in the cloud has a local look and feel. When I last looked at the service, I used iTunes to listen to music files stored online, but you really couldn’t tell where the data was. This seamless blurring of local vs cloud storage is a key strength for mobile users as is the cross-platform support and mobile client.

    Some of the key CloudDrive features include:

    • Seamless media integration – stream music, videos and photos to popular programs like, iTunes, iPhoto, Picasa and Windows Media Player.
    • Offline access enjoy frequently and recently used content.
    • Folder linking – link any folder to HP CloudDrive for automatic future importing.
    • Content autodetection –content is detected on devices by type (music, photos, etc.) for easy bulk importing
    • Improved iPhone app – move content seamlessly between an iPhone and one or more computers by storing it in HP CloudDrive.
    • Playlist syncing – listen to playlists on netbooks or smartphones, even if they were created on another PC.
    • File sharing – create a link to share a photo album, document, or entire folder for collaboration.

    We’ll see if we can get a hands-on demo when meeting with either HP or ZumoDrive and report back on the experience. If it’s anything like what I’ve seen in the past, it ought to be good. The one outstanding question I have is the end-user cost — while CloudDrive will be bundled, the ZumoDrive service typically requires a monthly fee based on the amount of storage, although anyone can get 2 GB of storage for free.

  • Five Biotechnologies That Will Fade Away This Decade

    Stephen Friend wrote:

    [Editor’s Note: This is part of a series of posts from Xconomists and other technology leaders from around the country who are weighing in with the Top 5 innovations they’ve seen in their respective fields the past 10 years, or the Top 5 disruptive technologies that will impact the next decade.]

    We look at amazement at strange technologies from the past. How did people function in worlds with quill pens or connect with each other by Morse code and telegrams? Within biotechnology’s short history, we have already seen approaches from the ’90s such as Southern blots that look at sizes and amounts of DNA, and antisense therapies, are being replaced. I guarantee you at least 50 percent of what we think of as the enabling technologies and approaches to biological knowledge will be relegated to museum displays in the next five (OK, maybe 10) years.

    Here are five that are ready to be replaced:

    1. Genome-Wide Association Studies (GWAS) studies based on single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). This is the approach that does high-speed scanning for markers across the complete sets of DNA, or genomes, among many individuals to spot small variations that might be associated with a particular disease. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) analysis isn’t going to last long as a major driver of biologic insight. Within the next one to two years, people will wake up to “ITEGS”—”It’s the entire genome, stupid.” Technologies are poised to allow analysis of variations in thousands to even hundreds of thousands of people. Do not be surprised when all the people with a disease such as Huntington’s are analyzed for DNA alterations across their entire genome. Groups such as Cure Huntington’s Disease Initiative are already preparing for this world.

    2. Proteomic Approaches as an end solution to understanding diseases: Many people believe that following quantitative proteomic analysis which looks at a wide array of proteins that carry out the functional instructions from DNA, will be the key to the next wave of biologic insights. Many today yearn for a world where we could know the levels of all the proteins in a cell to finally functionate the cell—as if knowing all the elements allows one to understand all chemical structures—NOT. It’s unlikely the levels of protein components are the sufficient keys to the puzzle. It’s more likely they will become yet another layer of key information along with readouts on metabolites and RNA. The real decoding of diseases will be driven by those that know what to do with the component lists—be they DNA, RNA, or proteins. The next wave of insights will be in the hands of those that can build network models of what went wrong in the disease states.

    3. Biomarker signatures as commercially viable robust markers akin to cholesterol or estrogen receptor positivity for breast cancer. Identifying signatures of certain genes or proteins is currently all the rage among those finding the right drug for the right patient. For the most part, these signatures are done on populations of hundreds to thousands of patients. Many hope to turn these into definitive markers that will guide treatment over decades. But hey VCs, you might want to try …Next Page »







  • Incoming Viximo CEO Sees a Burgeoning Economy of Virtual Goods

    Viximo Logo
    Wade Roush wrote:

    Online publishers who want to let their users exchange virtual gifts—think singing Santa e-cards at Christmas or animated hearts for Valentine’s Day—can turn to Viximo, a two-year-old startup in Cambridge, MA, for both the virtual goods themselves and the microtransactions system needed to distribute them. And now Viximo is turning to a new leader to spearhead its expansion.

