Category: News

  • Denmark-based Terma Seen as Viable Partner for Boeing Commercial Airplanes Work

    Terma and Boeing today announced that The Boeing Company has completed a detailed site survey of the Terma facility in Grenaa, Denmark, to assess the capabilities for possible commercial airplanes work.

    “Terma has a highly specialized production capability in composites, and this qualification by Boeing Commercial Airplanes is an important step toward increasing our commercial aircraft business,” said Terma Vice President, Strategic Marketing Jørn Henrik Levy Rasmussen.

    “During the survey, we demonstrated our growing capabilities in the areas of design, production control, machining, composites, assembly and quality management.”

    Boeing conducted the site survey in support of its growing business relationship with Terma that includes firm contracts and emerging opportunities in defence and commercial aerostructures.

    Boeing is moving forward with a robust plan to build long-term, sustainable partnerships with Danish industry as part of an industrial cooperation program for its F/A-18E/F Super Hornet bid in Denmark’s New Combat Aircraft competition.

    Through the Super Hornet industrial cooperation program, Terma could become a key supplier of composite materials and other parts to Boeing’s commercial aerospace business.

    Terma is already producing winglets for commercial airplanes, various composites structures for fighter jets and engines, all of which reduce fuel consumption significantly and is of great interest to commercial aerospace companies.

    “This visit confirmed Terma could be a viable partner and supplier of commercial aerospace structures,” said Boeing Northern Europe President Jan Närlinge.

    “We were impressed not only by Terma’s current capabilities and processes, but also by their plans to grow their Grenaa facility by expanding the composites capabilities beyond the defence industry into commercial aerostructures.”

    About Terma

    Terma, a Denmark-based global aerospace and defense company, is a growing partner to Boeing.

    Terma has delivered advanced capabilities to Boeing and its subcontractors on a number of Boeing programs, including electronic components and harnesses for the NATO AWACS (Airborne Warning and Control System) and the Electronic Warfare Management System for the P-8A, the U.S. Navy’s newest maritime patrol aircraft.

    In August 2009, Boeing selected Terma to provide the Aircraft Survivability Equipment (ASE) integrator for the CH-47 Chinook Medium to Heavy Lift Helicopter program for the Canadian Forces.

    Terma realized 2008/09 sales of approximately USD 200 million and employs approximately 1,300 people worldwide.

    Terma is headquartered in Aarhus, Denmark and maintains several subsidiary facilities and operations in Denmark and in a number of European countries, in Singapore, and at several locations in the U.S. through Terma North America, Inc.

    More information is available at terma.com

    MEDIA CONTACT:

    Kasper Rasmussen, +45 2022 6091
    Terma Corporate Communications
    [email protected]

    Ann Schmidt, +1 206-853-5450
    Boeing Commercial Airplanes Supplier Management
    [email protected]


  • Skiff Reader Sized for Big Content, But is it a Small Solution?

    With everyone in the e-book space zigging, it only makes sense for someone to zag. Skiff looks to be doing just that as details on the Skiff Reader begin to appear just in time for CES. Like the original Amazon Kindle, Skiff is partnering with Sprint for wireless broadband connectivity although the device also supports Wi-Fi. But unlike most all other eInk readers out there, the Skiff Reader is aimed at far more than books. The company says that Skiff is “optimized for newspaper and magazine content,” likely  due to the large 11.5″ touchscreen display showing 1200 x 1600 pixels of content. The tech specs show battery life to last roughly a week with a two to three hour re-charge time. Out of the 4 GB of internal memory, 3 GB is usable for content storage and there is an SDHC memory card slot.

    Aside from providing the 3G connectivity for content downloads, Sprint will also be selling the Skiff Reader in their stores. Pricing and availability details are forthcoming but the device will be shown off at CES this week. One details is pretty likely though — that touchscreen will make it easy to click on the anticipated ads. Even the official product shot shows a little advertising interaction, no?

