Category: News

  • IPEVO Tubular wireless speakers aren’t quite totally tubular, still slightly rad

    IPEVO’s products may not always push the envelope in terms of design, but the company definitely seems to have stepped things up for its new Tubular wireless speakers, which we can only hope sound as good as they look. Intended primarily as a portable solution, the speakers are Bluetooth-based, can be charged via USB (for up to 8 hours of playback time), and they can even be locked together to form a tube (hence the name). At $79, however, they are far from the cheapest option around, but you can at least get a closer look at them in the video after the break courtesy of IPEVO itself.

    Continue reading IPEVO Tubular wireless speakers aren’t quite totally tubular, still slightly rad

    IPEVO Tubular wireless speakers aren’t quite totally tubular, still slightly rad originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 04 Jan 2010 18:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Logitech working on “ground-breaking” Android device according to job posting

    Logitech working on
    While we’re all sitting around waiting on the Squeezebox Touch to break into the world of the officially released, it’s nice to take a little time to ponder what the next round of media products from Logitech might look like. A clue (and a pretty big one) has been found in a job posting for an “Android Applications Developer” on a contract basis, looking for a “a super-star engineer” who has written “world-class Android applications” to work on “a ground-breaking new product that will give users access a to broader range of media than ever before.” It could be anything, but given the extremely limited selection of apps we’ve seen implemented for the Radio we wouldn’t be surprised if Logitech weren’t going open source for its next offering in the segment — but we certainly wouldn’t turn down an Android-packing Harmony, either.

    [Thanks, Elmar]

    Logitech working on “ground-breaking” Android device according to job posting originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 04 Jan 2010 18:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • SixthSense Computing of Tomorrow is Augmented Reality I Want Today

    Although this video from TEDIndia was previously shared on our main GigaOm site last year, I’m very appreciative that one of our readers put it on our radar again. (Thanks, Dave!) If you haven’t seen it, I consider it a must-watch. Why? Because Pranav Mistry shows ingenious ways to meld the physical world and digital world using very intuitive methods. I look at this demonstration as showing the true promise of augmented reality, a concept that really hasn’t wowed me just yet. There’s potential in AR, of course, but the practicality of it is limited in my view.

    The timing on this video is rather perfect, though. I was just wading through an in-depth report on mobile augmented reality over at GigaOm Pro (subscription required) and it highlights many of the challenges I see — and even some I hadn’t thought of. In the 35 page PDF report, John du Pre Gauntt discusses how location based systems and mobile hardware are poised to blur the lines of reality in the future. Given the maturity of smartphone hardware, John expects the number of AR-capable handsets to quadruple by 2012, so clearly there’s a potentially large user base. But what types of augmented reality add value while others simply act as fun eye-candy? That’s what I’m interested in and when I saw the TEDIndia video, it’s what I envision to be the potential future of AR — interactive computing without the computer in the way.

  • Battlefield Bad Company 2 Multiplayer Hands-On Preview

    If you’ve been closely following Battlefield Bad Company 2, you know that EA has been slowly trickling new multiplayer-centric information since the game’s announcement. A few days ago, I got some hands-on time with two new multiplayer modes: Squad Deathmatch and Conquest — up until this point, I’ve only seen the Rush multiplayer mode on the Arica Harbour and Port Valdez maps.

    For a quick recap, there are four playable classes this time: Assault, Recon, Engineer and Medic. Battlefield 2 veterans will be happy with the Medic’s return; he still throws down health packs and can still use a defibrillator to both revive allies and kill foes at melee range. The Medic’s defibrillator and the Engineer’s power drill will now compete for the title of “most humiliating to be killed by.”

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  • Report: Number of cars in the U.S. dropped by four million in 2009 – is America’s love affair ending?

    Filed under:

    2009 was not a good year for car sales. No surprises there. An interesting side effect of lowered sales last year, though, is that the total number of vehicles in the overall U.S. car fleet dropped. There were 250 million cars here in 2008, and only 246 million at the end of 2009. We may have been buying fewer cars than we usually do in a year – there were around 10 million sold in 2009 – but we still got rid of 14 million units.

    Lester Brown, president of the Earth Policy Institute, will be speaking to reporters Wednesday about why he thinks these numbers mean that “America’s century-old love affair with the automobile may be coming to an end.” Part of Brown’s reasoning is that he sees the shrinking U.S. fleet trend continuing through 2020 thanks to market saturation, economic uncertainty and a “declining interest in cars among young people who have grown up in cities,” among other factors. The end result? Brown believes the shrinking fleet “will also largely eliminate the need for building new streets and highways, and will set the stage for increased investment in public transit and high-speed intercity rail.” Is Brown on to something, or will a widely-expected rebound in new car sales due to pent-up demand render his argument spurious? Check out the EPI’s press release after the jump, then be sure to leave your thoughts on the matter in ‘Comments.’

    [Source: Earth Policy Institute | Image: kodiax2 – C.C. License 2.0]

    Continue reading Report: Number of cars in the U.S. dropped by four million in 2009 – is America’s love affair ending?

    Report: Number of cars in the U.S. dropped by four million in 2009 – is America’s love affair ending? originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 04 Jan 2010 19:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • PSA: Bono wants cars to bring sexy back

    Filed under: ,

    No, really. If you didn’t know, U2’s front man and Africa activist Bono is a regular columnist at The New York Times. And he (too) has a top 10 list to kick off the new decade we now find ourselves living in. Bono first smartly apologizes for burdening our collective eyes and minds with yet another such list, before then presenting his.

    Items found on his list include: a cap and trade system taxing every individual’s right to pollute, protecting the intellectual rights of movie and television studios, a rock star teleportation scientist and eradicating rotavirus. All good and/or interesting stuff, no doubt, if not a little, um, predictable. Which may very well be why Bono stuck his car-related concern up on they very top of his list. That concern? “Return of the Automobile as a Sexual Object.”

    In short, Bono thinks modern four-door sedans are lame looking and laments the fact that minivans and SUVs are so widespread (and dull). He meditates on the decline of the sexy family car, pioneered during the U.S. auto industry’s design heyday, circa 1946 to about 1971. Where are the curves, he asks, before stating, “In Ireland in the ’70s, it was the E-Type Jag that made sense of puberty.” A line, we should add, that we’ll be stealing.

    Bono then goes on to muse that the problem with modern car design might the practice of “design by committee,” noting that, “rarely does majority rule produce something of beauty.” We’re with him so far, but then he gets a little fatuous. Essentially, Bono says that since the Obama Administration, “still holds the keys to the big automakers,” they ought to be injecting some, “style fascists into the mix.” Among those mentioned, Marc Newson, Steve Jobs and Jonny Ive, Frank Gehry and Jeff Koons. Luckily, we’ve got some insider knowledge about that last little bit. Make the jump for a slightly NSWF explanation of why this writer thinks that Bono’s wrong.

    [Source: The New York Times | Image: William West/AFP/Getty]

    Continue reading PSA: Bono wants cars to bring sexy back

    PSA: Bono wants cars to bring sexy back originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 04 Jan 2010 18:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Mortgage and Housing Related: MBS Game, Iacono on Tax Credit, Walk Away Cachet, Issuance, USS Fannie Mac, Half Way Down, Peter Miller Predictions, Just in Case

    bill-coppedge-dec09-1 original content selection by MortgageNewsClips.com

     

    seeking-alpha1

    The Fed’s MBS Shell Game – John Dalt – … The ‘twins’ can buy MBS to force the market down, relieving the Fed of intervening. Even more nefarious they can sell their bonds for less than face value and book a loss to the taxpayer. They can also write down mortgages for troubled homeowners, and send the bill to the Treasury.  This allows the Fed to act as if they are withdrawing from supporting the markets. Just like a shell game, when you watch one shell there is mischief occurring with the other shells. Classic. … Conclusion: Treasury will use the ‘twins’ to hold interest rates down, … more – Seeking Alpha

    ————

    tmtgm

    Interesting home statistics for the day – Tim Iacono – read the numbers – conclusion – … There is clear message here for the U.S. government. If they really want home prices to go back up, they need to drastically increase the tax credit. Maybe they should double it to about $15,000 next summer and then move it up to $25,000 or so in 2011, increasing the tax credit regularly as needed to keep home prices rising. …The Mess That Greenspan Made

    ————

    reuters-blogs-commentaries reuters-rolfe-winkler

    2010: Walking away will gain cachet – Rolfe Winkler – … Financial self-interest is likely to be contagious. A study by three economists suggests that when a few borrowers in a neighborhood just say no, others are likely to follow.  … Until now, borrower guilt has helped protect bank balance sheets. That is likely to change. If it does, the next chapter of the financial crisis could be a painful one. … – Reuters Blogs
    ————

    reuters

    U.S. mortgage bond issuance jumped in 2009 – … However, 2008 ranked as the slowest year for new U.S. MBS issuance since 2000, said Matthew Toole, an analyst in the deals group at Thomson Reuters.  Nearly 89 percent of all U.S. MBS this year were backed by government-sponsored enterprises Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae, he said … – Reuters
    ————

    zero-hedge

    Who Launched the USS Fannie Mac? – Submitted by Bruce Krasting – … Fannie was told what to do by the Administration. For Mr. Bush to have suggested that this was somehow the “underpinnings of good capital” speaks for itself. That statement makes no sense. But, none of this made sense. The audience of mortgage bankers cheered loudly however. 
    This was the battleship USS Fannie Mac headed for the levee. It just took six years for the crash to happen. – interesting thoughtsZero Hedge
    ————

    mdw1 new-observations

    Property Values: The Numbers Still Say 30% Down 30% Left To Fall – by Michael David White – It’s very nice that values achieved a gain of .013% in October, but we still have a 30% fall ahead of us and, as you know, we have a 30% fall behind us. Better send in your mortgage payment. – New Observations.net
    ————

    realty-trac

    predictions – Real Estate 2010 — Will It Be Better? – By Peter G. Miller  –  covers Foreclosures  & Modifications , Option ARMs, Interest Rates, The Courts, Unemployment, Looking Ahead – RealtyTrac

    ————

    credit-writedowns

    Manipulating mortgages – by Edward Harrison –  The dust has settled a bit on the Treasury’s recent decision to give Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac a green light to nationalize our mortgage problem. Calculated Risk says the move was not necessarily done on Christmas Eve to escape notice. And it was not done to socialize future losses via Fannie and Freddie. It is just a precautionary move … I take a more negative view.  I see Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac as a means of manipulating interest rates and distorting the allocation of resources and funneling precious capital investment into a housing sector which suffers a dreadful amount of overcapacity. .. – Credit Writedowns

  • Report: Number of cars in the U.S. dropped by four million in 2009 – is America’s love affair ending?

    Filed under:

    2009 was not a good year for car sales. No surprises there. An interesting side effect of lowered sales last year, though, is that the total number of vehicles in the overall U.S. car fleet dropped. There were 250 million cars here in 2008, and only 246 million at the end of 2009. We may have been buying fewer cars than we usually do in a year – there were around 10 million sold in 2009 – but we still got rid of 14 million units.

    Lester Brown, president of the Earth Policy Institute, will be speaking to reporters Wednesday about why he thinks these numbers mean that “America’s century-old love affair with the automobile may be coming to an end.” Part of Brown’s reasoning is that he sees the shrinking U.S. fleet trend continuing through 2020 thanks to market saturation, economic uncertainty and a “declining interest in cars among young people who have grown up in cities,” among other factors. The end result? Brown believes the shrinking fleet “will also largely eliminate the need for building new streets and highways, and will set the stage for increased investment in public transit and high-speed intercity rail.” Is Brown on to something, or will a widely-expected rebound in new car sales due to pent-up demand render his argument spurious? Check out the EPI’s press release after the jump, then be sure to leave your thoughts on the matter in ‘Comments.’

    [Source: Earth Policy Institute | Image: kodiax2 – C.C. License 2.0]

    Continue reading Report: Number of cars in the U.S. dropped by four million in 2009 – is America’s love affair ending?

    Report: Number of cars in the U.S. dropped by four million in 2009 – is America’s love affair ending? originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 04 Jan 2010 19:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • This Bottle Will Heat Up Your Milk Without Elecrticity [Design]

    Designer Karim Rashid has a knack for off-the-wall designs, so I wasn’t surprised to see his name attached to the Iamo Go baby bottle concept. This somewhat phallic-shaped bottle is supposed to heat milk to body temperature without using electricity.