    The company announced today that Dale Strang, an online media and advertising veteran, has taken over as CEO. Strang replaces acting CEO Dayna Grayson, a principal at Viximo backer North Bridge Venture Partners, who had stepped into the CEO role after the departure of Viximo’s first CEO, Rob Frasca, last spring.

    A virtual good is any digital object—a video, an icon, a piece of clothing for a game avatar—that helps people express themselves in an online interaction, add bling to their online persona, or increase their enjoyment of a game. U.S. consumers spent $1 billion on such items in 2009, according to Inside Network, a market research company focused on Facebook and social gaming sites. Strang says he sees these purchases as a potential substitute for dying revenue streams (such as subscriptions) in the publishing world.

    “In the print world we used to take it for granted that users were willing to pay for certain interactions,” Strang tells Xconomy. “They’d buy a copy of a magazine, for example, or a subscription. That made for a healthy, balanced business model. But the Internet hasn’t had that. I view the virtual goods microtransaction explosion as an answer for that.”

    "Girl's Best Friend" virtual gift

    Strang says more and more online publishers are looking at online communities where there is a brisk trade in virtual goods, such as MySpace and Facebook, and deciding that they want to build their own virtual economies. But it’s harder than it looks, he says.

    “Some people have implemented an online currency, but they can’t quite get it right. Other people may have problems integrating their currency with a payment system. Others may have huge holes in the content that they provide. The strategy that has evolved for Viximo is to do all the hard parts for our partners, while they do their main job, engaging with the audience.”

    Viximo’s clients have 60 million network members in aggregate, with social networking sites BlackPlanet.com and SmartDate.com and sports site FanIQ among the newest users of the Viximo platform. The startup offers customers a soup-to-nuts solution, including a huge catalog of virtual items designed by freelance digital artists; currency systems that let people buy virtual currency with cash or earn rewards through various online activities; payment systems that ensure that the money from currency purchases makes it back to publishers; and analytics software that shows publishers which items are selling best.

    Just how “micro” are the microtransactions involved in virtual goods exchanges? That varies. Interscope Records, the label behind rock singer/songwriter phenom Lada Gaga, uses Viximo’s technology to power the Lady Gaga Gift Shop on Facebook. Most items in the store, such as an animated picture of Lady Gaga wearing TV-shaped sunglasses, cost …Next Page »







  • CES 2010: New HP Mini 210 and HP Mini 2102 Netbooks

    _DSC0049The HP Mini 210 and HP Mini 2102 are not major overhauls of HP’s previous Mini series of notebooks, but this round of updates sport some nice refinements. Both systems weigh 2.69lbs, are less than one inch thin with unto 10 hours of battery life, they sport a 10.1″ LED screen, a 93 percent full size island style keyboard, and optional 3G broadband and GPS. The Mini 210 is geared towards consumers and is available in several colors including Black Crystal, Silver Crystal, Pacific Blue or Sonoma Red HP Imprint. The Mini 2102 is practically identical but it’s geared towards business users and only comes in black. Both systems come with some cool new software from HP including QuickSync, QuickWeb, CloudDrive and MediaStream. The Mini 210 is available on Jan. 7, starting at $299.99, while the Mini 2102 starts at $329.


    HP QuickWeb
    is an innovative software solution that sits outside your computer’s operating system, enabling you to access the web without having to boot into Windows. With a single touch of a button, you can enjoy a fast connection to the internet in under 20 seconds from a power-off state.

    Just push the HP QuickLook button on your HP business notebook. HP QuickLook 3 springs to life in about ten seconds. You then have immediate access to information from your Microsoft Office Outlook® program. HP QuickLook 3 enables this fast access by proactively capturing information and storing it outside your computer’s operating system. You can specify the frequency at which data is captured, the type of data that is captured (e-mail, calendar, contacts and tasks), and the range of data that is captured. For example, you can capture and cache up to 1,000 messages from your inbox for ready access via HP QuickLook 3.
    quicklook 300x224 CES 2010: New HP Mini 210 and HP Mini 2102 NetbooksWork Fast with HP QuickLook 3:
    • find information in seconds when your computer is off.1
    • view e-mail, calendar, contact and task information with
    the push of a button.
    • create and edit calendar, contact and task information,
    and then see your changes incorporated into outlook the
    next time you open it.
    • respond to e-mail messages and store them in your outbox until
    the next time you open outlook.
    • cache data from office outlook 2003 and 2007
    automatically.