    The device itself looks nice, but really appears geared to “save” print media. And I’m not sure it’s the best approach. I still receive a few magazines, mainly because they’re not available in a digital format, and part of the allure is the brilliant color on the pages. A grayscale eInk device simply can’t compete with that. So from a magazine perspective, I don’t see a huge draw — especially when digital magazines can be enjoyed in color on computers, netbooks and maybe even the smartbooks of tomorrow.

    Newspapers might gain a shot in the arm, although I haven’t see much of a positive impact by newspaper offerings on existing devices similar to the Skiff. I think the problem is one of timeliness and interaction, not printed paper vs eInk. Blogs, websites and social networks are solving this problem quite well, so a hardware solution for newspapers isn’t vastly compelling from where I stand. Thoughts?

  • Shell Turns Its Back On Solar Customers

    shell tbi

    Green energy companies and the World Bank have accused Shell Oil of refusing to honor solar equipment warranties, the Guardian reports.

    A widespread breakdown of Shell’s solar panels in Sri Lanka has local suppliers in danger of going out of business, but Shell is claiming that it’s not responsible for replacing the 700 or so failed systems, as its Shell Solar Sri Lanka business had been transferred to a third-party, Environ Energy, “along with all liabilities.”

    Environ says that most of its former solar module manufacturing operation has also been sold to a new owner, Solar World.

    Further complicating the matter is the claim by Environ that Solar World will not replace any modules without the appropriate warranty documents, which Environ alledges were destroyed by Shell prior to the transition to Solar World. Shell claims this is untrue.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • I’m a Sucker For a Good Ejector Seat Prank [Japan]

    Once you’re done watching innocent people fall through an artificial floor, hit this clip two minutes in to bask in one of life’s simple pleasures—a guy is ejected from a van into a small tub of water. [Geekologie]







  • Guinness World Records 2010 Gamers Edition out in US today

    Who’s the most recognizable video game character? Who went on the longest gaming session, for how long, and what game was it? Know the answers to all those and other interesting superlatives on the Guinness World Records

  • Gilbert Arenas Facing Possible Criminal Charges For Gun Fight With Javaris Crittenton

    Washington Wizards teammates Gilbert Arenas and Javaris Crittenton drew guns on each other during a Christmas Eve locker room argument over a gambling debt, according to The New York Post.

    Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

    The pistol pullout stemmed from a card game on a Dec. 19 team flight. Arenas is said to have wound up owing teammate Crittenton $60,000. Two days later, the players reportedly had a heated argument in the Wizards locker room over the money. At one point, they allegedly aimed guns at each other.

    Arenas denies gambling, but admits he stored unloaded guns in the Wizards locker room at the Verizon Cener in Downtown Washington, a violation of league policy.

    “That’s bad judgment on my part, storing them here, and I take responsibility for that,” Arenas said in a press statement Sunday.

    The U.S. Attorney’s Office and DC Police are now investigating and Arenas could face possible criminal charges and NBA penalties for the alleged gunplay.


  • List of London neighborhood ghettos,Medium and rich people.

    London neighborhood list of poor people,medium and where the rich lives.
    photos included.:)sorry for my english :cheers: and can some one tell me how much might cost to rent an apartament,cottage etc.. in those 3 locations…:):banana:
  • Beyonce on the cover of Hip Hop Weekly

    We also added the scans of the latest issue of Hip Hop Weekly. Thanks again Amy!

