Category: News

  • Spy Shots: Smart ForTwo+2 in the works?

    Filed under: , , , , , ,

    Smart, the German-born automaker that revived the stagnant microcar market in the first place, has seen itself fall behind in the city car wars with Toyota’s oh-so-clever iQ taking the top spot with its extra space for passengers and packages via its brilliant layout. What’s more, new machines are on the way from BMW (the long-rumored Isetta revival) and the Audi (the A1, which will be debuted at the next Geneva Motor Show).

    As such, we’re not surprised to see Smart engineers out and about testing what appears to be the next generation of the diminutive Fortwo. Judging from the fender flares, we might make and educated guess that the new model will be slightly wider than the current car, which makes sense as the same platform is rumored to gain an extended-wheelbase variant called the Fortwo+2.

    Unlike the previous Forfour, the Fortwo+2 would share the expected rear-engine, rear-wheel drive architecture with the base car and would come equipped with what would surely be a mini set of rear doors. According to Auto Express, we should see the next Fortwo in dealerships late next year with the +2 showing up in 2012. Electric and hybrid versions are reportedly in the works – and here’s hoping they finally fix that horribly awkward transmission.

    [Source: Auto Express]

    Spy Shots: Smart ForTwo+2 in the works? originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 01 Dec 2009 13:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Howard Chui reviews the Bell Samsung Omnia 2

    For a bit more professional look at the Samsung Omnia 2, we have this 10 minute review of this Windows Mobile smartphone.  This is the GSM version on Bell Canada, but should share much software and features with the Verizon version, which is set for imminent release.

    See his earlier unboxing video here.

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  • Rupert Murdoch: Feds Should Stay Out Of News Business, Except, Of Course To Smack Down Google For Sending Me Traffic

    Rupert Murdoch stopped by at an FTC workshop on the future of journalism to say that the federal government should “stay out” of regulating the journalism business. Except, in the same speech he said exactly the opposite. What he meant was that he didn’t want the government to get in the business of funding journalism. Yet, in the very same speech he did say that the government shouldn’t allow Google to link to his news stories, calling it “theft” yet again. Again, he didn’t explain why he hasn’t blocked Google if it’s actually “theft.” Not surprisingly, compounding these contradictions, he failed to mention (or perhaps recognize?) that the sites he owns do plenty of aggregating themselves. I’ve been told, however, that Arianna Huffington is making that point, though I wonder if Rupert stuck around to hear it. Update: Huffington has published her speech, which does a very nice job making the point.

    Other points made by Murdoch include the bizarre claim that “advertising is dead” as a model to support journalism. You would think that someone who has lived through a bunch of ad market cycles wouldn’t extrapolate from just a short period, but that appears to be what Murdoch is doing. About the only other explanation for all of this is that he’s simply trying to confuse and throw off both the competition and the federal government — but at some point someone should directly call him on his various contradictions and confusion.

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  • Microsoft announces Windows Phones for Latin America

    windows-phone-america-latina

    Microsoft is having a Windows Phone event for Latin America in Buenos Aires. Yes, Windows Mobile 6.5 has come to Latin America.

    11 Latin American countries will be receiving over the next few days the first phones with the new Microsoft operating system. The exact dates or countries have not been specified.

    Douglas Smith, director of mobile division in the Americas at Microsoft, announced that the first three phones with Windows Phone we will have available are: Samsung Omnia II, HTC Touch 2 and LG GW550.

    Source: emovilPRO

    This post was submitted by teo.

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  • Manhattan Inventory Problem Continues To Improve

    (This guest post originally appeared at the author’s blog)

    Absorption defined for the purposes of this chart as: Number of months to sell all listing inventory at the annualized pace of sales activity.

    The absorption rate continues to improve from a bottom up, approaching the 10-year 10.0 month average for all three market areas (the data set is too thin for a reliable trend for Uptown).

    Observations

    The East Side absorption rate slows considerably above $1.5M. Co-ops are considerably slower than condos above that threshold. Condos generally absorb faster than co-ops.

    The West Side absorption rate has reduced in higher price segments, up to $3M. Co-ops generally absorb faster than condos below $3M but take much longer than condos above the threshold.

    The Downtown market absorption rate has reduced in higher price segments, up to $3M. Co-ops and condos are consistent below the threshold but co-ops absorb considerably slower above the threshold.

    Note: This chart series does not include shadow inventory (properties ready for market but not yet listed for sale) so it understates condo absorption.

    Absorb Charts

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  • Autoblog Podcast #155 – ‘Twas the night before the LA Auto Show…

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    Click above for the Autoblog Podcast in iTunes, RSS or listen now!