     CES 2010: New HP Mini 210 and HP Mini 2102 Netbooks


  • HP’s TM2 Tablet: Finally Touchable [Tablets]

    HP’s new TM2 swivelling tablet is an evolution of its surprisingly long-running tablet series, and it’s definitely a worthy younger brother to the TouchSmart 600 all-in-one. BumpTop, the new desktop alternative, is a huge step up for the line.

    The TM2 is the next-gen version of the TX2, also a 12.1-inch capacitive multitouch swivelling tablet. The TX2 had some issues—it was one of those “just slap a touchscreen on Windows and now it’s a tablet” tablets, which never really work that well. HP’s TouchSmart software was okay, but was really better for its big brother, the all-in-one. But the TM2 is a huge step in terms of software, not least because Windows 7 is eminently more touchable than Vista or XP. The hardware is a typical bump from the TX2—same sized screen, 9-hour battery life, same chiclet-style keyboard and multitouch trackpad as the Envy line, Core 2 Duo proc and better graphics.

    But what’s exciting is the “BumpTop” interface. It’s essentially a desktop replacement that replicates your documents as well as various “places” that you can toss them—toss a photo into the Facebook icon to upload it, or toss a document into the printer icon to print it. It’s intuitive and works well, although it’s tricky to use when the screen is flipped up in “laptop” mode rather than down in “tablet” mode. The TM2 also has the new TouchSmart software for things like music, video, Netflix and Hulu, which is good because they’ve eliminated the optical (DVD) drive. But this is still a Windows 7 tablet—it’s best to think of it as a portable version of the TouchSmart all-in-ones. It’s a normal computer with some fun touch extras built in.

    It’ll be available January 7th, starting at $950. [HP]







  • HP Mini Netbooks: Pine Trail Processors, Physical Redesign, and a Mysterious Touchscreen Option [NetBooks]

    HP announced three new netbooks in the Mini line today: The 210 (consumer), 5102 (business) and 2102 (both?). They’re pretty standard next-gen netbooks, except for the 5102’s odd touchscreen option.

    The new HP Mini 210 is looking a lot better on the outside, with a new design, multitouch trackpad (like a miniature version of the ones in the Envy series) and new island-style (or chiclet) keyboard that’s 92% the size of a standard keyboard. It’s also available in craaaaazy new colors, like blue! And red! They’re packing Intel’s new Pine Trail Atom procs (the N450 at 1.66GHz, to be exact, with an optional Broadcom video accelerator), 10.1-inch screen, larger HDDs (160GB, 250GB and up to 320GB, which is huge for netbooks), and up to 1GB of memory (lame). The 2102 is pretty much the same internally as the 210, but with a brushed metal finish instead of the cute plasticky case of the 210.

    The Mini 5102, the “business” model, is a little confusing: It actually offers a multitouch screen like the TM2, but without the software and without the swivelling screen, so I’m not quite sure how useful it is. It has the “premium” brushed aluminum finish and a 95% real-size keyboard, as well as a goofy handle so you can carry your netbook like a lunchbox. The 210 will start at $300, the 2102 at $330 and the 5102 at $400, with the former two available starting today and the latter sometime this month. [HP]







  • Kodak Playsport Rugged Pocket Cam: 1080p Under the Sea [Pocket Cameras]

    The Zi8 is one of the best pocket camcorders around, but maybe the biggest. The Playsport takes the Zi8’s guts—including its 1080p video, 5MP still photo sensor—and crams them into a small, waterproof shell. And? It’s cheaper.

    Like the Zi8, the Playsport shoots 1080p video at 30fps, as well as 720p at 30 or 60fps. Video is stabilized—which works fairly well to reduce image shimmering in the Zi8—and displayed on a 2.0-inch LCD. Storage comes by way of SDHC, while power draws from a rechargable Li-Ion battery. Basically, it is the Zi8, except it’s noticeably more compact, and it’ll shoot video up to 10 feet underwater.