    hiphopweeklynews

  • Nokia continues legal assault on Apple, files suit with ITC to ban Apple imports

    nokia-iphone-camera suit

    Back in October we told you about Nokia filing suit against Apple over the iPhone, claiming that Apple’s mobile offering violated Nokia patents pertaining to GSM, UMTS and wireless LAN (WLAN) standards. Perhaps some legal posturing, we thought; a public and principled shot across the bow aimed at the Cupertino based tech company? Apparently not, as Nokia has taken off the gloves. In a December 29th filing with the International Trade Commission, Nokia seeks an immediate injunction that would ban the import of anything with a camera and an Apple logo on it: iPhones, iPod Touches, iMacs, Macbooks – you get the idea. The suit claims Apple is violating Nokia patents in its use of a combined camera chip which keeps the size and power usage of devices down, a voltage controlled oscillator (VOC) that “increases the efficiency of the wireless device and uses less power than traditional VCOs, thereby increasing battery life,” and the sensor technology used in the iPhone that turns the screen off when it is within proximity of your face to prevent accidental input. We’re not sure if Nokia’s strategy is a sound one, but we’ll stay on top of this one as the filings continue to mount. You can hit up the link to read the original article translated from Finnish.

    [Via Nokia Views]

    Read

    Buy This Item: [Click here to buy this item]

    Read Original Article

  • 14 pays dans le viseur américain

    http://www.radio-canada.ca/nouvelles…aerienne.shtml

    Afghanistan, Algérie, Arabie saoudite, Cuba, Irak, Iran, Liban, Libye, Pakistan, Somalie, Soudan, Syrie, Nigeria et le Yémen

  • ARTICLE: 10 for ’10: Noah’s Top Ten Business Smartphones

    See Also: Noah’s Top 10 Consumer Smartphones of 2009

    A few readers asked me for a Top 5 Smartphones of 2009 list. One even suggested that I’d promised such a list a few months back. I don’t remember that, but I believe him … and am happy to oblige, as tough as it’s been to settle on such a list.

    So here you go, sorta. My Top Ten Smartphones of 2009 is actually two lists: The Top Ten Business Smartphones and the Top 5 Consumer Smartphones. Considering that smartphones are becoming more and more mainstream, and that subtle differences between “productivity smartphones” and “entertainment smartphones” are becoming more and more important to consumers, a dual list seemed like the way to go. 

    Bear in mind that this list will likely be close to obsolete before the first three months of 2010 have come and gone – that’s how fast the marketplace changes. But for now, looking at 2009, I’ve made my picks.

    And so here’s one half of the list, my ten favorite business smartphones of 2009:

    Top 10 Business Smartphones

    1. HTC Touch Pro2/Tilt 2

    For business use, you can’t beat the QWERTY thumbboards on HTC’s flagship WinMo phones. And when it comes down to it, if you can’t tap out meaningfully dictatorial emails on the road, your smartphone won’t be good for much business use. The Touch Pro2/Tilt 2 is big and bulky, but the QWERTY board is that good and the speakerphone is second to none. Add to that a huge display, Opera Mobile web browser, and HTC’s increasingly useful Sense UI on top of the aging but still widely deployed Windows Mobile OS, and you’ve got the ultimate smartphone for road warriors.

    2. BlackBerry Bold 9700

    Best BlackBerry going, thanks in large part to the flexibility of GSM networks to handle global roaming and simultaneous voice and data. Plus, the Tour (see #3 below) lacks WiFi. What up with that? I’m a big fan of T-Mobile’s HotSpot@Home UMA calling feature, so I’d give the nod to the TMo version here.

     

    3. BlackBerry Tour

    The modern BlackBerry that CDMA users waited a long time for. And it delivered on all counts save that head-scratching decision to omit WiFi. As great as it is, don’t buy it – wait for the Essex, which is more or less a Tour with WiFi, and should start shipping in early ’10.

    4. Motorola Droid

    Me, personally, I was so disappointed in Droid’s hard QWERTY board that I fell out of love with the device pretty quickly. But that doesn’t mean it’s not a stellar smartphone. There are issues with the quality of the slider mechanism, amongst other things, but Droid is still the fastest, most robust Android device on the market (for now). That means you get solid Web browsing and Email capabilities backed by Exchange support, social networking integration and free navigation via Google Nav. All of that means that while I’d opt for a Droid Eris or iPhone 3GS over Droid, Moto gets the nod above those devices when it comes to business use.

