Category: News

  • Merry KISSmas! …and More Ways to Bring Radical Self-EnFUNment to the Workplace

    It doesn't get much merrier than this

    It doesn't get much merrier than this

    Here at BMHQ, the year is winding down and we have only a few short hours until we lock the doors and say goodbye to 2009. I’m spending my final moments archiving last year’s files…including all of the pictures we took at and around the office last year. Looking back, it was a momentous one. Full of great achievements as well as some setbacks, enormous gains and sad losses. But one thing is for certain, no matter the pain or the strife, the thing that makes any day bearable is that we ALWAYS remember to have fun! Some people say “Well of COURSE it’s fun, you work for Burning Man!” but let me tell you, doing budgets and making copies and having meetings is no different here than any office. Granted, once in a long while a marching band may sneak attack us during an office staff meeting, but more importantly, what we DO have here are open minds, open arms, and a readiness to have fun. Those are things that only come with more practice! Below are a few tips and tricks I’ve learned over the past couple years that can be used in any workplace to bring at least a smile and certainly some fun to any day.

    1. Try to make the fun something everyone can enjoy

    Everyone's cookie cutters are welcome, here!

    Everyone's cookie cutters are welcome, here!

    Well, we didn’t want to pick any religious holiday in particular, so when Frog and I were talking about what we should do on December 22nd, which we knew would be a slow day at the office, we decided on a religion just about everyone could agree to….Rock & Roll! We called it Merry KISSmas Tuesday, and encouraged everyone to dress as the KISS army of elves and stop by the kitchen where we were making cookies. Frog was awesome and made the sugar cookie batter (vegan, so everyone could have some) the night before, so all we had to do was show up as our fabulous selves and start rollin’ in the dough! Err…rollin’ OUT the dough.

    YES, I decided to be Peter Criss and no one forced me to, why does everybody keep asking that? Point is, we took an hour or so mid-day to wear platform boots, paint our faces, and try to salvage the feet that kept breaking off the clown cookies. In short, it was a success.

    2. Have your fun in a timely fashion

    danceparty

    1-hour dance party

    A workplace is a workplace and taking an entire day to plan and execute an impromptu dress-up day or event is most often frowned upon by your superiors. However, with a little planning even extravagant-seeming events can take just a short time. Take, for example, the 1-hour dance party. I did a few of these last year, and the best part about them is, they can be done with just about NO planning or cost at all. And besides, a revolution without dancing is a revolution not worth having. The only thing you need is some sheets or big pieces of fabric, thumb tacks, and music (and maybe permission…). The formula is simple: 15 minutes of set-up to move furniture and tack pieces of fabric to the ceiling. Turn on your musical device (streaming internet radio is great for this, if you don’t have free time at home to make a playlist). 30 minutes of dancing. I like to make my dance rooms in a u-shape so you feel like you’re in a little dance room, but it’s also open to anyone walking by that may have been planning on just using the restroom, and will inevitably get sucked into dancing. Remember to play dance music at a reasonable level so those with their doors closed aren’t going crazy. Kick everyone off the dance floor. 15 minutes of clean-up. All it took was your lunch break, and you can get everyone re-envigorated for the rest of their day.

    If you are just starting the sometimes difficult journey to a fun office, try a theme day, where no time commitment is required at all. Take “Crazy hat day.” Simple. Easy to get on board with. If you wanted, you could set up a paper hat making/decorating station at the door for those who forgot or don’t have crazy hats, but still want to participate.

    Shhhh...the clowns are working

    Shhhh…The clowns are working

    3. Always respect your fellow coworkers when having fun

    It MAY be the case that not everyone will want to participate in tutu Tuesday or there MAY be meetings going on when you want to have a pirate-clown cocktail party. If you know it is going to be a loud-ish event, consider having it at the end of the day. If you have vegans in the office and want to have a “It’s Valentines Day and all i want to do is eat” potluck, make sure some of the dishes will be something they can enjoy, as well. Radical inclusion, right?

    That being said, only take no for an answer on the second “no” when asking someone if they want to join in the fun. Sometimes people just need a little encouragement. Sometimes they REALLY just don’t want to play that day.