    It’s one of the first seriously rugged pocket cams on the market, but it won’t be the last—as cellphone cameras and regular point-and-shoots start to take better video, dedicated pocket cams will have to do something special to justify their existence. Hence, the swimming. The Playsport will go on sale in April, for $150. [Kodak]

    Rugged KODAK PLAYSPORT Video Camera
    Captures Adventures in HD – Even Underwater

    Kodak engages consumers online to find new name “PLAYSPORT”

    Rochester, NY, January 7, 2010 – Eastman Kodak Company today introduced the new KODAK PLAYSPORT Video Camera, a rugged, durable and pocket-size HD video camera with an appetite for adventure. The KODAK PLAYSPORT Video Camera is specifically designed for consumers with active lifestyles, allowing them to capture full 1080p HD video – even underwater* – with the touch of a button.

    The KODAK PLAYSPORT Video Camera is waterproof up to 10 feet and features built-in software and USB cable output so users can edit and easily share with family and friends through sites such as YouTube and Facebook. The KODAK PLAYSPORT also features electronic image stabilization and KODAK Imaging Science for sharper videos with vibrant colors and less blur.

    “Today’s consumers want to easily capture and share life’s moments anywhere they happen without trading off quality,” said Phil Scott, Vice President of Marketing, Digital Capture and Devices, Kodak. “We designed the KODAK PLAYSPORT Video Camera with this in mind, combining the superior features of our HD digital video cameras with a rugged, waterproof exterior so consumers can capture their KODAK Moments in more places – from the inside of a halfpipe on a snowboard or while duck diving on your surfboard.”

    KODAK PLAYSPORT Video Camera Features:
    • Waterproof up to 10 ft. (3 m)
    • Full 1080p HD video capture at 30 fps
    • Electronic image stabilization
    • Brilliant 2.0″ color LCD display
    • Capture 5 MP HD stills (16:9)
    • Edit and upload to the Web with built-in software and included USB cable
    • Smart face tracking technology
    • Incredible low-light performance
    • Expandable SD/SDHC Card slot for memory cards up to 32 GB, that can record up to 10 hours of HD video**
    • Li-Ion rechargeable battery with in-camera charging
    • HDMI cable output (HDMI cable included)
    • Remote control compatible (remote control sold separately)
    • MAC and PC compatible
    The KODAK PLAYSPORT Video Camera will be available in Abyss (black), Wave Crash (blue) and Adrenaline Rush (purple) for US $149.95 MSRP beginning in April 2010 at major retailers including Best Buy and Amazon.com, as well as Kodak.com. The KODAK PLAYSPORT Video Camera is also now available for pre-orders on Amazon.com.
    *Colors and availability may vary by region
    Product Accessories
    A range of accessories are available for the KODAK PLAYSPORT Video Camera, including:
    • KODAK SDHC Memory Cards, available in 4, 8 and 16 GB customized for optimal video capture
    • KODAK Adventure Mount for helmet, handlebars and more
    • KODAK Flexi-Tripods
    • KODAK Cases, Camera Bags and Neck Straps
    • Remote control
    • KODAK Li-Ion Rechargeable Digital Camera Battery KLIC-7004
    • Battery charger options including KODAK Li-Ion Universal Battery Charger K7600-C, KODAK Solar Charger KS100-C+2, KODAK Portable Charger KP100-C+2

    Consumers Help Name Newest Video Camera
    Through crowdsourcing, a technique utilizing mass collaboration to achieve a business objective, Kodak received thousands of naming suggestions via Twitter and its 1000 Words blog, for the new video camera. Two winning entries were chosen: Mike Colbourn of Williston, Vermont, entered the name ‘Play’, and Jim Culver of La Mesa, California, entered ‘Sport’. Mike and Jim won a trip to Las Vegas and the 2010 International Consumer Electronics Show to join Kodak in announcing the new name.

    Kodak is also introducing a new Mobile Marketing Tips guide at the Consumer Electronics Show.

    * Up to 10 ft. (3 m) under water
    ** Record approximately 20 minutes per 1 GB at HD 720 at 30 fps.







  • Kodak’s First Touchscreen Camera Shoots 720p, Goes By “Slice” [Cameras]

    Kodak’s first wave of cameras basically embodied the commodity point-and-shoot: they were cheap, simple, and not particularly good. The Slice, their first touchscreen P&S, is their first attempt at something better.

    The Slice is the only camera that stands out in Kodak’s new P&S line, not just for its touchscreen, but for its price. $350 gets you 14MP still shots and 720p, 30fps video, optical image stabilization, a Lithium Ion battery, and facial recognition and tagging. It’s a sleek little slice slab of phone, but honestly, touchscreen point-and-shoot isn’t?