    5. Apple iPhone 3GS/3G

    iPhone is due for a serious upgrade/revision in 2010, but it’s still a whale of a mobile device. Despite its entertainment first, productivity second nature, Apple’s smartphone caught on this year in enterprise circles, due to its upgraded Exchange support, top-notch virtual QWERTY board, and ever-growing App catalog. The fact that executives who year to be cool demanded that their IT staff start supporting iPhone didn’t hurt Apple’s cause, either.

    6. Palm Pre

    If only Pre had shipped with Pixi’s keyboard, it might have placed a few notches higher in this list. I’m high on WebOS, and am hoping for big things from Palm in 2010 once it gets on to more carriers with refined and all-new devices. WebOS can do it all. It just needs some UI/feature refinements and more developer support to really have a shot at the big time.

    7. Nokia E72

    Full disclosure: I haven’t actually used an E72. But the E71 was so awesome, and Symbian users are so many in their numbers and so hardcore in their faith, that I had to put E72 on the list. I eventually gave up on E71 because I just couldn’t deal with S60’s old school ways any more. But I never lost my affection for the device’s sleek, sleek lines, comfy QWERTY board, and German luxury sedan-type build quality. From what I hear, E72 is a worthy successor, and thus it gets a spot on my list.

    8. LG Expo

    Expo just came out, and it’s not quite as peppy as I thought it’d be given the Snapdragon processor lurking inside of it. But that seems to be Windows Mobile 6.5’s fault as much as anything. That said, Expo is kind of like a mini Touch Pro2 – side slider with a full touchscreen, comfy QWERTY board, and specs to burn. Expo’s optical trackpad is all but useless, but the display is nice and the keyboard is great.

    9. HTC Droid Eris/Hero

    My favorite Android phone of the moment lacks the physical keyboard that business users often need, and “Me too” appeal that placed iPhone ahead of it on my list. So what? It’s an awesome device. Droid Eris is slimmer than either version of Hero, which I like, but that unlocked GSM Hero has that geek chic angled look to it. No matter which version you choose, you’ll get integrated multitouch support out of the box – something your Droid-toting pals won’t be able to match.

    10 (tie). Samsung Moment / Samsung Jack

    Personally, I preferred the old Samsung Epix to the new Samsung Jack. But Jack is a solid, if not super-exciting, addition to Sammy’s long line of QWERTY-packing WinMo devices. And lots of people love them a Samsung running Windows Mobile. Moment suffers from a keyboard with an odd, odd layout, but it’s still the most tactile-y pleasing hard QWERTY to be found on any Android phone anywhere. Whether or not tactile-y is actually a word, when you’re using your smartphone for business, the feel of your keyboard matters. 

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     


  • Edificio de Gobernaciones Departamentales de Colombia

    ******************************************************

    ARAUCA – Arauca
    ARMENIA – Quindío
    BARRANQUILLA – Atlántico
    BOGOTA – Cundinamarca
    BUCARAMANGA – Santander
    CALI – Valle
    CARTAGENA – Bolivar
    CUCUTA – Norte de SAntander
    FLORENCIA – Caquetá
    IBAGUÉ – Tolima
    INIRIDA – Guainía
    LETICIA – Amazonas
    MANIZALES – Caldas
    MEDELLÍN – Antioquia
    MITÚ – Vaupés
    MOCOA – Putumayo
    MONTERÍA – Cordoba
    NEIVA – Huila
    PEREIRA – Risaralda
    PASTO – Nariño
    POPAYÁN – Cauca
    PUERTO CARREÑO – Vichada
    QUIBDÓ – Chocó
    RIOHACHA – Guajira
    SAN ANDRÉS – San Andrés y Providencia
    SAN JOSÉ DEL GUAVIARE – Guaviare
    SANTA MARTA – Magdalena
    SINCELEJO – Sucre
    TUNJA – Boyacá
    VALLEDUPAR – Cesár
    VILLAVICENCIO – Meta
    YOPAL – Casanare

    *******************************************************

  • China’s Mobile Data Gold Rush Begins

    About a year ago, China issued 3G licenses to its three national carriers, causing bankers, technologists and communications equipment companies to drool over the potential hundreds of millions of Chinese who would rush to buy data plans, smartphones and applications. Today, iSuppli predicts that wireless data revenue in China will rise to $19.3 billion in 2009, up from $16.3 billion in 2008.

    By 2013, iSuppli analyst Will Kong estimates, data revenue in the country will surge to $31.5 billion, which still puts it at less than half of the almost $45 billion network operators scored from selling wireless data in the U.S. in 2009, according to estimates from industry analyst Chetan Sharma. But China’s spending is still nascent and spread out among many more consumers, meaning it could eventually surpass the U.S. in data revenue.

    But not anytime soon. Thanks to the adoption of faster broadband through a 3G network and better web-surfing devices such as the iPhone, Chinese carriers should see non-messaging service revenue (web surfing) reach $20 billion in 2013, up by a factor of three from $6.8 billion in 2008.

    Kong said Chinese carriers in 2009 will spend about $6.3 billion on mobile infrastructure equipment, up 28 percent from 2008. Spending in 2010 will decline by 2.4 percent to $6.1 billion, which may be one reason Huawei is less optimistic about its sales growth for the coming year. During the next five years, carrier spending will continue to decline but will remain at a high level of more than $5.5 billion annually.

    Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

  • Gaza & the Israeli Peace Movement: One Year Later

    David Shulman

    A demonstrator dressed as a clown being arrested by Israeli police during a protest against the eviction of Palestinian families from their homes in the Sheikh Jarrah neighborhood of East Jerusalem, December 18, 2009. (Oren Ziv/Activestills.org)

    The fact that Gaza is still under siege has hardly infiltrated Israeli awareness. The first anniversary of Israel’s military intervention in Gaza, Operation Cast Lead, has of course been noted in the Israeli press. The predominant tone, even in Haaretz, supposedly the voice of the liberal left, is almost smug. The rain of Qassam missiles on Israeli cities and villages has more or less halted; in recent months housing prices in Sderot, which is less than a mile from Gaza, have soared, and demand for plots of land in the moshavim close to the Gaza border far outstrips supply. So for Israelis the campaign was clearly a success, despite the 1,400 Palestinian dead, the 3,540 houses destroyed in Gaza, the devastation of the civilian infrastructure there, and the international outcry about possible Israeli war crimes.

    In general the Gaza story now fits the regnant Israeli paradigm: They attacked us, we patiently put up with it for a very long time, then we let them have it, and things have now been quiet for X months (until we have to do it again). Though nothing could be farther from the truth or more self-serving, most Israelis believe this. For the hard-core right, the paradigm is even simpler: We evacuated Gaza, removed settlements, and got Qassams in exchange. Ergo, all Israeli settlements on the West Bank must be maintained, indeed expanded, at any cost. Settlers I encounter on the West Bank think this syllogism is now part of the so-called “consensus,” and I’m beginning to think they may be right; it certainly informs government policy toward the Palestinians. You can also state the operative principle more bluntly: Fence them in.

    Meanwhile, the picture emerging from Gaza is a more complex one. The volume of goods allowed in via the Israeli checkpoints is about 25 percent of what it was before the war. Flour, rice, and cooking oil are permitted, but the rules, which change all the time, are arbitrary to the point of perversity: recently tea, sugar, and preserves were banned (can one manufacture explosives from tea bags?), then reinstated. Pencils and notebooks are out. Only a trickle of construction materials, badly needed in the wake of the destruction wrought by the IDF offensive a year ago, has crossed the fence: a mere 41 truckloads over the last eleven months, compared to 3700 truckloads each month in 2007-2008. Ninety percent of available drinking water is not up to WHO standards.

    According to the relief organizations, some seventy percent of the population survives on less than a dollar a day. Palestinian fishermen are hemmed in to ever smaller spaces: they used to be allowed to sail eight nautical miles from the coast; this dispensation was reduced first to six, then to the present three miles, and the Israeli navy regularly arrests them and sometimes impounds their boats (the shoals close to shore have been both polluted and largely exhausted; sardines are present six nautical miles from the coast).

    At the same time, smuggling via tunnels from Egyptian territory is a thriving business, and you can’t blame everything on the siege; the Hamas government clearly benefits, in more ways than one, from its tight control over all goods coming into Gaza (a license per tunnel costs some 10,000 Israeli shekels) and may even prefer the present situation to the lifting of the blockade. Recent visitors to Gaza report that medicine and food, including luxury items, are available in plenty if one can pay for them. On January 1, Israeli planes bombed some of the tunnels, but the effectiveness of such attacks remains doubtful; despite extensive destruction a year ago, the tunnels (by now numbering in the hundreds) were rapidly rebuilt following the Israeli campaign. Egypt is said to be planning a steel barrier on the Gaza border which may slow down the tunnel traffic.

    The apathy within Israel toward Gaza and its people is not absolute. The army, under fierce pressure because of the international outcry, says it is investigating 150 cases of possible criminal offenses by soldiers during last year’s campaign (so far, rather typically, only in one case are charges being pressed). There has been a chain of passionate, if not particularly effective, protests. On December 26 a thousand people demonstrated against the siege in a nocturnal protest march in Jaffa, near Tel Aviv. In Beersheva riot police tried to shut down a lively protest on the streets, as they did during the war a year ago; this time they were less successful. There is even a Coalition Against the Siege that is organizing another march on Saturday night in downtown Tel Aviv.

    On December 31 a Gaza Peace March took place both inside Gaza and on the Israeli side of the Erez border crossing, at the northern end of the strip. According to one report, on December 30, the Egyptian government allowed some 80 international peace activists—a small fraction of the more than one thousand that had gathered in Cairo—to cross into Gaza from the Rafah gate in the south; they marched through Gaza, and stopped about 500 meters short of the Erez crossing on the Gaza side, as close as they could get without risk of being fired on by the Israeli soldiers stationed there. Assembled on the Israeli side, meanwhile, were about a thousand Israelis, including several Arab members of the Knesset who, predictably, were furiously attacked by right-wing politicians for fraternizing with the enemy.

    On December 27 I joined a march on the northern Gaza border organized by activists from Ta’ayush and other peace organizations. In theory, we were meant to be operating in tandem with what was supposed to be a much larger group of Palestinians marching inside Gaza but, given the tremendous difficulty in communications, this didn’t play out quite as planned. Unusually for us, we took pains to keep the plan secret—no emails, no cell phones, details passed only by word of mouth in safe places, only a few trusted journalists invited—in the hope that we would gain a little time on the beach and thus be able to unfurl our banners and cry out our message of hope.

    Initially it worked: we had about seven heady minutes marching by the sea in sight of the Gaza tenements before the army zeroed in on us. Then the most remarkable configuration of forces descended upon us: a platoon of regular soldiers, the blue-uniformed police (some on horseback), Border Police, the notorious riot-control unit, amphibious craft closing in from the sea, and even an army helicopter hovering in the sky above us. There was one mock-heroic moment when two activists tried to get past the barrier by jumping into the sea and swimming frantically toward Gaza; the cavalry fished them out. The BBC turned up (a little late) and took some pictures; the Israeli media paid little attention. Sixteen activists were arrested and carted off to the police station in Sderot, where they were questioned and released some hours later. I can tell you the blockade works, and not only against tea bags.

    It’s easy to be cynical about Gaza, cynical about whatever you choose to focus on: Israeli policy, the misery of Hamas rule, the fortunes acquired by the tunnel-smugglers, the suppression of dissent within Israel, the gratuitous cruelty of the ongoing siege. None of it makes sense unless you bring in the larger picture of the occupation and the steadfast reluctance of Israeli governments to make peace. Seen in isolation, Gaza is too riddled with ambiguity to galvanize what’s left of the Israeli peace camp into action. The real contrast is with the burgeoning protests in East Jerusalem, in the neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah where several Palestinian families have recently been evicted from their homes and Israeli settlers planted in their stead.