    4. Bring extra fun to share!

    Sometimes, as fabulous as we are, burners tend to forget that it isn’t necessarily common to have a full-body cat suit ready for “dress like an animal” day or a recipe other than “cooked” for “Bacon Day.” SO help them out! Say it’s Cowboys & Indians Wednesday during “Great rivals throughout history” week to get the blood pumpin’ at your law firm before a big case. You decide to go as Tonto, but also have 3 cowboy hats and a pair of chaps at home. Bring those along, too! There will always be someone that forgot it was dress-up day or doesn’t have something to go along with the theme. In fact, people that are shy about these sorts of things really tend to open up when they don’t have to plan their own outfits;)

    Scanned photo from Great America's Halloween Haunt!

    Scanned photo from Great America's Halloween Haunt

    5. Have fun OUTSIDE the workplace…then bring it back!

    One thing I can’t recommend enough is to plan events outside the office with your coworkers. This photo is from the 2008 Halloween Haunt at Great America. Nothing like war paint and roller coasters to bring the team closer together! The best part was that we got the photo taken together and put it up in the office for a while. It was great to walk in and see us all smiling with adrenaline and ready to take on the world. That’s the attitude we need getting ready for the event every year, and if it takes free falls and funnel cake to make it happen, then so be it.

    I suppose the best advice I can give is don’t give up. Some people think work and fun don’t mix, but they certainly can, and should! Good milk comes from happy cows, and good work comes from happy workers. Not to mention it makes coming to work something to look forward to, instead of dread. So keep “work” from being a 4-letter work, and this coming year, bring a little Radical EnFUNment to your office.

    Happy New Year from all of us at Burning Man HQ!

  • DS homebrew – Remote Touch DS v0.6

    Homebrew dev BlazerRazer has released a new version of Remote Touch DS, a handy app that allows you to control your mouse, keyboard and manage your media files via your Nintendo DS. The latest update includes lot’s

  • ARTICLE: New BlackBerry Essex pictures surface

    In the clearest pictures seen on the internet to date, BGR has spent some time with the BlackBerry Tour2 (Essex) 9650.  Among the findings:

    • The keyboard is still great, despite the removal of space for the trackpad.
    • The phone is quick, and no slowdowns have been reported.
    • Physical size is almost (if not exactly) the same size as the Tour 9630.
    • Wi-Fi works just like any other BlackBerry device.

    It’s nice to see RIM standardizing their line away from the trackball, and onto the trackpad.  For those that purchased the original BlackBerry Tour, endured through the initial trackball issues, and are watching as the Tour2 nears a release, how do you feel?  Should Verizon and Sprint offer early upgrades to those affected by the release?  Sound off in the comments section!

    Via: BGR


  • Apple tablet may finally arrive in January

    apple tabletWe may soon see Apple’s long-rumored, yet-to-be-announced tablet computer. It looks like chief executive Steve Jobs has plans to demonstrate the product on-stage in January.

    A source tells The Business Insider that Apple has asked application makers to create apps for a demonstration next month. Those apps need to support full-screen resolution, suggesting an iPhone- or iPod Touch-style device with a larger screen — i.e, a tablet. And Apple has rented a stage at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts for several days in late January, according to the Financial Times.

    Piper Jaffray analyst Gene Munster predicted today that there’s a 50 percent chance that Apple will announce the tablet next month. If that happens, he said the device will probably go on sale later that quarter.

    The tablet has been the hot topic around Apple for months and months now. Whenever Apple holds an event, everyone wonders, “Will we see the tablet?” It’s supposed to be the focus of chief executive Steve Jobs, after he returned from a health-related absence.

    An Apple tablet would certainly face plenty of competition, including Hewlett Packard’s Dreamscreen, the controversial JooJoo (formerly the Crunchpad), and even a super-cheap tablet from the One Laptop Per Child project. But if Apple does demonstrate the tablet, I’m sure of one thing — it will look really, really cool.


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  • Merry Christmas To You and Yours from The Kitchn

    2009_12_02-Christmas.jpg“Christmas is the season for kindling the fire of hospitality in the hall, the genial flame of charity in the heart.” — Washington Irving

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  • Combination Mac mini, coffeemaker and subwoofer stuck in an iMac

    Filed under: , , , ,

    Have you ever wondered why the coffeemaker in your kitchen doesn’t have a subwoofer attached to it? Us too! And if you’re going to put a sub on there, you might as well include a Mac mini, right? And when you really think about it, isn’t the only case worthy of holding all that stuff an iMac DV? It just makes sense.