    $350 isn’t play money, and it edges dangerously close to high-end point-and-shoot territory, where it’d have to compete with the likes of the Canon S90, which seems like a pretty terrible idea. But with these kinds of cameras—that is, featureless rectangular prisms that are supposed to take pictures—the proof in in the pictures. [Kodak]

    KODAK SLICE Touchscreen Camera Lets You Share
    and Relive Moments Instantly

    New Digital Camera Boasts Sleek Exterior with Thousands of KODAK Moments Inside

    Rochester, NY, January 7, 2010 – Eastman Kodak Company today announced the latest addition to its consumer digital product portfolio, designed to make it easier than ever for people to share pictures with family and friends anytime, anywhere. The KODAK SLICE Touchscreen Camera lets consumers carry a personal photo album worth sharing and reliving at all times. With a sleek and intuitive 3.5-inch touchscreen, and the KODAK SLICE Search Feature, consumers can find the pictures they want from up to 5,000 that can be stored on internal memory. Then, they can easily share those pictures right from the back of the camera.

    “Kodak knows that consumers want the ability to share life’s memories at a moment’s notice, whether it’s pictures that evoke a tear or just the funny everyday moments,” said John Blake, General Manager, Digital Capture and Devices and Vice President, Kodak. “The power of sharing and reliving life’s moments drove the development of our new SLICE Camera. It provides instant access to all of your KODAK Moments, and it’s right at your fingertips.”

    Store, Sort and Share with the SLICE Camera
    With the ability to store up to 5,000 pictures in HD resolution, the SLICE Camera’s onboard KODAK SLICE Search Feature and Face Recognition allow consumers to sort through thousands of pictures by person, place, date, or occasion in order to locate and share a collection of treasured moments.

    The touchscreen and Share Button allow consumers to tag pictures directly on the camera for effortless uploading to popular sharing sites including Facebook, KODAK Gallery, Flickr, and YouTube. Pictures can also be tagged to email or to send directly to the new KODAK PULSE Digital Frame.

    KODAK SLICE Touchscreen Camera features include:
    • Intuitive 3.5-inch, 16:9 LCD touchscreen with anti-reflective coating
    • KODAK SLICE Search Feature and Face Recognition to easily sort, locate and share pictures
    • Share Button for easy upload to Facebook, KODAK Gallery, Flickr, YouTube sites and e-mail
    • Store up to 5,000 pictures in HD resolution
    • Stunning image quality with a 14MP CCD sensor and 5X SCHNEIDER-KREUZNACH Lens
    • Built-in optical image stabilization
    • 720p/30fps HD video capture
    • Kodak’s exclusive Smart Capture feature, which analyzes scenes and automatically adjusts camera settings to deliver beautiful pictures more often
    • Compatible with PC or APPLE iLife Software
    • Li-Ion rechargeable battery included
    The KODAK SLICE Touchscreen Camera will be available in black, nickel and radish for US $349.95 MSRP beginning in April 2010. Best Buy will initially be the exclusive retailer for in-store sales. The KODAK SLICE Touchscreen Camera will also be sold online at Amazon.com and Kodak.com.
    Kodak is also introducing a case for the SLICE Camera, which was designed in a competition among accessories students at the Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT) in New York City. The final case design was chosen by celebrated designer Steve Madden and FIT faculty.
    *Colors and availability may vary by region







  • The Copia eBook Platform and Hardware Get Social With eReading [Ebooks]

    Copia is an open platform that wants to help you share with the world world exactly how you rate the entire Norah Roberts oeuvre. It’s like Goodreads on steroids, and it’s paired with two new lines of eBook readers.

    First, the platform. Copia is a social networking platform that lets you set up a profile, rate and buy books, and share recommendations with your friends. You can also form and join discussion groups, both public and private, and gives you personalized recommendations based on what your friends have been reading. It has a web presence at thecopia.com, but will also be a platform hosted by various hardware partners to be named later.

    So as not to depend entirely on those partnerships, parent company DMC Worldwide will also be producing two lines of eBook readers: Ocean and Tidal. The readers range from 6-inches to 9-inches, and include both capacitive touch displays and QWERTY keyboard models as well as black and white ePaper and color TFT screen options.