    The legal situation in Sheikh Jarrah is ambiguous: Israeli courts have recently ruled that Jewish claims to ownership of land and houses in the neighborhood, from long before 1948, are valid and constitute a basis for evicting the Palestinian residents, all of whom received these lands from the Jordanian government in the 1950s in exchange for their UNRWA cards (thus relinquishing their status as refugees). But the issue is not really a legal one. The government, the municipality, and the settlers want to take over yet another Palestinian neighborhood—another 26 homes are scheduled for eviction, in addition to the three that have already been evacuated—and, of course, to prevent any future compromise in Jerusalem.

    As a result, hundreds of Israelis, many of them young people joining the struggle for the first time, take off Friday afternoons to march through town and then demonstrate, courting arrest and harassment, in Sheikh Jarrah; the clumsy attempts by the Jerusalem police to suppress the protest violently have only added to our numbers. The demonstrations have a festive character, with drummers, acrobats, and clowns (the police arrested the clowns). Rumors about the demise of the Israeli peace movement are, it seems, premature.

  • You Could Not Make It Up: Climate change far worse than thought before

    Article Tags: You could not make it up

    NEW DELHI: Global alarm over climate change and its effects has risen manifold after the 2007 report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC). Since then, many of the 2,500-odd IPCC scientists have found climate change is progressing faster than the worst-case scenario they had predicted.

    Their studies will be considered for the next IPCC report, but since that will come out only in 2013, the University of New South Wales in Sydney has just put together the main findings in the last three years. Most are by previous IPCC lead authors “familiar with the rigour and completeness required for a scientific assessment of this nature”, a university spokesperson said.

    The most significant recent findings are:

    * Global carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuels in 2008 were 40 percent higher than in 1990. The recent Copenhagen Accord said warming should be contained within two degrees, but every year of delayed action increases the chances of exceeding the two-degree warming mark.

    Source: timesofindia.indiatimes.com

    Read in full with comments »   


  • New Brentford Stadium

    Starting work on our new 20,100 capacity stadium next year if eyerything goes according to plan.

    What do you think?

  • Twitter’s Psychologist Strikes Again: Analyze Your Lists

    Dan Zarrella has long impressed us with his discourses on the science of retweets, as well as his psychoanalytic apps that scan and parse Twitter streams – one for general analysis and one for dreams.

    His latest project, TweetPsych for lists, is an enlightening and often amusing look at what your lists are talking about, how they view the world, what turns them on (or off), and more. Depending on how you group your Twitter friends, you can make interesting generalizations or conjectures about society as a whole. What do the denizens of L.A. or San Francisco tweet about most? What about women – what’s got them buzzing? Read on for more on precisely that cross-section of the Twittersphere.

    Sponsor

    My “I Heart L.A.” list, a curation of tweets from the L.A. tech scene, shows a hilarious preoccupation with sex and a lack of tweeting about work, for example.

    And my lengthy list of San Francisco/Bay Area people on Twitter gave evidence of a complete lack of interest in celebrities and a preoccupation with self, the future and control.

    But when I looked at my “Southern Comfort” list of geeks south of the Mason-Dixon line, I got a very different picture. These folks are using the social web to tweet about their emotions, the passage of time, themselves, and dreams of unconscious thoughts, while they tweet less than others about celebrities, sex and money.

    When I looked at results for the list of women I follow, I saw they tweet a lot about sex, themselves, the past, anxiety and negative emotions, in that order. It was like watching an episode of Sex and the City flash before my eyes. They tweeted very little about money, learning, control (including self-control) and constructive behavior. Keep in mind, this isn’t a generalization about the state of womanhood on the Internet; I follow a very limited and eclectic group of ladies, all of whom I find very charming in their own fashion.

    Of course, I had to check out the stats on the ReadWriteWeb crew. We seem to tweet a lot about leisure and activities other than work. Uh, don’t tell the boss? However, tweets about work finished a close third, right behind tweets about ourselves. As a group, we don’t tend to tweet about personal things, such as money, sex or emotions.

    Other interesting hypotheses can be drawn when examining “social media” and “technology” lists. Many geek-centric lists I examined were shockingly devoid of tweets about leisure, positive or other emotions or physical sensations and dominated by tweets about learning, the self and control. Perhaps this is due to our realization that the personal and professional are quickly merging and our perceived need to present a reasonably consistent face and least objectionable programming-type content.

    At any rate, Zarrella’s given us another insightful peek into how Twitter reveals interesting snippets of information about various demographics and sociological segments.

    Give the new lists function a spin, and let us know your findings in the comments!

    Discuss


  • Jay-Z offers to plan wedding for Robbie Williams

    Jay-Z and Beyonce are set to add wedding planning to their resume – the supercouple has offered to organise British pop star Robbie Willams’ nuptials to girlfriend Ayda Field. Williams reportedly proposed to the American actress over the holiday period – and Jay-Z is already volunteering to plan the lavish ceremony, with the help of his superstar wife.

    He says, ‘I would be happy to help Robbie organise his wedding. I am sure he will make it an extravagant party. I had my 40th last month in the Dominican Republic. That would be a great place for Robbie’s wedding. It’s the most stunning place on earth. It has everything – beautiful beaches, scenery, golf courses – and is easy to fly guests to.
    The entertainment at my party was all hot and if Robbie wants my help he should come over for dinner and Bey (Beyonce) and I can help him out. She is great at organising parties, she loves it.’

  • iPhone Becomes a Universal Remote This February

    I love my Logitech Harmony remote, but that doesn’t mean I wouldn’t jump on the opportunity to ditch the thing forever and simplify my digital world even further. A new third-party accessory and software combo announced at CES will allow me to do that by turning my iPhone or iPod touch into a Universal remote capable of controlling all of my home theater equipment.

    It sounds promising, but it also brings back memories of apps for the Palm pilot that were supposed to do the very same thing. The Palm devices had built-in IR communication, so all you needed was the software, which sounded great, but ended up being clumsy and not really that usable on a regular basis. I still have a Palm in a bedside drawer that I occasionally drag out to use for that purpose, in fact. It never stays out long.

    Hopefully the iPhone’s accessory, which is called the L5 Remote and will cost around $49.95 when it hits retail stores this February, won’t suffer from the same failings. Once you have the dock-connecting IR blaster, you can get the application for free from the App Store. It promises to control televisions, DVDs, DVRs, cable boxes, audio equipment and more. I’ve got my fingers crossed for some unofficial support for the Logitech Harmony PS3 adapter. The blaster is said to have a functional range of up to 30 feet.

    One place where the iPhone’s universal remote app should easily trump the dated Palm version is in user interface. No messing about with a stylus or hit-and-miss finger touch response with Apple’s smartphone. And you’ll be able to create your own custom button configuration by dragging and dropping the appropriate commands from various devices in whatever arrangement you choose. That should make it easier than my physical remote, too, since I won’t have to rely on the pre-arranged layout of the buttons, which is sometimes far from intuitive depending on what device you’re controlling.

    The press release for the L5 describes a “short, guided training sequence” before you can begin using it with your home theater setup, which could be coded PR speak for a long and arduous process of holding your remote up to the IR blaster add-on for each command you want your iPhone to learn. I’m really hoping that the app comes with a built-in code database for common brands and makes of equipment, or that they at least open it up to user-generated databases.

    As of right now, L5’s web site is just a placeholder, which isn’t a promising sign, but keep your eyes peeled for the official release of the attachment and software next month. Hopefully by then there will at least be a place on the web to go looking for more info.