    With the LA Auto Show near at hand, Chris, Dan, and Editor Extraordinaire Paukert sat down and talked over some of the latest for Episode #155 of the Autoblog Podcast. First up is the surprisingly thorough re-rework of the Mustang, before we move on to talk about the early release of U.S.-spec Ford Fiesta pictures. Gazing at photos brings us to the Chevrolet Cruze, which has also been lensed in North American garb. The Chinese-market Buick Excelle is rumored as a possibility for our market, and we scratch our heads about that for a while. Toyota’s handling of its gas pedal recall and Nissan’s low-priced and well-integrated navigation unit wraps it up before we move on to some of your questions. Right before signing off, we jump back to talk briefly about the newly unveiled Audi A8 and Saab’s sad fortunes. At one hour, 50 minutes, it’s an epic. We blame Paukert.

    If you get bored once the new Autoblog Podcast bliss has worn off, check out our colleagues at Joystiq and Engadget. Let us know what you think by dropping us an email at Podcast at Autoblog dot com, reviewing the show in iTunes, filling out our survey, or even leaving us a voicemail on our Google Voice line 734-288-8POD (734-288-8763). Thanks for listening, we’ll see you next week!

    Continue reading Autoblog Podcast #155 – ‘Twas the night before the LA Auto Show…

    Autoblog Podcast #155 – ‘Twas the night before the LA Auto Show… originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 01 Dec 2009 13:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Was Caijing Magazine Killed By The Chinese Censors?

    Caijing

    China’s remarkably outspoken and investigative Caijing magazine recently suffered massive set backs with the departure of top writers and the majority of its staff.

    Apparently there were some serious disputes between Caijing’s top talent and Caijing’s owner, the ‘Stock Exchange Executive Council’.

    Meanwhile Caijing recently managed to put out a November 23rd issue using what remains of their staff, we’ve noticed that their English website is dead.

    The headline story is dated November 13th.

    While the Chinese version appears to be struggling on. Is it really that hard to find English translators?

    One of this magazine’s past strengths was its ability to let intelligent Chinese writers explain what’s going on to the non-Chinese world. Even if the magazine is still published, the website was a far more useful tool given the frequency of its updates in the past.

    In the latest issue, the new Caijing affirmed its past values, but the dead English website makes us wonder: is the old Caijing already dead?

    WSJ: The latest issue of Caijing also features a statement of support from a former high-ranking establishment media official. “Caijing magazine faces a heavy task and a long road ahead,” wrote Zhong Peizhong, onetime head of the news division of the Communist Party’s Central Propaganda Department. “I wholeheartedly wish Caijing magazine even greater success in the future.”

    International Business Times: It said that the mass resignation is followed escalating pressure in recent months by the Stock Exchange Executive Council (SEEC), to rid the outspoken magazine of its widely reputable editorial independence. “The key is, the SEEC wants to intervene and censor all of our financial stories, particularly cover stories and investigative reports. That’s unbearable (for us),” one source said.

    “None of the real stories we used to run would have been OK (with the SEEC) if they stepped in,” the source said. SEEC is Caijing’s owner, the unique shareholder, which always to intervene and censor the most important articles since July .

    We hope nothing changes. But if it does change, then luckily Caijing’s old departed team is reportedly organizing a new venture called Caixin. Love it.

    Chinais.com: Caijing insiders gave the information that the resignation was planned even earlier this year around August. The China Times found an interesting domain name “CAIXINNEWS.COM” (财新新闻) which is registered by Weiping Kang (康伟平), an editor of Caijing Magazine on the 6th of August. this domain registration unveils the possible date when either party started to set up their tactic – a strategic move from Hu Shuli or just one defensive registration of Caijing Magazine.

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  • Paul Krugman’s Emergency Jobs Program Will Never Work

    This guest post originally appeared at TheAtlantic.com

    Paul Krugman and I seem to agree that the worst part of a recession is unemployment.  Losing value in your 401(k) is terrible, but not, for most people, catastrophic.  Losing your business or your job, on the other hand, is wretched, particularly when there are six job hunters for every job opening.

    Where we differ is that Krugman doesn’t understand why the administration has not made creating jobs a top priority.  He wants transfers to state and local governments, a tax credit for increasing payrolls, and a WPA-style jobs program.  Other bloggers have attacked the first two; I’ll just say that I’m skeptical that a temporary tax credit will induce strained businesses to take on significant new operating costs.  But I want to talk about the jobs program, because it’s a superficially compelling idea that just won’t work.

    I don’t say this because I necessarily think it’s a bad idea.  During an employment slump as deep as ours, there are some compelling reasons to support the creation of temporary, low paid public jobs as an alternative to collecting unemployment.  There are risks, since someone doing a low-paid temporary job has less time to seek more fitting permanent employment.  But the risks are not so large that I would be unwilling to try such a program in the face of 10% unemployment.  Unfortunately, all this is entirely academic, because the federal government cannot create something akin to the CCC or the WPA on the time frame that would help the people who are suffering now.

    For one thing, there are powerful public sector unions, who are going to fiercely resist any attempt to create low paid temporary jobs that could be done by well paid government workers who have excellent benefits and job security.  I doubt the Republicans would be willing to take this one on (or well disposed to a New WPA).  But with Democrats in control, this is pretty much a fatal objection.

    Even if you could surmount union opposition, the federal government has an ever-increasing thicket of red tape that makes such a thing impractical.  It takes months to get hired for a job with the federal government.  It takes months to ramp up a new program.  By the time you’d gotten your NWPA through Congress over strenuous union objections, appointed someone to head it, set up the funding and hiring procedures, and actually hired people, it would be 2011.  Maybe 2012.  Perhaps you could waive all the civil service and associated procedure surrounding federal hiring, but I don’t see how.

    My father was the head of a trade association for the heavy construction industry, and most of my closest relatives either work for the government, or have done so in the past.  As you can imagine, over my lifetime I’ve had a lot of conversations about government procedure and government projects.  Every so often I’ll read some description of a project out of the olden days–the battle against malaria in Panama, the handling of the Great Mississippi Flood, or the creation of the WPA–and just marvel at how fast everything used to be.  The WPA was authorized in April of 1935.  By December, it was employing 3.5 million people.   The Hoover Dam took 16 years from the time it was first proposed, to completion; eight years, if you start counting from the time it passed Congress. 

    Contrast this with a current, comparatively trivial project: it has been seventeen years since the Southeast High Speed Rail Corridor was established by USDOT, and we should have a Record of Decision on the Tier II environmental impact statement no later than 2010.  This for something that runs along existing rail rights of way, and in fact, uses currently operating track in many places.

    I imagine this all sounds like a nattering nabob of negativity.  If there are procedural hurdles to jobs programs and high speed rail, we should challenge them, not resign ourselves to subpar policy!  

    Look, I may be skeptical that health care reform will be a net positive, but I do concede there’s some chance I’m wrong (and I will be glad if it is so).  But this is not merely unlikely; is is the next nearest thing to impossible, short of armed revolution.  Many of the procedural hurdles involve court rulings, concerning law which Congress cannot overturn in some cases (due process), or isn’t going to (civil rights legislation, civil service protections).  The obstacles arise out of things that individually, people, specifically Democrats, like: transparency, due process, environmental care, civil rights, unionism.  Cumulatively, they are devastating to federal productivity.  But it’s hard to get much support for repealing or altering them individually–which is what you would have to do.  Philip Howard has built a second career out of railing against the steady trend towards hyperproceduralism, of which this is a small part.

    So in this case, I think we’re better off looking for second best: things that the government can enact and implement relatively quickly.  More generous unemployment benefits, and further temporary extensions of the period for which you can collect them.  Other forms of cash and quasi-cash assistance to struggling families, like food stamps.  Payroll tax holidays.  These may not be optimal, but they are things that Congress can actually get going almost immediately, putting cash in the hands of people who are suffering.

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  • Mac OS X, iPhone OS, Safari Down or Flat in November

    November was not a great month for Apple, at least according to web metrics firm Net Applications. While one could argue the launch of Windows 7 in October may have negatively impacted market share for OS X, Safari also lost ground to Chrome, and even the iPhone OS saw a slight decline against competitors.

    For OS X, the decline could actually be good news. In the first full month since the release of Windows 7, OS X declined to 5.12 percent of the overall market, down from 5.27 percent last month. That’s not so bad. However, if Windows 7 is to blame for that modest decline, it’s a little difficult to understand how Linux saw an increase of 0.04 percent, to an even one-hundredth of overall market share. More positively, Snow Leopard continues to account for an increasing share of the OS X user base.

    From September through November, OS X 10.6 represented 18 percent, 22 percent and 27 percent, respectively, of the OS X user base. Those are impressive gains after launching on Aug. 28. In contrast, Windows 7 launched on Oct. 22, and nearly six weeks later is just reaching 5 percent of Windows market share. Faster uptake of OS X means new technologies see more widespread support sooner; slower for Windows 7 means more support headaches for Microsoft.

    Similarly, Safari 4 has become the standard among Mac versions of the web browser, accounting for more than 80 percent of Safari users since launching in June. In terms of overall market share, Safari, including the Windows version, represents 4.36 percent, down slightly from 4.4 percent in October. Still, that percentage is moving slowly upward over time, though not nearly as fast as Google’s Chrome. Chrome is now at 3.93 percent, up from 3.57 percent for the previous month, and will almost assuredly pass Safari on the desktop within three months. Of course, some solace can be had in that Chrome and Safari both use WebKit. More WebKit users, and Gecko users with Firefox, ultimately mean a greater adherence to neutral standards for web browsers.

    As for the iPhone, November was one of those rare months that saw the iPhone OS lose ground. In terms of overall market share among operating systems, iPhone OS may be insignificant, but the actual number of users probably exceeds 60 million. Nonetheless, market share for iPhone OS was 0.43 percent in November, down from 0.44 in October. Competing mobile operating systems like JavaME, Symbian, Andriod and RIM, all saw increases of 0.01 or 0.02 percent, minuscule changes, but still increasing.

    It should be noted, though, that Net Applications data this month comes with a “preliminary” warning label. That could mean there are still slight variations to be found. For a month that showed a little decline for Apple, it might turn out to be more of a plateau.


  • More Leo questions answered

    Biggest question I have is how is the speed of the processor. Especially when browsing the web with IE and Opera. How does it compare to the current 528mhz chips.

    Web browsing is brilliant, processor is blazing fast. It does everything I’ve thrown at it so far, and I’ve stopped caring that there isn’t a task manager in the top of the home screen. Opera now loads faster enough that there really is no need for IE, though IE does do flash (albeit badly) – I’ve yet to try flash in Opera.

    as much details as possible about the USB host please.

    So far, I’ve got nothing on that.

    I’m hesitating between a Touch Pro 2 and a HD2. I want to go for the HD2 but before I want to be sure about 2 topics not really developed on other reviews: The screen keyboard, is it good? practical? Can it replace a hardware keyboard? Is it fast?
    And I’d like to know the quality of the Mic / Speaker. Touch Pro 2 had great review about this and his hand free capabilities. Is the HD2 as good?
    Thank you,
    Gaz

    How it feels without stylus, on gui element that not yet skinned by touchflo.

    Some of them can be a litte awkward, but in reality there not too bad. Using the pinch zoom feature does make things better though.

    I’d like to know how the capacitive screen is to use on those ugly-old standard WM applications (Pressing the ‘X’ button, using scroll-bars, etc.

    The scroll bars expand when you touch them which makes scrolling through long lists really easy.

    Ditto on battery life – how long does it last with continuous web-browsing, video/audio playback, etc. 

    Playing a WVGA film full screen on headphones at 50% brightness lasted a lot longer than the 2h30 film I was watching, at which point I fell asleep. That was with push email in the background over HSDPA… Probably not the best battery test, and I’ll try and do a proper one at a later date.

    How much free RAM is there after bootup with no programs running?

    The simple answer is “enough”. With Sense, you do lose around 50MB, but even so there’s more than 200MB free (and that’s with no optimisations at all).

    And finally, is it possible to zoom using one hand only?

    Some applications like Opera do zoom on a double tap. The pinch zooming is pretty hard with one hand as it’s a massive screen.

    Hello, would like to know how Sense is compatible with "old" applications such as agenda fusion, applications which really close the program instead of putting them backwards (i use wktask, but can be others) or pocketbreeze (who show on today page next appointements tasks etc). Those old apps may be too old, but are must have for me to use WinMo efficiently, and could prevent me from buying this beautiful HD2. And, btw, is it possible to put shortcuts on the today page of Sense to most common apps or functions (all the above, shortcut for silent & vibrate, etc…) Thanks for the answer, and excuse my bad english.

    Sense itself is pretty much just a today plugin. Its not incompatible as such, but for other today screen plugins, its Sense or something else, not both. You can disable Sense though, and the whole thing somehow seems even faster! You can put shortcuts to whatever you want, though silent and vibrate may need applets to work on the sense main page.

    Thanks a lot for your answer. Sounds logical. But still wondering how it works in "real life". how about switching between 2 or 3 opened apps, view calls list during a call, how pocketbreeze could show all appointement on the start page/home screen if there is no more start page (but the sense page), if it is possible to put more than 9 shortcuts (9 blocks only are available, 3 of them always displayed), …. the whole impression i have is that the sense skin is not very upgradable, despite it’s beautiful. And i love to tweak and put shortcut everywhere on my WinMo 5. But maybe this is not the right place here for such questions, and once again, thanks a lot for the answer.

    Switching between 2/3 open apps is as simple as either reopening them, or finding them in task manager. If you didn’t shut them, you can just minimise the front app and the one behind it will pop up again. Viewing call history in a call is Menu->Call history, and then you can filter it if you want. PocketBreeze wouldn’t be able to work with Sense for that. There are only 9 items by default, but I guess XDA-Devs will figure out a way to add more. With Sense, you can put shortcuts on the first page, and the WM6.5 start menu lets you move shortcuts around. You can also just disable Sense, and you’re back to stock WM6.5 which has the same today screen setup as WM5 for things like PocketBreeze.

    How well you can see whats on screen when outside ? I have TyTN and I can’t see anything on screen outside.

    Depends on what the weather is like. In too bright sunlight, there’s no chance, and not even the Omnias with the AMOLED screens are visible. Generally though, it’s perfectly usable. A good deal brighter than my Diamond or Prophet.

    I’d be interested to know the quality of the external speaker in comparison to the diaomond. My diamond’s is shockingly poor and i rarely here my phone ringing anywhere even slightly noisy.

    To my mind, it’s rather good. Plays music loudly, and I’ve yet to miss a call. And it’s got “Pocket Mode” that makes it ring louder if the proximity sensor is covered i.e. in a bag or pocket.

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  • Svalbard Seed Bank

    Norway, Europe | Subterranean Sites

    Your grandma is right. The bananas that you can buy today in your local supermarket are not as sweet as the ones that she ate in her childhood.

    There are many types or “cultivars” of any given fruit, a cultivar is a cultivated plant which is chosen and given a special name because of its desired characteristics, and various types of cultivars (for example in apples, the Red Delicious in the 1870s) come in and out of favor over the years. In the middle of 20th century the dominant banana cultivar exported to North America and Europe was the Gros Michel. Sometime around 1950, it become virtually extinct due to the rapid spread of the so called “Panama Disease,” a fungal infection that attacks the roots of the banana plant. The Gros Michel was replaced with more resiliant but less tasty Cavendish cultivar.

    Modern agriculture is generally focused on maximizing profit by extracting maximal possible yield of crop. A small number of specially selected cultivars of any given crop are planted throughout the world, displacing in the process numerous other local varieties. This approach guarantees consistently high yields under the normal conditions but harbors a hidden danger.

    Essentially, every single comertialy grown plant is a clone of one of only a few specially selected strains of genetic material. Diversity of genetic material is thus reduced to a bare minimum, leaving crop species exposed to any disease which can exploit that single strain. With corn, wheat and rice, being grown world wide in such a fashion, this is concern that one newly mutated strain of fungus could whip out an entire world crop in matter of months, causing massive food shortages.

    In order to preserve the gene diversity of major food crops, international institutions have established a series of green gene banks, which store samples of genetic material of various strains of each plant species.

    Svalbard Seed Bank is meant as a sort of safety net, a reserve of last resort and the vault functions like a safety deposit box in a bank. It stores duplicate specimens from genebanks worldwide and while the Svalbard seed bank owns the building, the individual depositor owns the contents of his or her box and the access to individual specimens is regulated by their respective depositors. The facility has a capacity to conserve 4.5 million seed samples. With approximately 1.5 million distinct seed samples of agricultural crops thought to exist, the Svalbard Seed Bank can store roughly three of each sample. Under the current temperature conditions in the vault (temperatures similar to those in a kitchen freezer) the seed samples can remain usable to begin new crops for anywhere from 2000 to 20,000 years.

    The seed bank is located in an old copper mine on remote northern island of Spitsbergen, Norway. The main storage is 120m inside a sandstone mountain, on a tectonically dead island. The bank employs a number of robust security systems. Seeds are packaged in special four-ply packets and heat sealed to exclude moisture. A local coal mine and powerplant supplies the electricity for refrigeration control. The remote northern location also serves as a natural fridge. In the case of complete power failure at least several weeks will elapse before the temperature rises to the −3 °C of the surrounding sandstone bedrock.

    The Svalbard Global Seed Vault opened for deposits officially on February 26, 2008 with the construction of the vault financed entirely by Norwegian Government. The operational cost is currently shared by Norway and the Global Crop Diversity Trust.

  • SocGen’s Albert Edwards: Even The Bulls Should Know They’re Screwed

    The market is rallying, but so what. SocGen’s uber-bearish analyst Albert Edwards says you should be terrified if you’re a bull, and that if you’re not terrified, you’re probably deluding yourself.

    FT: Alphaville has his latest report:

    We have just had the worst decade’s performance for equity investors on record. Relative to government bonds, equities have been an even bigger disaster. Surely after such a terrible decade for equity investors things can only get better?

    On a ten year view, equities may indeed prove to be a good investment. On a 1-2 year view, however, we still see much pain to come. After what we have been though so far, where the bulls’ optimism has been crushed in 2001/2 and in 2007/8 surely there must be a heavy weight of self-doubt yoked onto the shoulders of the bulls – but apparently not!

    The lesson from Japan is that while de-leveraging plays itself out, the global economy will remain extremely vulnerable. The Great Moderation is dead. It was built on a super-cycle of private sector debt. We know from Japan, we now return to what was before, i.e. highly volatile and unpredictable cycles. Recession will quickly follow recovery.

    And he concludes with this terrifying slide:

    inflation


    Read the whole thing at FT Alphaville >>

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  • Howard Davidowitz: “We Are On A Death March!” “We Are Japan!”

    Many economists draw comparisons between the United States now and Japan in 1990.

    For those who aren’t familiar with Japan’s recent economic history, this is not a good thing. 

    Japan’s stock market peaked in 1989 at about 40,000.  It now trades around a quarter of that level, or 10,000.  GDP, meanwhile, has barely grown at all.

    Economists used to refer to Japan’s malaise as “a lost decade.”  Now they’re saying “lost decades.”

    Our guest Howard Davidowitz sees a similarly horrific future in store for the U.S. He calls America’s current path, rich in deficit spending and weak in currency a “road to nowhere.”

    He also doesn’t buy the arguments of those who reassure us that Japan’s problems are “cultural” and “demographic”–and, therefore, that it’s different here.  Japan’s problems are the same as our problems (artificially low interest rates and a bailout culture), Davidowitz says.  The only difference is that we’re about 20 years earlier into the collapse.

    If we are Japan, what is the outlook for the stock market (and your retirement savings)?  Not good.

    If the DOW behaves the way Japan’s NIKKEI has, the DOW will trade at about 4,000 in 2025.

    See Also: The United States Of Wusses

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  • What Hangover? November Auto Sales Actually Solid

    fordsnow.jpg

    The numbers are trickling in. Here’s how U.S. automakers did or are expected to do this November:

    • Ford: Flat. 123,167 units versus 123,222 a year ago
    • Porsche: Sales up 18% to 1626 units
    • BMW: Sales down 7.5% at 18,727 units
    • Toyota: Sales up 2.6% on 133,700 units
    • Hyundai: Sales up 46% over last year on 28,045 units
    • Mercedes-Benz: Sales up 19.1%. 16,797 units versus 14,102 a year ago
    • General Motors: Sales down 2% to 151,427 units
    • Chrysler: Sales fell 25% to 63,560 units
    • Honda: Sales down 3%
    • Nissan: Sales up 31.3% for 56,288 units
    • Kia: Up 18.3% over last year on 17,955 units
    • Lexus: Sales up 14%

    It’s almost as if… consumers are buying cars again.

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  • Officially Official: Volkswagen Amarok pickup makes the scene

    Filed under: , , ,


    Volkswagen Amarok – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Well looky here – it’s the latest in a long line of oddly named trucks from Volkswagen. This time, the Amarok refers to a cryptozoological Inuit giant wolf-creature that eats those who dares to hunt alone. No really. Regardless, the Amarok is VW’s first pickup truck since the Caddy, aka the Rabbitamino first released in 1980. Aside from being thirty-years more new, the Amarok looks to be a bit, well, more stout.

    Spartan, too – especially the no frills interior. And here’s the really good part for you truck dudes – it’s a real-deal, honest-to-goodness body-on-frame worker bee. Meaning it can haul 2,300 pounds and tow nearly three tons (5,600 pounds) when equipped with VW’s 2.0-liter common-rail turbo diesel four-cylinder that’s good for 163 hp and 295 lb-ft of torque.

    A smaller diesel motor with 122 hp and 250 torques will be an option, as well as a direct-injected gasoline engine. True, it’s not a Ford F-450 Super Duty. But then again, what is? And really, if hauling a couple of jet skis or a track car are your thing (as opposed to say a yacht), the Amarok could be your truck. If you live in Europe, South America, Asia, Africa or Australia. Predictably we can’t get the Argentinian-built Amarok here. But feel free to inflame your trucky jealousy by reading the full press release, after the jump. Hat tips to Carlos and Doug!

    [Source: Pickuptrucks.com via Argentina Auto Blog]

    Continue reading Officially Official: Volkswagen Amarok pickup makes the scene

    Officially Official: Volkswagen Amarok pickup makes the scene originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 01 Dec 2009 13:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Grok Tag

    grok tag 1 Grok TagThere was a time when you could go to any schoolyard and see kids being kids. Kids would run, leap, throw, and exert themselves with the pure joy of uncorrupted youth. They were suddenly realizing their bodies were incredible machines capable of precise, complex movements, and the games they played developed these capabilities. Dirt clod fights, epic dodgeball matches, and tetherball developed hand-eye coordination and agility; roughhousing that never graduated into enmity taught kids the value of a few bumps and bruises (as well as how to dish ‘em out); games like tag, capture the flag, and monkey in the middle emphasized foot speed, lateral agility, and rapid changes of direction. The teacher on yard duty might hand out a citation or break up a little scuffle once in awhile, but recess was generally pretty relaxed. About the only thing your average schoolyard athlete worried about was explaining away the grass stains, or maybe the scuffed knees. Looking back, we really had it good: unstructured play, impromptu workouts that didn’t feel like work but got us into great shape and developed our social skills. We were little Groks, cultivating our minds and bodies without actively planning a routine (or play date). It probably helped that we didn’t have Nintendo DS Lites or smart phones (or overbearing parents) to distract us, but the fact remains that we just were. A bit like Grok, we didn’t run and jump to get better at running and jumping; we ran and jumped because it was fun, because it simply felt like the right thing to do. Our athletic development was merely a bonus.

    We’ve totally lost that. Kids now spend recess checking their Facebook statuses, their weekly itineraries, and catching up on piles of homework. I actually have a close friend in school administration – principal of a public elementary school – who laments what she sees as the loss of recess. Well, recess is technically still around, but it’s been neutered into some unrecognizable form. Dodgeball is widely banned (promotes competition and inequality), and the random roughhousing and general tomfoolery kids used to get into are completely cracked down on. Dirt fights and wrestling, I can understand, but dodgeball? I weep. I weep, but I’m not even that surprised. Those red rubber balls sure do sting (the ego?), and we wouldn’t want our precious kids made aware of any discrepancies in ability between their peers and themselves. Save that revelation for adulthood – that’ll be healthy!

    But the latest schoolyard casualty is too much to handle. I won’t stand for it. As of 2006, administrators in Cheyenne, Boston, and Spokane elementary schools have banned tag. Tag. It’s perhaps the oldest game in the world, and it’s being banned from schoolyards across the country – even here in my backyard, Santa Monica. They cite “concussions, broken bones and numerous bumps and scrapes” as potential causes for concern, as well as the “self-esteem issue.” I dunno about you, but I foresee far greater self-esteem issues for the kids who never learn the value of honest competition. Getting picked last is part of life. Losing is an essential skill. If they don’t learn these lessons early on in a natural, organic manner, how are kids supposed to handle the rigors and responsibilities of adult life, where the consequences are graver and your parents can’t come pick you up at lunch and get you ice cream?

    I’m beginning to digress.

    My point is this: those childhood games teach us important lessons, and they facilitate our athletic development. As adults, we stand to gain a lot from going back to these games, even if we were lucky enough to grow up in an age where kids were allowed to be kids (strike “allowed,” actually; kids simply were kids). Games like dodgeball, monkey in the middle, and especially tag are excellent ways to get a great, fun workout (I would advise against dirt clod fights and roughhousing with random adults – these tend to morph into actual fights). Play, after all, is one of the Primal Laws, and what better way to show your children the value of a good game of tag than by playing it with them?

    Let’s remove the “childhood” tag from tag, shall we?

    I focus on tag because it can be played anywhere without equipment. Dodgeball is great, but a good game requires a special ball, a court, and a certain amount of players. All you need for tag is a few participants and an open space. Tag’s also perhaps the purest, oldest game. I’m strictly guessing here, but I’d imagine organisms – hominids, dogs, otters, baboons, and squirrels – have been chasing each other around for no particular reason for millions of years. Go to a zoo or a dog park or a playground (sometimes) and you’ll see evidence of animals left to their own devices who default to chasing each other.

    Tag is completely free form. There are no boundaries and few rules. In football, there are clear goals. A guy’s chasing you, but he knows exactly where you’re headed: to the endzone. In tag, you can be completely unpredictable. You’re darting this way and that way without a real spatial goal in sight – except to get the heck out of the other guy’s clutches. You’ll develop moves you never knew you had and agility you thought was long gone, all because you remove those conscious mental filters that slow things down and prevent pure instinctual reactions.

    Tag is sprinting made effortless. Well, effort is still there, but you won’t be aware of it in a good game of tag; you’ll be too busy trying to stay “alive.” If you can’t seem to get out for a regular sprint session, you might try getting a gang together for tag. You’ll end up running what amounts to dozens of sprints without even thinking about it.

    Tag promotes full-on effort. Even if you’re a committed sprinter, it can be tough to really hit maximum effort each time, because at the end of the day you’re alone on a track, or a stretch of grass. Unless you’ve got a competitive training partner, you’re in an official competition, or there’s a mountain lion on your tail, you’re missing that sense of urgency that compels the true sprint. When you get in the zone in a game of tag, you do everything you can to avoid being “it.” You dodge, roll, fake, and sprint as fast as humanly possible to avoid being tagged. If you really get into it, it’ll be as if there’s a lion on your heels or a world record to be broken – your body won’t know the difference, and your performance will improve.

    There are dozens of varieties of tag. Most will work for your purposes just fine. British bulldogs, for example, begins with two “bulldogs” standing in the middle of the play area. Everyone else lines up on one end and tries to rush past the bulldogs to the other side. Those who are caught become bulldogs. The last one standing is the victor. Then there’s the always classic freeze tag, or even the modified tag variant hide and seek. Too many to name, but I think we can do better with our own variant.

    Grok Tag

    I suppose the real “Grok Tag” would look something like basic schoolyard tag: one person trying to tag another person, who then becomes “it.” Just basics, no tricks or gimmicks. That’s fine, but I’m thinking we can distinguish ourselves and make it a real workout by throwing in a little twist.

    • Gather a group of people together. At least five is ideal, three is good, and two will technically work.
    • Go to a field, the beach, a forest – pretty much anywhere with real earth underneath, rather than hard concrete. You’re going to be running a lot, so avoid high impact ground.
    • Have everyone do five burpees simultaneously for time. The slowest is “it.” Everyone else is the hunted.
    • Once you’re ready to play, have the hunted disperse. “It” waits ten seconds and then begins the chase.
    • If someone is tagged, they immediately drop and do ten pushups. Once they finish, they are now “it” and the person who tagged them is now the hunted.
    • Next person tagged drops and gives fifteen pushups. Once they finish, they are now “it” and the person who tagged them is now the hunted.
    • Continue in this manner until you reach thirty pushups. Whoever does the thirty is “it” for the next round, which begins in two minutes. For the next round, use squats instead of pushups. And for the round after that, use burpees, but start with five and end with twenty-five (unless you’re up for the full thirty). If there are low hanging branches or pull-up bars in the area, do a round with pull-ups instead.
    • There are tag backs and yes, a single person might end up doing a disproportionate number of repetitions in a given round. That’s life, though, and it’ll only make you stronger.

    You can modify Grok Tag to suit your needs and abilities. Raise or lower the reps as needed. Wear weighted vests for the duration. Have kettlebell stations positioned around the field of play, and substitute kettlebell swings into the game. You could even have a barbell sitting on the field – get tagged, do five deadlifts. The possibilities are endless, but the basic concept of being “punished” for getting tagged is key. You won’t want to do those twenty burpees or thirty squats, so you’re going to run like your life depends on it. Even the guys or girls who never get tagged still get a great sprint workout, and the guys or girls who always get tagged will only get stronger and faster.

    I’ll admit. This can be a pretty hardcore workout and a far cry from the tag of your childhood, but its scalability means it will never be too hardcore for anyone. Plus, it’s a good way to ambush a reluctant workout partner: “Hey, wanna play a friendly game of tag?”And if your kids have never played the game, this might be a good way to introduce them to an archaic tradition while teaching them proper burpee and squat form.

    Just don’t expect to see it in P.E. classes anytime soon.

    Have your own thoughts on a variation of Primal tag? Share it in the comment board. Thanks, everyone!

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    Related posts:

    1. The “Grok Crawl”
    2. Contest Video: Primaldelphia (plus Grok in the Wild! pics)
    3. Unleash Your Inner Grok

  • Apple claims the “TabletMac” trademark

    A couple of years ago, a company called Axiotron announced an aftermarket modification for the MacBook that converted the Apple laptop into a tablet. The modification remains for sale at $699 and takes a stock MacBook, removes the keyboard and screen, and adds a Wacom pen-based screen to give the device a tablet form factor.

    Transfer of ownership may not mean Apple has plans on using the term. Apple may have simply contested the trademark due to the potential for confusion between “TabletMac” and their own trademarks. But now Apple could potentially release a product called the TabletMac, and given the overwhelming number of reports of an Apple-branded tablet device, it certainly raises that question.

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  • How To Make DIY Spicy Tuna Sushi

    2009_12_02-SpicyTuna.jpgSince I am watching my finances these days like most people, I’ve been making a lot of food at home, including my own sushi. One of my favorites is spicy tuna, and with a little experimentation, I figured out how to make my own!

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  • Lichtenhain Waterfall

    Saxony, Germany | Watery Wonders

    Apparently, the Lichtenhain Waterfall just wasn’t good enough. A small waterfall in Kirnitzschtal in South Saxony, the original waterfall was improved in the 1830s by adding a “weir,” a small overflow dam used to raise the level of a stream, and in this case improve upon the looks and profitability of the waterfall.

    Operated by a “water-puller” the “weir” or gate, they installed gave the operators another advantage: they can show off. While the Lichtenhain Waterfall was normally low flow, when enough tourists gathered, and paid the operator of course, the “waterfall-puller” pulls the gate and the water reservoir is emptied all at once. The normally calm waterfall became a rushing torrent to the delight of all around. Today, it is much the same, though you no longer have to pay the operator, the gate is pulled every half hour, and is timed to be in time with accompanying music.

    The improvements weren’t entirely cosmetic, as the falls were also later used to power the Bad Schandau, a steel frame 171 foot tall (52.26 m) Art Nouveau elevator built in 1904.

    The Lichtenhain Waterfall can be best reached by the Kirnitzsch valley tram, a narrow gauge old electric tramway, in operation since 1898 and now powered in part (roughly 20%) by solar panels, from Bad Schandau. Once dropped off, it is still roughly a half hours walk to the waterfall, which includes a very neat walk up “Jacob’s Ladder,” metal stairs through a narrow rift in Ritterschlucht gorge. Keep your eyes out for “cowshed” cave a huge rock arch, some 11 meters high.

  • If You Gain Unauthorized Access To A Character In A Virtual World, Is It Theft?

    Well, here we go again. For years we’ve questioned the wisdom of using real world laws to deal with issues within virtual worlds. You begin to open up quite the Pandora’s Box of problems. If it’s okay to charge someone for theft of virtual goods in a virtual world, what do you do if “theft” is a part of the game? And then does killing another character in a virtual world become “murder”? These issues are coming up again as Slashdot points out that a guy in the UK has been arrested for “robbery” of a player in the online world RuneScape. In this case, the arrested guy used a phishing scheme to get access to the username and password, making it similar to a story from two years ago involving “stolen goods” in Habbo Hotel that involved a similar “hacking” of an account.

    But, again, it seems questionable to call this a robbery. Why not just charge the guy with violation of whatever laws there are against phishing or fraud, rather than robbery. These sorts of “robberies” can and probably should be dealt with directly in the virtual worlds themselves, where game administrators should be able to just “make things whole.” Instead of calling it a robbery, why not focus on the actual crime of phishing, rather than the questionable “crime” of “robbery” of another’s character.

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