    The private beta for Copia begins this month, with the public beta launching in March. The readers will be available online beginning in April, with prices ranging from $199 to $299. It’s a slow roll-out, but probably necessarily so: social platforms like Copia require a a robust audience to be effective, and at the current levels of eBook adoption it’s hard to see there being enough of a network presently.

    DMC Worldwide Unveils COPIA:

    An Open Platform for Delivering eBooks, Entertainment Content and a Collaborative Social Experience

    TheCopia.com Combines Content, Community and Commerce through Social Networking and Shared Discovery; Broad Lineup of Wireless Devices Introduced to Further the Experience

    NEW YORK, Jan. 6, 2010 – DMC Worldwide (DMCWW), a leading enterprise and consumer technology company today introduced COPIA, an open platform that combines content, social networking and e-commerce with an array of wireless e-readers to deliver an experience around shared discovery. The COPIA platform reinvents the way consumers experience content.

    The COPIA platform is a hybrid solution for consumers of all ages to experience a completely new way to discover, enjoy, share and purchase books, newspapers, magazines and a wide variety of digital content and a software application engine for OEM brands looking to deliver content across their digital devices including e-readers, notebooks, netbooks, tablets and smartphones.

    “Today, eBook content is delivered across one of two typical business models: a vast online store or a social networking service,” said Anthony Antolino, SVP, DMC Worldwide. “The COPIA platform is the first of its kind to combine content, collaboration, social networking and e-commerce together to connect people through a collaborative experience. We developed COPIA to allow users to discover and connect to each other through meaningful content regardless of the digital devices they are using. We also created the flexible COPIA engine that enables third-party device manufacturers to awaken existing and new devices to a wide variety of collaborative entertainment possibilities – reading and beyond. The COPIA experience will have a lasting influence on how people engage with and consume content.”

    In addition to launching COPIA, DMC Worldwide today also unveiled a diverse lineup of e-reader devices. The product offering includes both monochrome e-paper-based touchscreens and advanced color devices designed for rich color content. The devices are designed to extend the collaborative COPIA experience to readers across all genres of content and meet the needs of channel partners including mass market, entertainment, K-12 education as well as higher education.

    “No single device on the marketplace today can adequately serve the consumer’s ferocious appetite for content consumption,” said Ben Lowinger, EVP, DMC Worldwide. “DMC’s lineup of devices powered by COPIA matches perfectly to the experience of reading in black and white e-paper or rich media. We’ve developed the devices after carefully analyzing the needs and expectations of our audience and believe that we’ve developed both an online and hardware platform for delivering and sharing meaningful entertainment content now and in the future.”

    TheCopia.com provides its community with a compelling set of intuitive features, including:

    * Social Networking Compatibility – Community profiles are linked to existing Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIn accounts enabling users to easily share content across social media platforms.

    * Collaboration Tools – Students, as well as book groups, can highlight, annotate, and share reading content with those who are important to them. In addition, users can access the most useful annotations from the entire community.

    * Multi-Dimensional Browsing Experience – Real-world book browsing simulates how people typically view and select books in a store. Relevant eBook content can also be displayed in various ways for users to browse and find what’s most relevant. Content can be browsed by community rating, tags from users or publishers, notations, popularity and price.

    * Intuitive Search and Display Features – TheCopia.com makes it simple to find meaningful reading content by offering multiple paths to discovery. Users can easily filter search criteria to pinpoint what they’re looking for. Search results are provided in dynamic content views, enabling users to toggle between list views to expanded views, to easily compare across lots of content.

    * Personalized Home Dashboards – Each user connects to others via a home dashboard that displays consumed content and personalized reading recommendations from friends.

    * Unique Book Profiles – Books are given a social meaning by a community value score that connects to user ratings and reviews. Social recommendations are powered by user feedback and a proprietary numerical system.

    * Book Clubs Re-Envisioned – Users can create book groups to discuss and share reading experiences. Users can also set personal data metrics for reading goals, create milestones and set challenges amongst friends to further reading as a social experience.

    COPIA will begin its private, limited-invitation beta in Jan. 2010. The public beta will launch in March 2010. The site will offer a compelling array of content relevant to a wide range of ages, interests and genres across best-sellers, popular titles, textbooks, public domain titles, with new content being added daily.