    The idea behind the Iamo Go is that it uses “a disposable capsule containing water and salt” instead of power cords to heat up fluids. The heat is generated as the salt in the organic cartridges is rehydrated, so it’s a safe reaction. Clever idea, and Karim even seems to emphasize the safe, child-friendly nature of the design with his lovely matching outfit:

    Oh, that look on his face says “Bet you thought this thing was something entirely else when you first saw it.” And yes, Karim, yes I did. [Dezeen]







  • Taking the “Human” out of “Humane”

    We took a look last week at some details of the 2008 tax return filed by the deceptive Humane Society of the United States (HSUS). The filing shows that HSUS paid out less than one-half of one percent of its $99 million budget to hands-on dog and cat shelters. Meanwhile, a large portion of the kitty – tens of millions of dollars – went to employee salaries and animal rights lobbying. And all this expensive chicken-hugging has a hidden price. To find it, try visiting your local unemployment office.

    In 2008 HSUS spent more than $2.3 million on a political committee called “Californians for Humane Farms,” which campaigned for the “Proposition 2” ballot initiative in the Golden State. In 2007, it gave over $1.3 million. HSUS also made donations of $200,000 in 2007 and 2008 to the “Committee to Protect Dogs,” a Massachusetts organization that pushed for a statewide ban on greyhound racing with the “Question 3” ballot initiative.

    Both ballot campaigns were successful. And both had human costs. In California, a UC Davis study estimated that Prop 2 would destroy the state’s egg industry by adding 20 percent to the cost of egg production and causing companies to move to other states or to Mexico. In real numbers, the study found, Prop 2 was expected to cost more than 3,000 jobs and take more than $615 million out of the state’s already precarious economy. In Massachusetts, 1,000 people were expected to lose their jobs after the racing ban took effect last week. We love dogs too, but when people lose their jobs, who’s going to buy them kibble and flea collars?

    All told, HSUS’s leaders spent more than $4.1 million on two political battles, and put an estimated 4,000 workers out of business. And that doesn’t include similar political “committees” HSUS has bankrolled in Michigan, Colorado, and Arizona. Who knows how many jobs HSUS will kill this year in Ohio alone?

    Sure, HSUS claims it does everything “for the animals.” But what about people? How many American workers and their families are left unemployed in the wake of animal rights campaigns? And why doesn’t HSUS put a serious amount of money into pet shelters, where animals can be helped and jobs created?

    There are human costs to HSUS’s crusades. But when cows and pigs are all you care about, people can get lost in the shuffle. Today’s overfed animal activists are clearly willing to put Americans in the bread line. Just don’t expect any chicken soup when you get there.

  • Lionel Road | New Brentford Stadium

    Starting work on our new 20,100 capacity stadium next year if everything goes according to plan. With thanks to reading general.

    What do you think?

  • The Dangers of a Bigger Sex Offender Registry

    The names of low-level sex offenders in Nebraska were posted online today under a new law, which took effect despite a lawsuit trying to stop it.

    A class-action lawsuit filed by convicted sex offenders has been seeking to prevent the state from publishing their names, saying the new rule punishes them retroactively and will do more harm than good. The plaintiffs had won a temporary stay, but that was lifted today and the names went up.

    The previous law notified communities of high-risk offenders only. The new rule forces every sex offender in Nebraska to register for a minimum of 15 years. An attorney for the plaintiffs argued that some of his clients pled guilty to less-serious offenses and would have made different choices if they had known these ramifications would come later.

    “Now they’re going to be all lumped together with a broad brush and I think that’s going to dilute the registry and drive them underground,” Attorney Stu Dornan said.

    (more…)

  • It Was a Turbulent Couple of Years But Startups in Q4 ’09 Prospered

    Thumbnail image for nvca_logo_jan10.jpgWhile 2009 continued a downward trend as one of the worst recessions in U.S. history, the decline for venture-backed mergers and acquisitions has not been as severe as the dot-com bust in 2001 and 2002.

    New figures from the National Venture Capital Association show that in the last quarter of 2009, M&A hit $7.8 billion, up from the previous year’s mark of just over $2 billion. Overall, 2009’s total of $12.6 billion could not match 2008’s $13.6 billion total.

    Sponsor

    Mergers and acquisitions totaled over $68 billion in 2000, only to fall below $8 billion by 2002 following the bursting of the dot-com bubble. In contrast, 2007’s M&A total of $29 billion has declined to just over $12 billion in 2009 – a much more smooth rate of decay which has begun to flatten out.

    Mark Heesen, president of the NVCA, says they expect to see continued improvement throughout 2010. “Clearly, we have a long way to go towards a full recovery but we are encouraged by the increasing acquisition values and the number of companies that have filed a registration with the SEC to go public,” he says.

    nvca_vbma_jan09.jpg

    A late boost in the fourth quarter of 2009 has helped startups from reliving the experiences from earlier in the decade, the largest of which came from Amazon‘s July purchase of Internet shoe seller Zappos for $930 million. This acquisition helped internet specific purchases climb to $2.2 billion in Q4 2009 – a near seven-fold increase from 2008’s final quarter.

    Discuss


  • Edificio Vila Dos Corais

    Edificio de Frente para o mar .

    Eu não consegui deichar com os reflexos no vidro alguém me da uma mão para essa ajuda . Quem puder já agradeço

    Torre

    Ajudinha nos reflexos .
    Valeu

    Não coloquei mais fotos por não renderizar direito .

  • PC Energy Management Startup Verdiem Raises Close to $5M

    A weak economy is a solid time to sell a product that can save companies 30-60 percent on their energy bills. Computer energy software maker Verdiem, which passed the 1 million mark back in August for the number of government and business PCs that are running its software, has raised $4.71 million of a $5.93 […]


  • How China’s Attempts To Censor The Internet Are Failing

    Just as Bono is claiming that the world should look to China’s success in censoring the internet as a good example of how other countries can fight unauthorized internet file sharing, the Wall Street Journal is reporting on just how badly China’s “war” against the internet is going, noting that the more it tries to censor, the more trouble it’s having in doing so:


    The Internet has enabled more Chinese to have more access to information today, and given them greater ability to communicate and express themselves than at any time since the founding of the People’s Republic.

    Because of that, even as China tries to crack down, it simply leads to more people figuring out ways around the barriers:


    But for each critic the authorities stop, more rise. “There are simply too many people,” says Xiao Qiang, a scholar who studies the Chinese Internet at the University of California at Berkeley. “They can do that to a very small group … but the approach certainly is not good enough to intimidate all the voices online.”

    Mr. Xiao points to the example of Liu Xiaobo, detained in December 2008 for his role in creating Charter 08, a sweeping call for political and legal reform in China. Mr. Liu was sentenced on Christmas Day to 11 years in prison for subversion. But since his detention, thousands more Chinese have signed Charter 08 through Internet sites that disseminate the document.

    That’s not to say that the government hasn’t become good at cracking down on things it doesn’t like, and the article certainly notes just that the government is “losing,” not that it has “lost.” However, it also points out that rising voices of complaints are having an impact, noting how China’s “Green Dam” plan to install internet filters on all PCs was eventually stopped due to public protest over the idea. So, yes, the government has continued to censor the internet in China, and many users have more trouble reaching certain sites or types of information, but that does not mean that internet censorship works or that it’s been successful in suppressing opposition content and discussion online. No matter what Bono believes.

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  • They Struggle in Asia to and…….

    Ever watched BBC news when they make out the UK is the only place in the whole world where they have chaos and struggle with abit snow while comparing us with Russia or Canada, then thought is that really true? Well I’ve had a look and is seems the BBC is infact chatting shit. The last picture you see on the link below is how the M60 near the Trafford Centre looked 2 weeks ago.

    Most of East Asia is struggling with it. I watched last week as the USA was grinding to a halt and over Christmas when we had loads of snow, guess who else had aload of problems. The Scandinavians, the French and the Italians. Don’t worry Brits we are just as shit as everyone else when it comes to abit of snow and ice.

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asi…ic/8439179.stm

  • SiliconDust Networked CableCard HDHomeRun Confirmed

    SiliconDust CableCard HDHR

    Quick update to yesterdays post about the SiliconDust HDHR CableCard device.  I received confirmation today from a very reliable source of the following:

    • SiliconDust does in fact have a HDHomeRun in development that is a CableCard tuner
    • This device WILL be networked just as the current HDHomeRun works today meaning it requires no port on your computer.  Not sure if this would mean that it can be used on multiple computers in a setup or not given CableLabs limitations…

    There are a few reasons I find this exciting news.  First it’s from SiliconDust who made Networked QAM tuners a working reality.  Second the fact that you can have CableCard tuners on a network could really make sense with the limiting Windows MediaCenter lack of softsled – that is IF you can use one of these with more than one PC.  And finally it’s a strong sign of life for CableCard when not long ago it seemed like technology that wouldn’t make it.  We’ll have to see if it’s a dual tuner or not – that would make this even bigger.

    More details will flow this week at CES so stay tuned!