Microsoft Windows XP Professional
5.1.2600 Service Pack 3 Build 2600
HP Pavillion 061
X86-Based PC
Intel(R)
Pentium(R) 4 CPU 3.06GHz
3.07 GHz, 1.00 GB of RAM
Physical Address Extension
NVIDIA GeForce 7300 LE (graphics card)
Microsoft Windows XP Professional
5.1.2600 Service Pack 3 Build 2600
HP Pavillion 061
X86-Based PC
Intel(R)
Pentium(R) 4 CPU 3.06GHz
3.07 GHz, 1.00 GB of RAM
Physical Address Extension
NVIDIA GeForce 7300 LE (graphics card)
La dernière berline de Seat,rebadgeage direct de l’Audi A4 ancienne génération (B7),se vend moins bien qu’espéré par le constructeur ibérique.La gamme va donc être renforcée sous peu.
Pour ce faire,la maison mère,VAG,envoie en renfort ce qui n’avait pas encore été cédé de l’ancienne gamme A4: l’intégrale et le Cabriolet.
Pour commencer par le plus « spectaculaire »,l’Exeo aura droit dès juin prochain au Cabriolet A4 B7,l’ancienne génération de l’allemande.Voilà ce que ça donne:
Contrairement à Audi,Seat n'aura même pas besoin de changer le tableau de bord;sa berline a directement bénéficié de celui du cabriolet aux anneaux
Intrinsèquement,la voiture a plutôt belle allure,mais quid de l’image? La clientèle de ce genre de produits y est généralement très sensible.Ceci dit,même si les ventes sont faibles,il n’y a pas grand chose à amortir et ce sera quand même bénéfique pour Seat.
L’Exeo cabriolet sera présentée comme concept au prochain salon de Genève,en mars,sous le label « Ecomotive »,associé au 2.0TDI.Les prix devraient débuter aux environ des 5000€ au-dessus de ceux de la berline,ce qui restera très compétitif.Elle bénéficiera comme sa base allemande de la capote électrique télécommandée.
Pour finir avec ce cabriolet,il n’est pas exclu qu’il prenne un autre nom qu’Exeo,comme Bolero par exemple.
Autre nouveauté dans la gamme Exeo,cette fois dès avril,l’arrivée des versions intégrales.Il est peu probable qu’elles reprennent l’appellation quattro,mais elles en seront.Cette transmission sera disponible sur les moteurs 2.0TSI 200 et 2.0TDI 170 pour un surcoût d’environ 2500€,que ce soit en version berline ou break.
Avec ces deux nouveautés,il ne restera plus à Seat qu’à créer des versions Cupra et Cupra R pour avoir repris l’ensemble de la gamme de l’ancienne A4.Le résultat n’est pas mauvais,loin de là,mais c’est une curieuse politique de la part de VAG,qui ne semble plus trop savoir quoi faire de sa filiale ibérique.Pas sur qu’on apprécie beaucoup à Ingolstadt,siège d’Audi.
Pendant longtemps,Seat rebageait des Fiat,aujourd'hui ce sont des Audi…plus valorisant,mais aveu d'échec quand même.Et où est l' "Auto emocion" ?
Nouveau: pour profiter facilement et rapidement des notifications de nouveautés sur le site,pensez à vous abonner via Twitter.Chaque modification,nouvel article ou nouvelle vidéo sur notre chaîne Youtube,fait l’objet d’un Tweet immédiat!
Jeffrey White is the house expert on alternative medicines at the National Cancer Institute, and in that capacity he was asked by USA Today if there were telltale signs that could tip people off to advice, treatments, drugs and therapies that shouldn’t be trusted.
He came up with four basic things to watch for, and while he was specifically referring to scams directed at cancer patients, his red flags seem applicable to the dizzying world of weight-reducing programs, devices, supplements, regimens, books and so on.
In order:
For that matter, any product, regimen or device that fails more than one of these tests is a gamble, and one you probably don’t have to take.
(By Robert S. Wieder for CalorieLab Calorie Counter News)
From the RSS feed of CalorieLab News (REF3076322B7)
How to tell when “miracle” weight loss products and programs are bogus
DuROCK Alfacing International Ltd.’s headquarters in Woodbridge uses rooftop solar panels that generate power from both sides of the solar panels. A reflective roof coating sends light to the back of the panels, boosting the energy generation capacity of the solar installation. …
… “SANYO HIT Double PV modules generate power from both sides, resulting in up to 30% higher energy output than standard single-sided PV modules, making them ideal for carports, canopies and porch coverings. DuROCK Tio-Coat is a high-strength white elastomeric urethane roof coating that provides 89% solar radiation reflectivity and weather resistance, reducing the energy usage required for the building compared to traditional roof coverings. ” …
Via SANYO Solar: DuROCK Alfacing International Headquarters in Woodbridge
SANYO HIT Double Panels: “Bifacial Effect: The back face of a HIT Double panel generates electricity from ambient light reflected off surrounding surfaces, and combines with power from the front face of the panel. Depending upon system design and site albedo, this results in up to 30% higher power generation (more kWh) per square foot. ”
Avacos Renewable Energy: “Avacos Solar is a one-hundred percent Canadian owned company founded in 2007, offering complete renewable energy power solutions. ”
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has received a few dozen complaints from owners of the current generation Toyota Prius accusing defective braking, The Detroit Bureau (TDB) reported.
The public opinion has become extremely sensitive to safety issues related to the Japanese manufacturer. This is due to problems with the accelerator pedal which generated a 3.8 million vehicle recall, corroborated with an excessive corrosion issue (sometimes causing brake failure) t… (read more)

Karsten Nohl, a PhD from the University of Virginia, looking dreamy above, has broken A5/1, an algorithm to encrypt G.S.M. cellphone conversation. The hack follows a few steps including the use of a distributed key-gathering sytem to capture and decoding of a number of G.S.M. 64-bit encryption keys, the kind of keys that most cellular operators still use.
The hack could be negated by upgrading to the 128-bit A5/3 algorithm, although when cellular providers are cite copyright and the illegality of cellphone intercepts as reasons to ignore Nohl’s work, as they do in this NY Times piece, you have to wonder if they’re not actually scared pantsless.
The Tech Herald has much more info on the hack, which began in August, 2009.
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Despite the fact that Detroit automakers are moving their focus towards compact, fuel-efficient cars, and away from full-size pickups, the segment still makes up more than 20 percent of sales by the Big 3 and could play a big role in helping Detroit recover in 2010.
According to data from Autodata Corp, through the first 11 months of 2009, full-size pickup sales have been down 31.2 percent while the overall industry declined 23.9 percent. Nonetheless, Detroit automakers sold 91 percent of all full-size pickups during the period.
Dealers and manufacturers are hoping for a rebound next year as foreign automakers, with models like the Toyota Tundra and Nissan Titan, have failed at stealing significant market share from Detroit’s Big 3.
– By: Stephen Calogera
Source: Free Press
The big roundup in Nevada has begun. But rather than being fodder for a old-fashioned Western, this one is kicking up a fight. Yesterday the Bureau of Land Management launched its mission to capture 2,500 wild horses from public and private lands across the state.
Contractors in helicopters and on horseback herded some of the mustangs into corrals in the Black Rock Range, a chain of mountains 100 miles north of Reno, according to a spokeswoman for the Bureau of Land Management. Heather Emmons said she did not know how many horses were captured on the first day of the roundup, which will take two months and stretch across 1,750 square miles in the Calico Mountains Complex [Los Angeles Times].
According to the BLM, the Nevada lands can’t sustain the 3,000 wild horses that now live there, as the population will likely double in four years. So, the agency argues, winnowing the population will sustain the environment and protect the horses, too. But where the horses will end up remains uncertain. Long-term plans call for the mustangs to be placed for adoption or sent to holding facilities in the Midwest. The agency said a facility in Reno was full of adoptable horses, making it unclear when the animals gathered in the latest capture could be put up for adoption [AP].
To say that the helicopter roundup riled up some horse lovers would be an understatement. “To start this immense roundup … on private land where members of the public are forbidden to attend is a brilliant, insidious move on the part of the BLM to hide the suffering and death that they are about to inflict on our mustangs,” said activist Eylse Gardner [San Jose Mercury News]. Activists say that helicopter-assisted roundups frighten the horses and can cause injuries like broken legs, which cause horses to be euthanized. However, a federal judge last week denied a request to stop the operation by ruling that it didn’t violate the law, paving the way for its commencement yesterday.
Opposition remains, in both local activists and celebrity sympathizers—it seems the Rolling Stones aren’t the only musicians with a soft spot in their hearts for “Wild Horses.” Celebrities including singers Willie Nelson and Sheryl Crow and former Playboy models Shane and Sia Barbi have tried to call attention to the issue. “We must act now before the BLM has managed these magnificent animals into extinction,” Nelson said [USA Today].
Related Content:
80beats: Wife of Billionaire T. Boone Pickens Plots to Save Wild Horses from Slaughter
80beats: Horses Were Tamed, Milked, and Probably Ridden 5,500 Years Ago
DISCOVER: First to Ride, on the intertwined histories of horses & humans
Image: flickr / zenera
Filed under: Apple Corporate, Apple Financial
Apple COO Tim Cook has received $12.3 million in Apple stock for stepping in as CEO during Steve Jobs absence earlier this year.
Considering its been a rough couple of years for the economy and many CEOs still got large salaries for doing very little, it’s nice to see Cook being rewarded for, you know, actually doing something and producing results.
In 2007 and 2008 Cook earned stock awards worth $7 million and $6 million, respectively. This year for Tim closes with a $12.3 million stock award plus a $100,00 salary raise (up to $800,000 from $700,000) and a fat cash bonus of $800,000. Total compensation for 2009? $14 million.
Steve Jobs took his usual $1 salary and a $1 bonus. But don’t worry, he’s doing just fine with his 5.5 million shares of Apple (AAPL) stock, which closed Monday at another all-time high of $211.61 a share (that makes Steve’s shares worth a cool $1,163,855,000).
TUAWTim Cook gets $12.3M for watching Apple while Jobs was out originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 29 Dec 2009 09:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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Filed under: Hardware, Education, MacBook
Just a quick note that the online Apple Store has quietly dropped their white MacBook from $949 to $899 for students, teachers, and faculty members.
The white polycarbonate MacBook specs remain at 2.26GHz Intel Core 2 Duo, 2GB DDR3 memory, 250GB hard drive, SuperDrive, and the NVIDIA GeForce 9400M graphics card.
Other Macs and accessories seem to have retained their previous student pricing. It’s only $50, but if you’re an education customer in need of a cheap Mac this is a nice post-holiday gift from Apple.
TUAWApple drops MacBook to $899 for students originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Tue, 29 Dec 2009 09:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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(Editor’s note: Dave Kellogg is CEO of Mark Logic, an information infrastructure software company. He submitted this column to VentureBeat.)
Given the tumultuous events of 2009, it’s easy to forget the world didn’t come to a standstill. Life continued and Silicon Valley kept innovating.
2010 hopefully won’t be as tumultuous, but should be exciting. Here are my predictions on eight trends that will surface next year:
Corporations will deploy technology for advantage, not cost: As the economy recovers, organizations will – for the first time in nearly a decade – look to information technology as a means of gaining competitive advantage as opposed to a means for simply reducing cost.
Social networking will divide: People will settle into a pattern of using different social networking platforms for different purposes.
The notion of a single social graph for work, personal and other activities separated only by the friend-type of the linkages is dead. Facebook, assuming it doesn’t continue to make heavy-handed privacy mistakes, will end up owning the friends category. LinkedIn will own business colleagues, but will have to share status-ing with Twitter. Boutique networks should own other activities, perhaps with Ning as the underlying platform across those networks where users don’t mind and/or desire a common profile.
But social network fatigue will set in: While teens will continue to use social networks as telephones, social networking amongst the middle-aged and working crowd will lose some of its luster. Despite Facebook succeeding where Classmates failed, the novelty of reconnecting with long-lost high school friends will fade as will the “I’m at Safeway in the meat department” status message.
In some ways, social networks shouls settle back more into the Plaxo vision of permanently connected address books than the hipper vision of a constant communication platform. Twitter will suffer also – and not just from the “Iranian Cyber Army.”
Cloud computing hype will peak: Passing Gartner’s “peak of inflated expectations,” Cloud Computing will begin to dive into the “trough of disillusionment.”
The types of cloud (e.g, public, private, virtual private) will begin to stabilize as will the number of as-a-service acronyms.
Strategic cloud consultancies like Appiro and cloud interconnection companies like CastIron should begin to clean up as pragmatic customers seek to define sensible cloud strategies that leverage the best of many options and combine them.
The database market siege will build: The attack against the once-sleepy $15B market controlled by Oracle, IBM, and Microsoft will continue to build. While Oracle will reluctantly honor its MySQL promises for the European Union, Postgres will gain momentum among those worried about MySQL’s mid-term future.
Specialist database systems from vendors like Aster Data, Mark Logic, and Streambase will continue to eat the edges of the market while new database-as-a-service cloud offerings will commoditize the core.
The NoSQL movement will continue to gather steam, leveraging Hadoop as an “un-database” for those frustrated with either classic relational database technology or high oligopolistic pricing practices.
Google will show signs of weakness in search: As spammers gain ground in the cat-and-mouse game of search engine optimization, it will continue to get harder and harder to, for example, find a dishwasher on Google.
With substantial investment, some impressive technology and a good deal of persistence, Microsoft will do some damage to Google with Bing.
While Google is a long way from death by-a-thousand-cuts, the first hundred cuts or so will come from Bing, “decision engines” (such as machine-learning upstart Hunch) and human-powered “answer engines” like Mahalo or Answerville from Amazon.
The XML silent revolution will continue: Without a shot fired, XML may well take over as the principal underlying file format both within the enterprise and across the Internet.
As the latest suites from Microsoft, Adobe and others continue to penetrate the market, more and more information will, often unknowingly, be stored in an XML format.
New industry standards such as XBRL for financial reporting and HL7 for health records are driving the need for information infrastructures that mange both traditional data and this reservoir of XML-based unstructured content.
Disclosure: Yes, this is good for my company, but the dynamic opens the door to a range of tools and services to help companies extract greater value from data.
Mobility will take off – further: With the combination of new devices, higher-speed mobile networks and new location-aware technology, mobile applications will continue their ascent next year.
Augmented reality will go mainstream by combining the camera, the screen and the GPS into the devices, turning one’s mobile phone into not only a communication and web surfing device but also a “head’s up display” to guide you through life.
Regardless of how these 2010 predictions play out we know one thing is certain: The tech industry will always bring challenges to the status quo.
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The developers behind the XBMC project have announced the official release of version 9.11, codenamed Camelot, a major update that includes an improved user interface theme and a number of new features.
XBMC is a cross-platform media center application that is distributed under an open source license. Originally designed to run on Microsoft’s Xbox gaming console in 2003, the program has evolved to run on conventional desktop computers and has attracted a considerable audience of users and developers. Although it lacks DVR capabilities, it supports a broad assortment of media playback and library management features.
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James Altucher has a lengthy column on why you should rent rather than buy. Shorter version: there are a lot of hidden costs, and outside of the bubble, housing has not historically been a great investment. The phenomena that made it a great investment for some people (the emptying out and then filling up of cities, the introduction of self-amortizing mortgages, rising and then plummeting interest rates, and the special status of mortgage debt after 1986) will not indefinitely continue to push prices up; most of them have played out. Over the long run, housing prices cannot grow much faster than incomes.
I agree with all of this. You should not buy a house because
“renting is throwing your money away” or because you expect the house
to become a cash cow. As an investment, housing is a good form of
forced savings, but do not expect price appreciation to make you
rich–nay, not even if it made your parents and all your neighbors rich.
But
these articles, and the homeownership-skeptics (of which I am sort of
one) often give short shrift to the benefits of owning. Renting has
hidden costs, too. Outside of New York, with its massive stock of
professional landlords hamstrung by restrictive rent rules, renting
means you usually have to move every few years, because the landlord
wants to live in the house again, or is selling it, or wants to raise
the rent too much in the hope that you’ll be too lazy to move. Moving
costs a ton of money, between the movers (now that I’m getting old and
creaky), the new furniture that is inevitably required, and the old
furniture that cannot be fit into the new house and must be thrown
away. Moving also soaks up a month or so of your time on each side of
the move, which needs to be factored in for both lost income and sheer
misery.
Then there is the inability to have your house the way
you want it. Sure, it’s not like we could afford high-end appliances.
But if we owned our house, I might be able to hope that someday we
would acquire a water heater bigger than a thimble, rather than
hopelessly resigning myself to shallow, lukewarm baths. I might also
be able to sink screws into the ceiling for a hanging potrack, install
blackout curtains so that I could sleep later than 6 am in the summer,
and otherwise make the house over more to my specifications. But the
owners are fond of their home the way it is, so it stays.
For a
long time, I didn’t care so much about this. I liked the freedom
renting gave me. But once you’re committed to a city, and another
person, that freedom starts looking overrated.







After months of standing in line trying for adequate shipments of the H1N1 vaccine, pharmacies, supermarkets and other retailers with in-store clinics now are trying to make the most of an influx of supply now becoming more widely available.
“Right now there’s probably more supply than demand,” Troyen A. Brennan, chief medical officer at drugstore chain CVS Caremark, told the WSJ this morning. CVS is offering the swine-flu vaccinations in 23 states, while Rite-Aid has them in 30 states and Wal-Mart in 48 states. Walgreens, the No. 1 pharmacy chain by number of stores, will have them available in 49 states by year end, the WSJ says.
Of course, this ramp-up is happening while flu activity continues to decline in the U.S., according to the CDC. But the government push for people to still get H1N1 shots, especially now that there are enough supplies to give the vaccine to lower-risk groups.
For the retailers, vaccines may not be a huge profit center (most providers are charging $10 to $18 for a H1N1 shot), but they can build traffic. “We clearly see potential opportunity” in the vaccinations, spokesman Brian Dowling of supermarket operator Safeway told the WSJ. “The vast majority of our pharmacy customers shop the rest of the store.”
Booster Shot: WHO head Margaret Chan told a Geneva newspaper that “it is too soon to say that we have passed the peak of the [H1N1] flu pandemic on a worldwide scale….Winter is still long.” See more here.
Image of H1N1 by C. Goldsmith via CDC
CHAPTER 1: GM – THE NEVERENDING STORY
CHAPTER 2: CHRYSLER AND FIAT – A MATCH MADE IN HEAVEN
CHAPTER 3: FORD – THE LITTLE ENGINE THAT COULD
CHAPTER 4: PORSCHE AND VOLKSWAGEN – DAVID MEETS GOLIATH
CHAPTER 5: TOYOTA AND HONDA- THE JAPANESE SURPRISES
CHAPTER 6: BMW AND DAIMLER – HOLDING THEIR LINES
CHAPTER 7: RENAULT AND NISSAN – ZERO EMISSIONS APPROACH
CHAPTER 8: HYUNDAI AND KIA – CHEAPER, BUT BETTER
CHAPTER 9: THE PATH THAT LIES AHEAD
Which is the most popular web site in the US? Normally, if you’d answer Google, you’d be right. On Christmas day though, it looks like Facebook managed to pull off the seemingly impossible, dethroning Google as the most visited online destination. At least that’s what analytics firm Hitwise is saying, interestingly enough, on Twitter.
“Facebook was the most visited site in the US on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. 1st time the site has been the #1 visited US site ever,” Hitwise wrote in a tweet. Of course, this was just for two days and Google isn’t in any immediate danger of being overtaken by the social network.
The most recent numbers show that Facebook is the fourth largest site in the US having just passed AOL last month. Google, Yahoo and Microsoft sites still manage to get well over 100 million unique visitors every month in the US and Facebook still has some work cut out before challenging these top players.
If it manages to keep up the growth it has been seeing, especially in the past year, the time when Facebook is the number one site in the US may come soon enough, perhaps even next year. And with no sign of slowing down, it may very well reach this goal.
In fact, when it comes to individual sites, which is what Hitwise is measuring, Facebook is the third larg… (read more)
Filed under: CES, Technology, Ford
Here’s another first for Ford after the revelation of its motion-capturing software: The Blue Oval will be the first to offer iTunes tagging through iPods on SYNC-equipped vehicles. Right behind the announcement of mobile Internet connectivity being added to SYNC, this will go along with the package of mobile apps the carmaker will reveal at CES next month.
The way it works: if you you have SYNC with HD radio, when you hear a song you like on an HD station you can press the ‘Tag’ button, and the system will note the track. When you plug your iPod in, it will suck up all of those tracks in a ‘Tagged’ playlist. You can have another listen through them and then buy the ones you want from iTunes.
There are other makes of vehicles that will let you record songs directly onto the car’s hard drive for a fixed amount of time, but you can’t really do anything with the recording after that. Ford’s setup won’t get you that immediate satisfaction, but it will save you a few steps. You can read the press release on the new – and free – feature (provided you’ve paid for SYNC and the HD-equipped head unit) after the jump.
[Source: Ford]
Continue reading SYNC to offer iTunes tagging through HD radio
SYNC to offer iTunes tagging through HD radio originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 29 Dec 2009 10:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.
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The San Jose, California, police department has been under fire recently for several incidents involving the use of excessive force by officers on unarmed individuals. Perhaps the best-known incident in recent months was the beating and tasering of an unarmed student caught on video in September.
An exhaustive report published by the San Jose Mercury News on Sunday examined resisting-arrest cases over a one year period ending in October 2008, and found some disturbing patterns. Resisting arrest charges are notoriously used by police to cover up excessive, unnecessary force. The Mercury News investigation found 321 resisting arrest cases during the one-year study period, and discovered ten officers who reported using force in four or more incidents. This report lends some validity to a “bad apples” theory, that a few officers are responsible for most instances of excessive force.
The San Jose Police Department has been reeling from these accusations in recent months, but officials are taking action. Following on the heels of in-car cameras, which have provided critical evidence in cases across the country, San Jose is now experimenting with cameras worn by officers on their heads. It’s the first major department in the country to try wearable cameras.
There have been many battle gameplay vids for Final Fantasy XIII, but there aren’t a lot that show you what it’d be like if you’ve actually got the game. Since those in Japan already do, we can