    The e-readers will be available for purchase online in April 2010 and at retail by June 2010.







  • MP2 Capital & Oak Leaf to Provide Solar Power for Denver Public Schools

    The Denver Public School Board this week gave the go-ahead to plans for the development of photovoltaic (PV) solar energy projects on 16 school buildings throughout the school district. The projects are the result of planning and coordination with Oak Leaf Energy Partners with the School District and the Denver Green Print Council.


  • XsunX Completes Hybrid CIGS Solar Device

    XsunX Inc. said that it has completed a fully-functional CIGS (Copper indium gallium diselenide) thin-film solar device. The company is developing a hybrid solar cell technology that adapts manufacturing processes from the Hard Disk Drive (HDD) industry to produce CIGS solar cells deposited onto stainless steel substrate with “pseudo square” configuration.


  • AMSC & Dongfang To Develop 5-MW Offshore Wind Turbines

    American Superconductor Corporation’s AMSC Windtec subsidiary has signed a follow-on contract with Dongfang Turbine Co. Ltd. to design and jointly develop 5-megawatt (MW) full conversion wind turbines for the offshore wind power market.


  • Comfrey as a compost crop

    Comfrey is one of those herbs with multiple uses. Over the years people have used bruised comfrey leaves as a compress to sooth sprains and bruises and to reduce swelling on injured body areas. Some studies even show that comfrey may help ease osteoarthritis pain. Comfrey leaves can be infused and then used as an excellent garden fertilizer (although the smell of infused comfrey water is not at all nice FYI).

    Russian_comfrey

    In the past comfrey was used as an aid for treating gastrointestinal illness BUT note that we now know that comfrey can be incredibly toxic when ingested and cause serious liver damage so don’t eat it for any reason.

    That said, plants don’t have livers so using comfrey as a compost crop is perfectly safe. In fact, comfrey is so nutritious for plants that even if you don’t use it for anything else, many agree that comfrey is worth growing just so you can specifically make nutrient rich compost with it. As an additional benefit, comfrey is pretty much trouble free and easy to grow and its a prolific plant. You can cut off comfrey leaves many times during the growing season because it’s such a prolific grower; you should get many crops worth in a season.

    To make your comfrey compost…

    Comfrey is not all that different from other compost adventures. In this case you’ll just need to layer whole comfrey leaves with the other plant material in your compost bin. Since you’re using whole leaves you may want to add a layer of already prepared compost from the base of your old/other compost pile because this will help the leaves to break down quicker.

    IF you don’t want to deal with making a pile of comfrey compost you can also try tucking some comfrey leaves under and around plants as a natural mulch. Of course the leaves will rot down, and as they do so great nutrients will be released into the soil and your plants.

    [image via wiki commons]

    Post from: Blisstree

    Comfrey as a compost crop

  • BUSINESSWEEK: Buffett Reins In Kraft, Recalling Coke’s Retreat on Quaker Oats

    January 05, 2010, 08:09 PM EST

    By Andrew Frye

    Jan. 6 (Bloomberg) — Warren Buffett, the billionaire investor who helped scuttle Coca-Cola Co.’s bid for Quaker Oats 10 years ago, is restraining Kraft Foods Inc. in its quest to acquire Cadbury Plc.

    Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway Inc., Kraft’s biggest shareholder, urged fellow investors to oppose a plan to issue as many as 370 million shares to help buy the U.K.-based candy maker. Kraft Chief Executive Officer Irene Rosenfeld is seeking a “blank check” for the deal, Berkshire said yesterday.

    “I think Buffett’s got it nailed,” said Donald Yacktman, founder of Yacktman Asset Management Co., which holds Kraft shares. “Kraft is hemmed in — there’s only so much they’re going to be able to do to make this acquisition.”

    Buffett, who has said shareholders must act like owners, urged caution in negotiations after Cadbury rejected Kraft’s bid of 10.6 billion pounds ($17 billion). In publicly asking others to join him, the 79-year-old Berkshire chairman is drawing on his power as a 9.4 percent owner of Kraft and his standing in financial markets as the world’s preeminent investor.

    Berkshire said it may support a Cadbury takeover if it concludes this month that the final offer “does not destroy value for Kraft shareholders.” Buffett’s assistant, Carrie Kizer, said the company had no comment.