    That’s why, we’re guessing, tinkerer Klaus Diebel put together this incredibly useful device that will make your coffee, play some thumping tunes, and do your computing tasks as well. He tells us it was something like that — he really enjoyed the look of the gumdrop iMac, and has experimented with it a few times, creating both a mailbox and a birdhouse from the computer’s case. And this one just sort of snowballed — when he found that the Mac mini’s optical drive slot fit perfectly with the iMac’s slot, without any alterations at all, it had to happen.

    And we’re glad it did. The iMac is an exceptional little computer with a very distinctive form factor — if you have to put a coffeemaker in the thing just to keep it on your desk, so be it!

    TUAWCombination Mac mini, coffeemaker and subwoofer stuck in an iMac originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Wed, 23 Dec 2009 20:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Most Popular Firefox Extensions and Themes of 2009

    This year’s release of Firefox 3.5 gave us a lot of reasons to like it, but its extensibility remains everyone’s favorite feature. These add-ons and theme tools were the most popular in the year gone by.

    This list is culled from a straight listing of the most popular posts that offered a Firefox extension for download in 2009. We’re not including posts about configuring Firefox, or even our own hand-rolled Firefox add-on packs—even if they were pretty popular, too. Let’s get to the good stuff.

    Firefox 3.7 Theme Makes Your Browser Look Awesome

    One of the greatest things about Firefox is that its development happens way out wide in the open. When the design workers start coming up with preliminary sketches of a new release, anyone can peek at them and even compile them into a theme, which does just what the headline suggests.

    All-Glass Firefox Enables Slick Transparency Effects

    Windows Vista and 7 feature some fairly nice looking transparency effects, but if your primary browser doesn’t use them, it can feel a bit disconnected. All-Glass Firefox v2 tweaks your browser to look just, well, proper in its fancy-pants surroundings.

    “Vacuum Places Improved” Speeds Up Firefox with a Click of Your Mouse

    You can speed up Firefox by cleaning up its fragmented database, and the Vacuum Places Improved 0.3 extension automates that admittedly pain-in-the-butt process.

    Gmail Redesigned 3.0 Focuses on Speed and Message Space

    Google Redesigned, a multi-site suite that trades Google’s blue/white/minimal look for a darker, sleeker feel, kepts improving its transformative powers this year, adding a host of improvements in its 3.0 release, and later releasing a new version with GReader Redesigned for the RSS hounds.

    Dislike 0.2 Adds a Disapproving Dislike Button to Facebook

    “I’m having SUCH a bad day—the cleaning lady TOTALLY left her Pine Sol smell all over my bed linens!” That, my friends, is why clever JavaScript tweakers created the Dislike extension.

    TinEye Adds Reverse Image Lookup to Firefox

    Many of the pictures and illustrations you find across the web aren’t in their original form—and many can be had at better, perhaps more wallpaper-worthy sizes. The TinEye extension makes it a simple right-click maneuver to search out similar copies of any image you come across.

    SkipScreen Lets You Pass Go and Collect Your Download

    Sometimes, great stuff has to be hosted on public download services, because the file—or the attention it’s getting—is just too much for our meek little personal sites. And the download sites often make it as painful as possible to grab those files. SkipScreen acts as an automated intermediary, jumping through the necessary hoops and entering the key presses required.

    FireFound Tracks Your Stolen Computer, Nukes Your Personal Data

    This neat little extension, winnter of the Extend Firefox 3.5 contest, utilizes lots of Firefox’s built-in features, like geo-location and the extension framework, to offer wary laptop users a way to nuke their personal data, passwords, and history if necessary, track where their machine is logging on after a theft, and cull all kinds of data from the thief. FireFound is, in other words, a smart thing to install if your laptop ever leaves the home.

    Gui:config Gives Easy Access to Hidden Firefox Settings

    A lot of helpful stuff is tucked away in Firefox’s about:config menus. Gui:config brings them into focus and offers a graphical way to manage them. As the How-To Geek puts it, it’s amazing that this isn’t something being considered for mainstream distribution in the browser.

    Memory Fox Manages Firefox’s Memory Use, Aims to Keep It Low

    (Windows only): Firefox is decently light with memory on startup, but extensions and plug-ins drag it down as you actually use it. Memory Fox monitors Firefox’s memory use and, once it reaches your pre-set limit, whips it back into shape.

    Daum Blue Firefox Theme is Clean, Simple, and Elegant

    (Windows only): Well, the headline and picture kind of say it all about Daum Blue, but it’s worth noting that beyond looks, it’s also a fairly customizable, and looks even better on Vista and Windows 7 systems.

    Decreased Productivity Helps You Browse at Work Without Getting Busted

    Sure, kind of anathema for this site’s stated mission, but giving your mind a break at work has real mental benefits, even if your boss doesn’t think so.

    UrlbarExt Adds Super Powers to the Awesome Bar

    If you’re likely to do more at a web site than just simply bookmark it, UrlbarExt is like a Leatherman for your AwesomeBar. Head to a site’s root, search the site on Google, and do much more from a small array of address bar buttons.

    Foxmarks Becomes Xmarks, Adds Search and Suggestion Features

    Another headline that pretty much says it all. We weren’t a big fan of Xmarks‘ new “discovery” features, but its growing reach into Chrome and other browsers make the former Foxmarks’ expansion a good thing.

    Magnetiser Downloads Torrents When No Torrent File Is Available

    Given the recent legal crackdown on BitTorrent-centered sites, magnet links (explained here) are increasingly popular. Magnetiser makes it easy to track down a working torrent link to grab the file you’re looking for.

    Integrated Gmail Updates with Improved Looks and Handy Features

    It must be mentioned that, beyond smooshing together Gmail, Google Calendar, and Google Reader into one neatly-arranged Gmail page, Integrated Gmail also customizes every niggling detail of those combined apps, making it worth the try-out, even if you think you like your Google spaces separated into different tabs.

    Omnibar Extension Collapses Firefox’s Address and Search Boxes into One

    Omnibar is one of the clever ways Firefox can make itself into a Google Chrome clone, and we love that kind of openness ’round here.

    Invisible Hand Subtly Shows Best Web Prices

    If you’re always looking at online purchases and wondering if you could save more before pulling the trigger, Invisible Hand affirms your hunches for you, dropping down and showing lower prices wherever it can find them.

    Ubiquity Sees Major Update, New Look, Better Performance

    Mozilla’s future-facing automation and shortcut engine, Ubiquity, continued to get awesome-r in 2009.

    App Tabs Creates Permanent, Icon-Only Tabs, Firefox 4.0-Style

    We dug the idea of permanent, favicon-only tabs when a helpful reader explained it to us, but the App Tabs extension took a multi-step process and made it far more simple.


    Not seeing your favorite add-on released in 2009 here, or covered anywhere at Lifehacker? Can’t believe your favorite app doesn’t get more attention? Let’s hear all about it in the comments.

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  • Videogame Holiday Card Roundup 2009

    Videogame Holiday Card Roundup 2009

    We dig through the holiday card pile to share some of our favorites with you.

    Screenshot_altText

    Harmonix
    They share the holiday spirit with us in Rock Band fashion.

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  • Lotus celebrates return to F1 with Exige S Type 72

    Filed under: , , , ,

    Lotus Exige S Type 72 – Click above for high-res image gallery

    After a 15-year hiatus, Lotus is coming back to Formula One, and to commemorate its return to the top tier of motorsport, the Hethel crew is creating yet another special Exige inspired by the Type 72 that dominated F1 in the Seventies.

    Like nearly every other limited edition Lotus released in the last few years, the Exige S Type 72 is little more than a repainted, kitted-up version of its midship masterpiece. The supercharged, 1.8-liter inline four remains unchanged, putting out 220 horsepower and allowing the two-tone coupe to sprint to 60 in 4.5 seconds and on to a top speed of 145 mph.

    A set of carbon fiber ProBax sport seats swathed in black microfiber with contrast stitching ties in with the exterior’s gold wheels and emblems, while standard twin oil coolers and an adjustable front anti-roll bar round out the mechanical upgrades.

    Lotus has slated 20 Type 72s for sale in the UK, with another 20 destined for markets outside of the mainland (no word on U.S. distribution), each carrying a price tag of £35,995 or 40,332 euro. Not cheap, but then again, how do you put a price on nostalgia?

    Continue reading Lotus celebrates return to F1 with Exige S Type 72

    Lotus celebrates return to F1 with Exige S Type 72 originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 23 Dec 2009 20:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Bacon Fudge to Brownies: 20 Chocolate Treats from 2009 The Kitchn’s Best Recipes of 2009

    We don’t eat chocolate very often, but when we do, we go all out. Here, from candied bacon fudge to olive oil mousse, and from chocolate cookies that are nutty and dark to ones that are featherweight and chewy, are some of our favorite chocolate recipes from this past year. Chocolate with Nutella, chocolate with Guinness, chocolate with peanut butter — it’s all here.

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  • Photo for Today: Fossicking for artefacts in Bahariya

    Wessex archaeologist Chris Ellis hunting for lithics
    (prehistoric stone tools and manufacturing debris)
    in Bahariya as the sun began to set.
    And yes, he found some. The Western Desert is strewn with them but
    you do have to know what you’re looking for. And Chris does.
    Please note that Chris put everything back exactly as he found it.

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    We’d like to say thanks to this week’s GigaOM sponsors:

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  • Hello Everyone, newbie here

    Hi all

    I was just recently diagnosed as having diabetes, the 22nd of December, so merry Xmas to me.:(

    I truly feel lost. I am from Spain and trying to get as much info as possible as I am not too sure of the doctors here.

    Went in to my primary to see about some symptoms I was having( extreme thrist, urinating alot and weight loss) and had some tests done. I am scheduled to go to an endo and have more tests such as Hb A1C.

    I was given Levemir 14ml insulin shot for the morning 30 minutes before breakfest and also Dianben 850 in the morning and at night.

    Since I saw my primary doctor and he sent me to the ER for tests I got 2 different diagnosis, my ER said type 2 and primary said type 1. Seems like my pancreas is not producing any insulin.

    My blood suger levels when I have been:
    372 @ my primary doctors, 292 after insulin shot @ ER and 242 when I left the ER.

    Today my second day: Levels and times of tests.
    242 / 9:30 336 / 14:00 336 / 14:00 233 / 18:30 253 / 22:00 250 / 0:37 200 / 1:10

    I really dont know what to make of any of it yet. Really, really really scared. I am 36 and I have never cried as much as I did yesterday. Trying to be stronger today as it has taken a toll on my family and my wife is stressed enough as it is.

    My only relation with diabetes so far was that of an uncle that suffered from it from age 20 and passed at the age of 60 a few years ago. He led a pretty crappy life, always sick. So this is my only reference and I am pretty scared of living the same way.

    I have been pretty healthy up until now although with some extra pounds (308lbs 5´11). Have been dealing with uric acid(gout) for about 10 years and was hospitalized once for an infection of the urinary tract(name escapes me now for some reason).

    Having no prior family history besides my uncle( which it seems he got it from a treatment due to tifus) and grandparents all reached their 80s pretty much healthy with some diabetes which seems medication wise, so this really caught me by surprise and pretty much ignorant to this disease.

    What scares me most is not knowing what the outcome will be. I am so overwhelmed right now that I cant even think straight.

    Thanks for reading.

  • Mobile Search Firm ChaCha Gets $7 Million


    ChaCha

    Mobile search firm ChaCha—which lets users call or text message a query and receive an answer shortly afterwards—has raised another $7 million in funding, according to an SEC filing. The round comes five months after ChaCha disclosed a $4 million round—and ten months after it raised $12 million. The latest filing lists past backers, including former Compaq CEO Ron Canion, as directors. A company representative, however, would not say who provided the cash, which brings the startup’s total backing to more than $40 million. He did, however, happily provide figures detailing the company’s growth, including that the number of questions the service has answered is up 191 percent this year.

    Related


  • PalmCast Episode 89


    Derek and Keith replace Dieter with Phil Nickinson of WMExperts and talk Verizon rumors, Development, Finances, and Smartphone Round Robin.

    Thanks to everybody for writing and calling in!

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  • Introducing… The 27-inch iLemon

    ilemon4Regular readers will know my affinity for Apple products. In general, they’re high quality, and I’m willing to pay a bit more for that. But a lemon is a lemon, regardless of who it’s made by, and must be labeled as such. These new 27-inch iMacs? Lemons.

    In case you haven’t heard yet, the screens on these massive things are failing left and right. Granted, not all of them seem to be affected, but 110 pages worth of support questions/rants on Apple’s Support page for the issue tells me the problem is pretty widespread. That’s 1,640 replies, so far. And that thread has been viewed an incredible 264,630 times. The next closest recent page with that many views has 26,852 — and guess what? It’s also about a problem with the 27-inch iMac screen.

    Two days ago, Apple issued a fix for the issue. The only problem? The fix doesn’t appear to work.

    It did look like the fix was working for a little while, but today I’m back with the same constant flickering and random screen shutoffs that have plagued many of us. It basically makes the machine unusable. The support board is already filling up with users who applied the fix and still have the same problem. And, in fact, the only other TechCrunch writer with the new 27-inch iMac also has had the same issue and the fix hasn’t worked for him either.

    Earlier this month, it was reported that Apple was delaying further shipments of the 27-inch iMacs until it could get to the bottom of the screen issue. Many believed the fix two days ago was the solution, but it’s not. And so Apple appears to have a very big problem on its hands, literally. If I have to send this bad boy back, it will be the second time I’ve done so. The first time, it shipped to me with a crack in the screen. A problem which is also not an isolated one.

    Perhaps you read about how the FDA delayed the replacement one because it thought it was a piece of fruit. I was mad, but I shouldn’t have been. The truth is, these new iMacs are a piece of fruit. They’re lemons.

    Information provided by CrunchBase

    Crunch Network: CrunchBase the free database of technology companies, people, and investors


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  • More police shootings, more prison-system worries

    State budget deficit should not affect safety guidelines

    Editor, The Times:

    Our police are being killed because of Washington state’s failure to keep violent criminals behind bars [“Attack on deputies stuns weary region,” page one, Dec. 23].

    Violent criminals need to be locked up and the key thrown away. The state of Florida has a 10-20-life law for gun crimes.

    Let’s get that law here, also. Washington’s budget deficit should not be what guides our safety.

    — Reno Raines, Auburn

    Sheriff’s attitude out of line?

    I found the attitude as projected by Pierce County Sheriff Paul Pastor’s statement prominently displayed on the front page of The Seattle Times to be astonishing — “This should underline and make clear that people who wear badges risk themselves for perfect strangers.”

    What does the sheriff think the role of the police forces is?

    Sheriff Pastor gets paid for putting his tail on the line. And, yes, having dedicated more than 32 years of uniform service to our country, I well understand sacrifice for the good of the cause.

    Take a good look in the mirror Pastor and ask yourself: “Do I deserve to be wearing this uniform in service of the good people of Pierce County?”

    — Charles Bickel, Poulsbo

  • The health-care holiday wrap-up

    Winners and losers

    As the health-care bill is near completion, we see there are winners and losers [“GOP drops delays on health-care vote: Those states who get the bill for the health-care legislation and those states that have received special considerations because of their status in the Senate.

    Again our state suffers from a lack of representation in Washington, D.C. We received none of the special considerations that were given out there.

    This has happened over and over again.

    We misjudged Boeing with our politicians telling us that they will stay in our state without any more negotiations, even after Boeing gave fair warning by moving their headquarters and Internet business to Chicago years ago.

    We see Microsoft threatening to leave unless the business environment changes for the better; Verizon sent their data support to another state.

    We are so locked into the political correctness and party affiliation that we will continue to lose business, and the economy we once had will be replaced for a South Carolina-style economy, which these same congressional legislators continue to mock.

    — Larry Lundquist, Bellevue

    Lower the estate tax? Poor policy

    “Put health care aside and fix the economy” [Opinion, editorial, Dec. 20] stated, “[Congress] needs to lower the estate tax.”

    That line is an amazing non sequitur to all other lines prior to this sentence. What is implied is that changing a tax policy, the effects of which would have minimal impact over the next two or three years, would be an important move to fix our very current ills.

    I can’t imagine how this country operated so very well for years on an estate-tax level under a million dollars.

    Small business thrived at times and at times it did not. The country went through cycles of prosperity and recession. During the Clinton administration, the amount that was excluded was raised by a factor of about five times.

    Perhaps the exclusion level should be continuously adjusted for inflation, but to cite lowering the estate tax as a panacea for our sluggish economy is pure nonsense.

    Wealth concentration is and was a contributor to our current problems. Simplistic change in tax policy is poor policy.

    — Jerry A. Brownfield, Bellingham

    A step backward in the wrong direction

    As a doctor who provides a wide range of reproductive health care to patients, I watch Congress debate health-care reform with a cold shudder.

    Their political arguments about what should be covered have overtaken the discussion about who should be covered.

    The task we’ve given Congress is to find a way to serve the nearly 47 million Americans who are currently without health insurance. Their job is not to make personal medical decisions for women, for men, or for families.

    I’m encouraged that the Senate last week voted down the Nelson/Hatch amendment that would have restricted women’s access to abortion coverage in the private health-insurance market, even if they paid for the premiums with their own money.

    It’s a step backward that American women can’t afford to take.

    Let’s hope such draconian measures continue to be avoided in health-care reform.

    It’s been a long run, but the finish line for historic health-care reform is in sight. All citizens deserve access to our medical-care system. Leave the personal medical choices to Americans.

    — Anna Kaminski, MD, Seattle

  • Brief: MSN Messenger for Mac update: just a few more months

    The four of you who have been eagerly awaiting an update to MSN Messenger will have to wait a few more months, according to a post on the Office for Mac Team Blog, Mac Mojo. The update, which will bring A/V support, has hit some speed bumps along the way, causing a longer than expected delay in beta deployment. Apparently the trouble is in connecting to “the most current A/V code running on the Windows Live servers”.

    The news might be somewhat of a disappointment to those of you who remember a post on the very same blog from last year detailing the team’s plan to get A/V support running sometime in 2009. The Microsoft employees went as far as to say that they hoped to have a demo with A/V working at this year’s Macworld Expo. 

    The team is stating that the new version will be available in March and will be a “top quality experience.” Frankly, we didn’t know anyone still used MSN Messenger, or that it hadn’t been updated with A/V capabilities yet. Are any of you waiting on this update? Let us know in comments.

    What is a “Brief” post?”


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  • Brief: Class action suit targeting iMac G5 displays dismissed

    A class action suit filed against Apple over iMac G5 displays that eventually went south after the warranty expired has been dismissed by a federal judge. However, the judge left open options to amend certain claims in the suit if sufficient detail surrounding Apple’s alleged concealment of foreknowledge of the problem can be explained.

    Aram Hovsepian originally sued Apple at the beginning of this year, accusing Apple of concealing knowledge that displays on some iMac G5 models would fail, displaying random vertical lines across the display. “Apple remained silent knowing its iMac display screens would malfunction while consumers purchased iMacs, made warranty claims arising from the vertical lines on display screens, and made out of warranty repairs related to the vertical line problem,” Hovsepian claimed in his complaint.

    In the motion, District Judge Jeremy Fogel noted that the plaintiff did not meet the necessary “heightened” requirements for statutory fraud claims in his pleadings to sufficiently establish a cause of action. Furthermore, Judge Fogel also noted that Hovsepian did not define the proposed class narrowly enough—as described in his second amended complaint, the class would include anyone who bought an iMac G5, and not necessarily those affected by the alleged problem. However, the judge noted that Hovsepian could amend his complaint to address a claim of common law fraud if he could offer “further elaboration as to whether such a duty [to publicly disclose the problem] existed and as to the means by which Apple actively concealed a known defect from its customers.”

    The iMac G5 display issues describe in the lawsuit aren’t the only complaints about iMac displays Apple has had to deal with recently. The lawsuit’s dismissal comes just after Apple released a firmware update for 27″ iMacs to address problems with flickering LCDs. A number of other display issues have been detailed on Apple’s support forums, and those screen issues may have been at least part of the cause for weeks-long shipping delays of the gargantuan iMac.

    What is a “Brief” post?”


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