    “If he says no, everybody else is going to pile on and say no too,” said Justin Fuller, a partner at Midway Capital Research & Management who runs the buffettologist.com Web site.

    Disagreed With Coke

    Buffett was the most vocal dissenter on Coca-Cola’s board when directors met in 2000 to discuss a $15.3 billion bid for Quaker Oats, the maker of Gatorade, Cap’n Crunch cereal and Rice-A-Roni. Buffett argued the price was too high because a stock swap proposed as part of the deal would give up more than 10 percent of Atlanta-based Coca-Cola, board member James Williams said in an interview about three years later.

    The board voted against the acquisition, and PepsiCo Inc. bought Quaker Oats in August 2001 for $14 billion. Berkshire remains the largest shareholder in Coca-Cola. Buffett’s company also holds the biggest stakes in American Express Co. and Wells Fargo & Co.

    “It’s unusual for Berkshire to put out any sort of comment like this publicly,” said Glenn Tongue, a partner at T2 Partners LLC, which holds investments in Omaha, Nebraska-based Berkshire and Kraft. Buffett’s opposition to a stock sale may prevent Kraft from overbidding, he said. “As a shareholder, I love seeing this,” he said.

    Buffett’s Record

    Buffett won a global following as the “Oracle of Omaha” by profiting from investments in out-of-favor companies and firms he believes have unassailable advantages, including See’s Candies and ice-cream maker Dairy Queen. He agreed to buy $6.5 billion in debt and preferred shares in Wm. Wrigley Jr. Co. to help Mars Inc. acquire the chewing-gum maker in 2008. Last year, Berkshire bought stock in Kraft rival Nestle SA.

    “I’m not surprised that Berkshire would resist issuing shares,” said Tom Russo, partner at Gardner Russo & Gardner, which holds Berkshire, Cadbury and Vevey, Switzerland-based Nestle. Buffett “has had the longstanding belief that equity capital is very scarce.”

    Rosenfeld, CEO at Northfield, Illinois-based Kraft since 2006, is seeking to buy Cadbury, the maker of Creme Eggs and Trident gum, to expand outside the U.S. Kraft raised the cash portion of its bid yesterday after agreeing to sell pizza brands including DiGiorno and Tombstone to Nestle, the world’s largest food company.

    ‘Expensive’ Shares

    Cadbury fell 3.2 percent to 779 pence yesterday in London, the biggest drop in eight months. Kraft added $1.34, or 4.9 percent, to $28.77 in New York trading. That values Berkshire’s stake at more than $3.9 billion.

    Buffett said in the statement that Kraft shares were “very expensive ‘currency’” after falling about 17 percent in the two years ended last week, and he criticized management for seeking to issue stock at current prices after repurchasing shares at $33 in 2007. Kraft executives “have to do a lot of things right to justify this price,” Buffett said in September on CNBC.

    “We agree that Kraft Foods shares are deeply undervalued,” the foodmaker said in a statement. “We intend to remain disciplined in this process.”

    –With assistance from Duane Stanford in Atlanta. Editors: Dan Kraut, Dan Reichl


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  • ARTICLE: Verizon Wireless named World’s Best Data Service Provider

    Verizon Wireless was recognized as the World’s Best Wireless Data Service Provider by Business Traveler magazine, based on their survey of reader opinions.

    Needless to say, the nation’s largest wireless carrier was pleased.  “The continued recognition from Business Traveler readers of our international data services is a strong validation that our efforts to extend our best-in-class domestic services to  business customers to stay connected and productive while traveling abroad are working,” said John Mara, director for global services for Verizon Wireless.

    Good news for Verizon, given that the global traveling crowd is a relatively new demographic push on their end.  For those that travel overseas on a regular basis, would you agree with the assessment?


  • DOWNLOAD: Prospectus for Shareholders in BNSF deal with B’ Hathaway

    Download the Prospectus for Shareholders in Burlington Northern Santa Fe deal with Berkshire Hathaway.

    It is in PDF format.


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    How to Build a Business Warren Buffett Would Buy: The R. C. Willey Story How to Build a Business Warren Buffett Would Buy: The R. C. Willey Story by Jeff Benedict
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  • Happy Birthday mell1682

    :birthday: :birthday: :birthday: :birthday: :birthday:

    Happy Birthday Mellissa
    :flowers: :flowers: :flowers:

    :party: :party: