Category: News

  • awesome woman, awesome commentor

    This video has been making the rounds.


    so I have two quick comments then a present.

    1) Dear awesome student. You are awesome and there are many people in the blogosphere who would have loved to have been you for those few minutes.
    2) Dear fucking trumpet player. Fuck you, you fucking fuck

    Anyway, on the pharyngula comments about this video, one man, DorkMan, transcribed the video to text. I beleive he is a masochist. Anyway, via Dorkman, I give you the transcription:

    Female Student: [Unintelligible] saying, “Origin of the Species! Go evolution!” So, when somebody —
    Kirk: [Unintelligible]
    FS: Yeah, you did, I heard you. And I was like, “What? Kirk Cameron’s believes in evolution?” Are you being ironic or –?
    Kirk: No, I didn’t say “go evolution,” I took a picture and I said “Everyone say ‘Darwin’!” And I said “Darwin!”
    FS: Oh, okay.
    Kirk: I did say that.
    FS: Okay. I’m sorry. But that’s not important. Anyways, so when a passerby is getting that book, and they don’t know about you, they haven’t seen your videos, and they don’t know who you are, they think, “Oh, okay, this is the book,” so when they read it, they’re not aware that the information is coming from a group that has a special interest in dissuading people from evolution.
    Kirk: Okay. Okay, fair enough.
    FS: It’s like hidden propaganda. Which you, like — atheists groups would never, like, hand out the Bible saying, like, “This is not true and this is all the scientific information” —
    Male Student 1: I think you could have been more honest if [unintelligible].
    Kirk: (to Female Student) Can I respond to what you’re saying?
    Cameraman: (to MS1) Say it louder.
    MS1: I think it would have been more honest you had just distributed the introduction by itself —
    Kirk: I — I heard you earlier. (to FS) So, here’s my thought. I used to be — used to be an atheist, and studied evolution, and the Darwinian, the Neo-Darwinian [unintelligible], to the point where I’m, I’m convinced that it is not science, that Darwinism is atheism masquerading as science. That’s —
    FS: Darwin wasn’t an atheist, actually. He was really hesitant to publish his work because he knew that it would go against the beliefs of, you know, the church.
    Cameraman: And I kind of feel that’s undermining the faith of people who do accept evolution and who are Christian.
    Kirk: (ignoring Cameraman, to FS) Well, why do you believe that?
    FS: Because he has journals and because, like, you know, he took a long time — it wasn’t ’til Wallace said, like, “Hey, check this out!” and he’s like “Oh, boy,” you know, “I should probably publish what I’m doing.”
    Kirk: Okay, have you heard… Okay. Here’s, here’s, here’s the other important…um…(lengthy pause) I believe that Darwin was absolutely…that the end game was to make God…was to remove God from…the, the worldview of… I think that that was his end game. Um. And if you read — I don’t know if you’ve read the introduction in here, yet.
    FS: No, I have not yet. But I will.
    Kirk: You’ll find things you maybe haven’t read before.
    FS: I probably have never read what you wrote, no.
    Kirk: In my, my… I think that it is…very, uh… dishonest, and extremely —
    Trumpet: “When The Saints Go Marching In”
    Kirk: — for, for…for teachers, in the name of science, to push an atheistic worldview. Which — and they use Darwin in order to do it.
    FS: I don’t understand how… you’re combining atheism — because not all scientists are atheists, like, I would not say I’m an atheist.
    Kirk: Yes, alright, but —
    FS: But I, I, I…
    Male Student 2: Francis Collins.
    FS: Yeah.
    Cameraman: I bet he knows about that.
    FS: I don’ t understand [unintelligible]. Why is science an atheistic endeavor? I don’t understand that.
    Kirk: Okay, let me —
    FS: I don’t understand the problem.
    Kirk: Why is science an atheistic endeavor?
    FS: Yeah, and why is — particularly, um —
    Kirk: You have to ask [unintelligible] of atheism being taught in the science classes to answer that question. I mean, look at Dawkins, for instance, look at Dawkins —
    FS: I love Dawkins.
    Kirk: …okay, so —
    FS: But other science —
    Kirk: But if you look at those who are the loudest proponents for, uh, Darwinism, and evolution, you’ll find that they are absolutely on the mission to demonstrate that God is irrelevant and doesn’t exist. And they’re atheists.
    FS: What Dawkins argues is that God and science should not be in the same argument, because science is based on evidence, whereas religion is based on faith. And so —
    Kirk: So is Darw —
    FS: They don’t explain…
    Kirk: But Darwinism is extremely based on faith, not on evidence.
    FS: Not really, it’s based on a lot of evidence. He made, he made assertions that were based on faith, he didn’t have evidence for yet, but he had a lot of evidence. Later on now, scientists are, you know, doing research. And in fact, current scientific thought doesn’t accept, uh, plain Darwinian evolution. In fact now, there’s like a lot of different, uh…
    Cameraman: It expanded over the years.
    Kirk: Sure.
    FS: It expanded, so —
    Cameraman: Especially with genetics and that sort of thing.
    FS: Yeah. So Darwin was the basis, but it is not, uh, what actual evolutionary biologists, you know, uh… go with. And in science, there’s no like “Okay, this is the FINAL ABSOLUTE TRUTH,” it’s always changing because —
    Kirk: Correct.
    FS: You know, all the evidence either against it, or that should show different things.
    Kirk: So, what… so, what — I understand that — so, so I’m pro-science, I love science.
    FS: Why not this specific branch of it? Because —
    Kirk: Which branch are you referring to?
    FS: I’m referring to biology.
    Kirk: I love biology.
    FS: Except the part where it says that — do you believe in micro-evolution?
    Kirk: Are we talking about, um, adaptation?
    FS: Yeah, that’s why you get a different vaccine every year because —
    Kirk: Yes.
    FS: — you know — okay.
    Kirk: Yes, but to extrapolate that into speciation and macro-evolution by saying it takes lots of time —
    FS: No, not if you accept, not if you accept that it does take — okay, so if you believe in micro-evolution, you believe that it continues happening, it just doesn’t happen in like, two minutes and then it’s done, it continues happening. The Earth is not six thousand years old, and even if it were six thousand years old, in that span of time, continuous micro-evolution would have added up to something, right? Even if you believe the literal Biblical, uh, idea that the Earth is not old, it would’ve still added up. Not to what we have here…
    Kirk: Do, do you — I understand what you’re saying, [unintelligible] I think that they do change over time, but we don’t, but we don’t see speciation as a result of adaptation. We don’t see —
    FS: Because we don’t have enough time. And in fact they are —
    Kirk: Okay, but you have to, but you then have to concede, though, that that’s a presupposition that you’re assuming that it happened, even though we don’t have enough time to observe it.
    FS: Well, it’s not — it’s because of geological evidence. What happens in science, is you bring different branches of knowledge together, and it’s not, it’s not isolated. You don’t just say, like, “Okay, biology proves it.” Because biology doesn’t prove anything. There’s evidence that there’s a biological process, but combining that with geology, physics, and —
    MS2: Astronomy.
    FS: Other sciences — astronomy, yeah.
    MS2: They all agree.
    FS: Then you, you combine that knowledge, right? And that’s how you think, like, “Okay, if this is happening now, and if we know that the Earth has been, you know, this old and this, like, many changes have happened” — all of this knowledge, then you — it, it is a safe, logical assumption to make that conclusion. For instance say, like, “Micro-evolution has been happening for this long, and it’s added up.” Whereas with, uh, a belief in a certain faith, particularly in this case the, the Christian persuasion, all the evidence that you have is based on the Bible, and that would be circular logic, because you think, “I believe in the Bible because the Bible says it’s written by God.” (draws a circle in the air) It doesn’t — there’s no outside body of evidence, there, there’s no conjecture —
    Kirk: That’s not true.
    FS: What other body —
    Kirk; History, geology, cosmology, biology…
    FS: So, okay, so history —
    Cameraman: Do you mind if I ask you a question about geology, really quick?
    Kirk: Hang on a second.
    Cameraman: Okay, sure.
    FS: How does history disprove evolution?
    Kirk: How does history disprove evolution?
    FS: Yes.
    Kirk: Well, I didn’t say history disproves evolution, I said that history —
    FS: Okay. Then give me another line of evidence other than the Bible that disproves evolution.
    Kirk: Um, I would say evolution disproves — D, Dar — I would — (pauses) Evolution, talking about, we’re talking about speciation, I would say that, that…that Darwin’s theory, nor — and ANY theory — does not sufficiently, uh, account for speciation, apart from the existence of God. You don’t find the fossil record, you don’t find —
    FS: Okay, what about the difference between bonobos and chimpanzees? Which are very similarly related, they just have —
    Kirk: I’m not familiar with, what?
    FS: Okay, bonobos are essentially chimpanzees, except they’re smaller, and they’re more, uh, friendly with each other. Whereas chimpanzees are, like, very aggressive —
    [END OF VIDEO]

    Thanks awesome woman, Thanks Awesome Dorkman.


  • DS homebrew – Woopsi v0.41

    Homebrew coder ant512 has released a new version of Woopsi, a handy Nintendo DS GUI library for creating homebrew user interface based on AmigaOS wind…

  • 2009 Will Be One of the Top Five Warmest Years Globally Since Records Began 150 years Ago

    800px-Sudan_village

    2009Nov24: 2009 will be one of the top five warmest years globally since records began 150 years ago, according to the Met Office (BBC).

    Reference: BBC http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8377128.stm

    Image Description: C.I.S.S. humanitarian tour to Sudan. Photo by Pier Luigi Bertola, 2008. Image Location: Wikimedia Commons http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Sudan_village.jpg Image Permission: This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 License. In short: you are free to distribute and modify the file as long as you attribute its author(s) or licensor(s).

  • Thirty Years Of The Sony Walkman In Three Minutes


    tpsl2

    Walkman is a Sony brand originally used for portable audio cassette, and is now used to market Sony’s portable audio and video players as well as certain Sony Ericsson phones. The original Walkman introduced a change in music listening habits by allowing people to carry their music with them, a revolutionary concept for its time. The device was built in 1978 by audio division engineer Nobutoshi Kihara for Sony co-chairman Akio Morita, who wanted to be able to listen to operas during his frequent transpacific plane trips. The original Walkman was marketed in 1979 as the Walkman in Japan, the Soundabout in many other countries including the US, Freestyle in Sweden and the Stowaway in the UK. Morita hated the name “Walkman” and asked it to be changed, but relented after being told by junior executives that a promotion campaign had already begun using the ‘Walkman’ name and would be too expensive to change.

    In this video courtesy of SonyLearnTV, we see the history of the Walkman (which celebrated its 30th anniversary this year) in just a few short minutes.

    My familiarity with the Walkman brand is probably obvious to some of you who have been following my words for a while in my past ventures (Minidisc Community Forums and ATRACLife). Watching this video brought back many memories – what about you? Whats your favorite Walkman?

  • Conflict in Africa About 50% More Likely in Unusually Warm Years When Food Supply is Scarce

    800px-Ashu_land

    2009Nov24: Researchers at the University of California at Berkeley, found that across Africa, conflict was about 50% more likely in unusually warm years when the food supply is scarce. The study appeared in Writing in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). “Studies show that crop yields in the region are really sensitive to small shifts in temperature, even of half a degree (Celsius) or so,” research leader Marshall Burke, told BBC News. “If the sub-Saharan climate continues to warm and little is done to help its countries better adapt to high temperatures, the human costs are likely to be staggering,” Burke added (BBC).

    Reference: BBC http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/8375949.stm

    Read the full article – Marshall B. Burke, Edward Miguel, Shanker Satyanath, John A. Dykema, and David B. Lobell. Warming increases the risk of civil war in Africa. PNAS 2009 : 0907998106v1-pnas.0907998106 http://www.pnas.org/content/early/2009/11/20/0907998106.abstract

    Image Description: Palm trees growing on the Ashu land in between the land inundated by the Nile called Gerif and the irrigated Saqiah land. Photo taken on Sherari Island in Dar al-Manasir, Northern Sudan. Image Location: Wikimedia Commons http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Ashu_land.JPG Image Permission: This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 3.0 License. In short: you are free to share and make derivative works of the file under the conditions that you appropriately attribute it, and that you distribute it only under a license identical to this one.

  • PlayStation Store US Update – 11/24/09

     As we celebrate Thanksgiving this week, Sony has decided to bump up the PlayStation Network update a little bit early. This week’s lineup incl…

  • Star Wars Galaxies Chronicles More Than Three Million User-Created Quests Within A Month


    star-wars-galaxies-jawas

    Sony Online Entertainment LLC (SOE) today announced its Chronicle Master system in the hit title Star Wars Galaxies has resulted in over three million user-created quests to date. The Star Wars Galaxies Chronicle Master system gives players the ability to create stories in-game and allow other players to follow and complete these quests. The player-driven content creation empowered the community by allowing players to create their own plot using iconic characters in the legendary setting of the Star Wars universe. User-created quests is a feature that is mostly unique to Star Wars Galaxies, and is not currently offered in its biggest competitor World of Warcraft.

    In just over a month since launching, players have told their own stories through the Chronicle Master quest creation interface including one individual who has created over 6,000 playable quests. Players who complete these quests are rewarded with in-game tokens that can be used to purchase unique loot items specially created for the Chronicle Master system.

    Steam users interested in trying the Chronicle Master system firsthand can now download Star Wars Galaxies: The Complete Online Adventures Premium Plus Pack directly from Steam and from Direct2Drive. This compilation includes An Empire Divided™, Jump to Lightspeed™ expansion, Episode III: Rage of the Wookiees™Trials of Obi-Wan™ expansion. Players who download the game through Steam and Direct2Drive will also receive three exclusive in-game vehicles based on the Star Wars film series.

  • Reuters, AP Refuse To Cover Cricket Matches Over Restrictive Press Accreditation Rules

    Sports leagues around the world have been trying to put more and more restrictive rules on various journalists and news organizations when it comes to reporting on their events. In the US, both the NFL and the MLB have put ridiculous restrictions on what reporters can write about or post on their websites. While, technically, these leagues cannot stop news organizations from covering their events, they can restrict what kind of access they have. Of course, for basic coverage, when the events are televised, reporters could just as easily cover the event while watching it on TV. Still, it’s been disappointing that the major news organizations have refused to stand up to the football and baseball leagues over this attempt to restrict their reporting.

    Apparently, they only do that on sports that don’t get as much attention (in the US, at least).

    Last year, we wrote how the press was planning to boycott various cricket matches over similar attempts to limit reporting. And, once again, major news organizations like Reuters are proudly announcing that they will not be covering certain cricket matches due to the press policies. The Associated Press has announced similar plans, and says that the AFP is also refusing to cover the matches. At what point do these sports leagues realize that they’re better off with press coverage than without?

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  • XTR Carchip Porsche Cayman X-Wide is the RS we’ve always wanted

    Filed under: , , , ,

    XTR Carchip Porsche Cayman X-Wide – Click above for high-res image gallery

    We’re not overly familiar with XTR Carchip, but the Berlin-based tuning company caught our eye with its “X-Wide” Porsche Cayman project. Designed as a daily-driver-turned-track-tool, the 987 S underwent a major exterior overhaul, with a detachable CFRP front splitter, fenders, side skirts, carbon fiber exterior mirrors and an adjustable rear spoiler, along with a set of three-piece, central locking 18-inch BBS RS wheels wrapped in Pirelli rubber.

    Inside, the stock stereo and air conditioning remain, but a set of Recaro GT3 seats with six-point Schroth harnesses and a roll cage make it ready for a late night assault on Hockenheim.

    Somewhat disappointingly, the only modifications to the engine are a Super Sprint Magnum cat-back exhaust and an ECU tune which boosts output to 310 horsepower and brings a top speed of 177 mph. However, XTR isn’t stopping there — they’re working on a twin-turbocharged version that will reportedly put out around 850 hp when it arrives next spring.

    [Source: XTR Carchip via Porsche Point]

    XTR Carchip Porsche Cayman X-Wide is the RS we’ve always wanted originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 24 Nov 2009 19:56:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • HD2 Flash seems compensating for redness

    These are two photos of my white wall (admittedly under slightly yellow light from an incandescent bulb, but still pretty white). The redness is very very obvious in the second of the two photos, but with the flash it seems to pretty much disappear.

    IMAG0068IMAG0069

    I don’t know whether this is simply the flash being bluey, or the sensor/drivers doing a better job, but I’m guessing more publicity on this issue can only get HTC working harder to fix it! :D

    I’d guess that the software patch may well just compensate for the redness, though in one of the comments here, it’s clearly at least partly software.

    Interestingly my HD didnt have any pinkness when i first got bit but its now running a Leo based ROM and it now has some pinkness, although not as much as seen here.

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  • More on Voice input text

    We recently reported about the new voice prediction text input, well I have more images and information. This application just entered beta 2 and they are working hard to get it out to us soon. They sent us some more information to give to you guys, and we will do a review of it sometime this week or next week, so wait for that.

    vp1.bmp: when app is launched

    vp2.bmp: Spoke Greg Aronov and then typed letter "G"

    vp3.bmp: Selected Greg Aronov

    vp4.bmp: Selected Email for Greg Aronov (this is common compostion window for all types of messages…always listening indicated on top)

    vp5.bmp: same as vp4.bmp except that the green listening toggles back and forth between listening and speak then type (a simple indicator to user)

    vp6.bmp: Shows word "voicepredict" being predicted when user speaks it and taps the letter "v"

    vp7.bmp: Shows symbol "?" being predicted when user speaks it and taps the symbols LSK

    vp8.bmp: same as vp7, except users can speak emoticons and sms-lingo words

    vp9.bmp: same as vp8, but shows that when mobile is tilted and the screen goes into landscape mode

    vp10.bmp: A feature wherein users can update FB and Twitter status. This screen is launched when user presses "update status" which is the LSK shown in launch screen of vp1

    vp11.bmp: A feature to reply to the latest sms (so users have most of the power of an Inbox but do not need to manage an entire inbox). This screen launched when user presses "Last sms" which is the RSK shown in launch screen of vp1.

    vp11 vp1 vp2 vp3 vp4 vp5 vp6 vp7 vp8 vp9 vp10

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  • US Air Force Orders 2,200 PS3’s For Clustered Supercomputer


    Air Forces Exercise

    According to a recent article in InformationWeek, the United States Air Force is moving forward in obtaining 2,200 PS3 systems to enhance its already 336 unit strong supercomputer. The PlayStation 3s will be used at the Air Force Research Laboratory’s information directorate in Rome, N.Y. The Air Force also has no plans to drop this method, as moving to an alternative technology hardware would also cause duplication of costs associated with redeveloping the software, military systems, and applications already based on the existing Sony PS3 cluster. This will become increasingly relevant as the magnitude of applications and supporting hardware infrastructure likely will increase over time.

    With respect to cell processors, a single 1U server configured with two 3.2GHz cell processors can cost up to $8K while two Sony PS3s cost approximately $600. Though a single 3.2 GHz cell processor can deliver over 200 GFLOPS, whereas the Sony PS3 configuration delivers approximately 150 GFLOPS, the approximately tenfold cost difference per GFLOP makes the Sony PS3 the only viable technology for HPC applications. Sony is the only firm capable of manufacturing the brand of required hardware without the Government experiencing substantial duplication of cost that would not be recoverable through competition among providers of alternative technology. Using cell processor technology besides the Sony PS3 would cost the Government the equivalent of several years of professional research and engineering effort.

  • Next in line to get irked by Jeremy Clarkson? The Romanian government [w/VIDEO]

    Filed under: ,

    Top Gear in Romania – click above to watch video

    Another day, another country that hates Jeremy Clarkson’s guts. Or at least, another country that is seeking an apology from the Top Gear host for his no doubt rude, but no doubter funny comments about said country. In this case, it’s the former Iron Curtain nation of Romania. Seems that during the series’ season 14 opener, Jezza had some less than flattering observations about the country that shot former “Conductor” Nicolae Ceauşescu and his wife before they could even be tied up and blindfolded.

    Clarkson’s offending remarks? He referred to Romania as “Borat country.” He also donned the silly-looking pork pie hat above and stated, “I’m wearing this hat so the gypsies think I am one. I’m told they can be violent if they don’t like the look of you.” He also called Romanian water “Communist water” and mentioned that Romanians like to express their sense of humor with guns. Pretty innocuous stuff if you ask us. Especially compared to cracks Clarkson’s made about other non-British places. Like Germany, America and Malaysia. Regardless, the Romanian government is apparently expecting an apology. We think they’d have a better chance at satisfaction by issuing a Whamber Alert. In any case, you can see the offending footage in its entirety by clicking through to the jump.

    [Sources: Telegraph; YouTube]

    Continue reading Next in line to get irked by Jeremy Clarkson? The Romanian government [w/VIDEO]

    Next in line to get irked by Jeremy Clarkson? The Romanian government [w/VIDEO] originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 24 Nov 2009 19:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • For Developers: Resco Releases Resco MobileForms Toolkit 2010

    banner_mft2010 Resco, a supplier of advanced developer components and tools for mobile devices, releases today Resco MobileForms Toolkit 2010, which is optimized for Microsoft Visual Studio 2008 and the Microsoft .NET Compact Framework 3.5.

    “Since 2003, when the first version of Resco MobileForms Toolkit was released, we have been  working hard to enrich each new release by adding new components to support modern and ground-breaking mobile technology,” said Radomir Vozar, Resco Developer Tools & Enterprise Division Director. “The current year is no exception; the 2010 edition not only allows developers to develop attractive and fully competitive mobile applications, but it reasonably simplifies the development process and saves time.”

    New Component Themes

    New Resco component themes are various graphic drafts of mobile forms that were elaborated based on Resco’s knowledge of mobile software. The themes list along with screenshots of every control is accessible directly from Visual Studio designer. After the appropriate theme is selected, it can be easily applied into the component. This function significantly facilitates the development process. It provides developers with graphical drafts that cannot be created in standard Visual Studio environments.  Furthermore, the majority of the themes contain professionally designed icons which enhance the development experience. 

    Three New Components

    Resco ScrollBar is a component that copes with mobile device’s screen limitations by allowing developers to browse the screen content easily and comfortably. Resco ProgressBar is a customizable progress bar with advanced graphics. Another new component, called Resco MaskedTextBox, allows developers the opportunity to fine-tune their applications by simplifying the data input fields. .

    New and Updated Standalone Designers

    Standalone designers are an additional functionality upgrade in the Resco MobileForms Toolkit components; they can  be used by Visual Studio designers and launched separately as well. The designers allow components to be designed in the specific environment that is designated for the specific component. Along with updated components AdvancedList and DetailView, the Resco MobileForms Toolkit 2010 brings brand new designers to AdvancedComboBox, AdvancedTree, and CustomKeyboard.

    “The new features of Resco MobileForms Toolkit 2010 provide developers with advanced tools so they can work even more effectively and quickly deliver attractive applications to customers through Windows Marketplace for Mobile,” said Jason Lim, director of ISV and developer experience at Microsoft Corp.

    About Resco MobileForms Toolkit

    Resco MobileForms Toolkit is one of the richest and most comprehensive sets of Microsoft Visual Studio controls and libraries designed for developers of software solutions for mobile devices. In its portfolio there are controls and libraries that tackle most problems developers encounter in the mobile environment. Flexible keyboard, professional list control, powerful grid control, charting control, and scheduling control — to mention only the most frequently used ones.

    For more information about Resco MobileForms Toolkit, visit www.resco.net/developer/mobileformstoolkit.

    Via WindowsPhonethoughts.com

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  • Daily U-Turn: What you missed on 11.24.09

    Review: 2009 Infiniti G37X Sport makes no excuses

    The Infiniti G series relied on its lower cost of entry to make up for its shortcomings. With the G37X Sport, that’s no longer the case.

    Quick Spin: Nissan Leaf the tip of mass market EV spear

    We take the Nissan Leaf all-electric vehicle for a spin in So. Cal. to see if one mainstream automaker is finally ready to bring EVs to the masses.

    Daily U-Turn: What you missed on 11.24.09 originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 24 Nov 2009 19:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Protexid and Protexid ND and adventures in DR

    I’m going to reveal the only medical problem I have (at least that I know of) other than the propensity toward obesity when I eat too many carbs.  I’m going to explain how the direct response business works.  I’m going to talk about the problems direct marketers have in dealing with our servants in Washington. And I’m going to tell you how you can get the best nutritional supplement I’ve ever seen in action absolutely free.  How’s that for a pleiotropic post?

    First the medical problem.  I’ll reveal it in true AA fashion.

    I am a GERD (gastroesophageal reflux disorder) sufferer.

    I don’t get it often, but when I do, it’s a nightmare.   As long as I stick with my own diet, I never ever have a problem.   But sometimes, what with traveling and all, I’ll stray from the straight and narrow for a bit.   The first day or two or even three after I’ve fallen off the wagon, I don’t have symptoms.  But starting about day three or four, it turns brutal.   And like most everyone else, once the let’s-eat-carbs devil is on me, I want to keep on going.   And I pay dearly.   I actually become afraid to go to bed because I know what’s going to happen.   Those of you who are fellow sufferers know what I mean.

    I’ve taken to never going far without my team of GERD-preventative products, which, even though OTC, are really the only semi-sort of medicines I ever take.   I always packed the duo shown below: Tums and Pepcid AC.   Both are OTC, although Pepcid used to be prescription.   I hated to take them, but I hated the symptoms of GERD even worse.

    GERD regimen1

    Now for the direct response business.

    A direct response company (DR) is one that sells products direct to consumer through channels other than retail stores.   Companies that sell through catalogs, online, direct mail, infomercials, Google ads, websites, etc are called DR companies.   Anyone who sells this way is said to be in DR sales.   Many companies have physical stores but still have a DR arm that sells through catalogs and online.   The little product section of our website is a DR store.

    As I’ve mentioned on this blog, or at least in the comments somewhere, MD and I are part owners of a couple of DR companies that produce and sell unique, patented nutritional products.   I’ve avoided promoting any of those products on this blog because I didn’t want to contaminate it with commercial marketing. I want what I write to be accepted as my opinion based on my years of practice and my reading and understanding of the medical literature, not as an overt or even subtle effort to drive readers to buy products that I may have to sell.  Any time I do post about a product, which I did once with Pentabosol, I am always clear that I am in the business of selling said product, and I expect anyone reading what I have to say about it as coming from someone who stands to gain financially by its sales.

    I will never follow the loathsome practice used by a majority of the newsletters out there that recommend products in a seemingly unbiased fashion then offer a link for readers to purchase those products from what appears to be a third party, but which, in reality, is a company owned by the newsletter publisher.  I believe such behavior is beneath contempt.

    How does my GERD and my involvement in the DR business all come together in one post?

    Because GERD is a problem that afflicts me, I do a fair amount of research on it.   Through this research, I’ve discovered that I’m far from alone in suffering GERD’s debilitating effects.  There are estimated to be anywhere from 25 million to 40 million fellow GERD sufferers in the US alone, numbers that get the attention of the DR marketer in me. (Not to mention the pharmaceutical companies, which is why the commercials for the little purple pill are all over TV.) For several years, I’ve been on the lookout for a natural supplement that works for GERD. If you google GERD or heartburn, you’ll find plenty of nutritional supplements, but based on my experience, none of them really work – at least not for me.  Below is a photo I took of a part of an entire section at Costco devoted to OTC reflux meds.

    Costco gerd1

    A few years ago I was doing my morning cruise through the medical literature when I came upon a paper by a Brazilian scientist about a natural supplement he had developed and used successfully to treat severe GERD. I read his paper his paper (pdf file) and found a follow-up paper and was intrigued. He had compared his supplement head to head with omeprazole, the generic for the drug Prilosec (and the precursor to Nexium, the little purple pill), and his supplement had won.   Moreover, he had a large number of subjects – almost 300, which is a pretty huge number for trials with natural supplements.  Usually it’s something in the range of 10-20.  He found that within 40 days ALL the subjects on his supplement had achieved complete relief from their GERD symptoms whereas only 67 percent of those on the drug had done so.  As you might imagine, this paper got my attention.

    When I looked at the ingredients, it didn’t look to me as if they would particularly work to relieve GERD, but, according to his study, not only did they work, they were shown by endoscopy to actually heal ulcerations.  The follow-up paper (pdf file) had photos of the healing progression.  In doing further research on the product and the ingredients, it looked as if this product worked in a different way than all the others on the market.

    Since the beginning, when people first starting treating GERD and acid reflux, they’ve used a variation of the same treatment: reducing the amount of stomach acid.  The theory is that acid from the stomach gets through a loosened lower esophageal sphincter (LES), the muscular ring that holds the bottom of the esophagus closed, and splashes onto the delicate tissues of the esophageal lining, burning them in the process.  Although new theories are emerging as to what really causes GERD, the excess acid reflux theory has held sway for ages.  According to the precepts of this theory, if you can reduce the degree of acidity of the stomach acid or cause the stomach to produce less of it, you can reduce the effects of the acid that makes its way through the LES to the vulnerable esophageal cells.

    Antacids, the earliest approach developed, work by neutralizing stomach acid.  The newer drugs such as Prilosec and Nexium work by making the stomach produce less acid.  In both cases, the problem is solved by either getting rid of the acid or neutralizing it.  Which, for the most part, works to reduce or eliminate the symptoms of GERD.  But, and this is a big ‘but,’ maybe isn’t the best way to go.  Stomach acid is there in the stomach for a reason.

    It’s the first line of defense against microbe invasion.  If you swallow germs, the acid works to destroy them.  When you breath in germs, they get stuck to the mucus in your respiratory tract, then the little hairs (that haven’t been burned off due to smoking) move this mucus, filled with germs and particulate matter you don’t want in your lungs, upward and dumps it in the back of your throat (you never notice this happening, but it happens 24 hours per day) from where you swallow it.  Those bugs then get killed when they hit the acid in the stomach.

    When food reaches the stomach, the stomach acid acts upon it as the first phase of the digestive process.  Protein starts to be broken down in the stomach.  When the acidic stomach contents are released into the first part of the small intestine, their acidity stimulates the release of alkaline juices to neutralize them and do other work in the digestive process.  Whenever stomach acid is gotten rid of or neutralized, the very first step in the digestive process is compromised and there is a domino effect from there on.

    Studies are starting to demonstrate that those who take the newer anti-GERD drugs suffer a higher incidence of pneumonias and other infections (which makes sense since the first line of defense is knocked out) and more osteoporosis and hip fractures (which also makes sense since protein digestion and absorption is affected).  As far as I know, antacids haven’t been implicated, but that’s probably because people don’t take them all the time as they do these other drugs.  Most people only take antacids as they need them, so their acid isn’t affected 24 hours per day, day in and day out.

    This Brazilian product appeared to work by strengthening the LES so that the acid didn’t get to where it wasn’t supposed to be.  But the acid itself wasn’t effected, so the digestive process could perform unhindered.

    I thought this could be a terrific product for DR, so I tracked the researcher down in Brazil.   He told me he had used the supplement on many, many patients besides the ones in the study and that he was shipping it all over Brazil and to people in the US and Canada.  Furthermore, he informed me that he had the worldwide patent rights on the product.   I told him I would love to work an arrangement with him to get the exclusive license to make and sell his product.  I (and my partners) flew him to the US where we put him up for a week and picked his brain on the product.  Satisfied that it was legit and that his patents were in order, we executed a worldwide exclusive licensing agreement with him.

    We began to formulate a strategy to sell the product, which we named Protexid.   We decided to start with a radio infomercial because they are much less expensive to produce and can be used to work out the bugs in the presentation before jumping into the much more expensive television infomercial market.   At the same time we were in the planning stages for the radio infomercial we were working to come up with a name for the product (the name he was using in Brazil wouldn’t make any sense to an American consumer), designing the labels and accompanying literature and all the rest of the creative stuff that has to be done to bring a product to market.

    Our Brazilian doctor had sent us names of clients he had in the US who had been using his product.  We got in contact with a number of these folks and found them to have been tremendously satisfied and several were willing to be testimonials for us.  Once we had all the parts of the promotion together, MD and I went to a studio and recorded the radio infomercial.  We stayed in the booth for two days making a number of iterations of the program.  Once finished we got the shows transcribed and sent the scripts to the attorney whose job it is to keep us out of trouble with all the government regulatory agencies.   MD and I are old hands at this, so we pretty much know how to do these things on the fly and stay in the clear.  Consequently, we were expecting a few little cuts here and there, but nothing that would substantively alter what we were trying to say.   We’re we ever in for an eye opener.

    Here comes the part about our friends in Washington.

    When we spoke with the lawyer, we found that our show had been cut to the bone.   GERD is a disease, and if you make disease claims – as in, it relieves the symptoms of GERD – you are making a disease treatment claim, which runs you afoul of the FDA.   The only way you can make a so-called disease claim is to go through the same kind of extensive FDA-approved studies as drugs have to go through.   If you try to make a disease claim without doing this, you get hammered by the FDA.   Then there are all the FTC regs.   About half the time you can’t say one thing because the FDA won’t let you and the other half you can’t something else because the FTC won’t let you.   After our lawyer – who really is reasonable – got through with our show, it turned out that the only claim we could actually make was the following:  Protexid may offer relief from occasional heartburn.   Nothing about GERD, nothing about acid reflux, nothing about the long term problems with untreated GERD, and nothing about how our product stacked up against a prescription drug.   All in all, our program had been totally emasculated.

    We had no way to explain how phenomenal Protexid really is without risking serious problems from our government watchdogs.  Which is extremely frustrating when you’ve got a product that works as well as this one and that so many people could benefit from.

    And it works extremely well.

    As we were fiddling with all the work necessary to get this project moving, I was going about my business doing all the things I normally do including tending to this blog.   Over the first couple of months or so that we had the product I had an episode or two of GERD, but dealt with them with Tums and Pepcid AC as usual.   I didn’t use our own product for a couple of reasons.   First, the samples we had gotten from the Brazilian doc had been made in China and I wasn’t about to take them.  Second, when I got GERD, I got it bad (for some reason, I never have a slight case or a touch of it; I always have the full-blown version), and I wanted to take something I knew worked, not something I had never taken before.  So even when we had our own US manufactured product, I didn’t take it myself.

    I’ve had tons of experience with natural supplements, and they all pretty much work the same.   You take them for several weeks or a few months and you build up levels that actually start to work.  Krill oil had been the perfect example.   I took a krill oil/fish oil/curcumin combination to relieve my aches and pains from playing too much golf so I could quit taking all the ibuprofen I was taking.  After about a month and a half I was pretty much ache and pain free.   Now I take only a single krill oil softgel and one curcumin daily to keep myself that way.  But it initially took almost two months for the natural supplement combo I was using to kick in and do its thing.   Which, in my experience, is pretty much the standard course with natural supplements: many work, and work well, but it takes time.

    When I have an episode of GERD, I don’t have time to wait.   I want relief now.   I don’t want to lay awake all night in agony and do so for two months while I’m waiting for the natural supplement to kick in.  Thus I never used our own product the couple of times I needed something.

    Until one time MD and I went on a several-day-long trip, and I forgot to take my Tums and Pepcid.  A couple of days into the trip, I could tell I was going to get GERD that night. (Most of the time I can tell when it’s going to happen; occasionally it sneaks up on me.)   I was desperate.   I was getting ready to head off to find a drug store and get the stuff I needed, but MD brow beat me into taking a Protexid.  I took one capsule (the standard dose) at bedtime and experienced no GERD.  I wrote it off as a fluke.  But then I tried it again the next night and, again, no symptoms. I tried to test it by eating a bunch of junk that I knew would normally do me in.  One capsule at bedtime and nothing.   This is what the Brazilian doctor had told me, but I simply hadn’t believed him.  Once I saw how well it worked for me, I became almost a religious convert.  I knew a few guys I played golf with who had GERD.  Most took prescription drugs daily for the condition.   I got them to try the product.  In every case, they got complete relief with one capsule at bedtime. I was stunned that it worked so well.

    I have had probably 30 people that I now know first hand who have taken this product with success equal to mine.   One guy – a surgeon – ditched drugs he had been taking for years and got total relief.   He feared he was going to have GERD one night, and so took one of his prescription drugs that night in addition to the product.   He didn’t have symptoms and we don’t know if he would have on the product alone or not.   But that’s as close as we’ve come to a treatment failure with his product.

    In fact, in all my years of medical practice, I have never seen a natural supplement that works like this one.   It works quickly and it takes only one capsule at bedtime, not the large doses throughout the day that are associated with most natural supplements.   It is the only supplement I’ve ever seen that has truly drug-like effects in terms of speed of action and efficacy.

    So we’ve got this great product and we can’t really tell people via paid advertising how it really works.  We ran our emasculated radio infomercial, but, as expected, it didn’t do squat.  The people who purchased the product were happy, but not nearly enough bought it to make continuing to run the show profitable.  We cut our losses and shut down.

    We were approached by another company that wanted to promote our product via television infomercial, so we negotiated a sub-licensing agreement with that company.   This outfit went over the moon in making claims about Protexid (in our licensing agreement, of course, we made sure we were exempt from any liability for claims this company made), yet they, too, were unsuccessful in making the promotion a success.  They spent even more money and tried again with even more aggressive claims and got very little return.  They finally gave up and returned the rights back to us.

    Why didn’t these shows work?  We knew ours didn’t work because we couldn’t really describe how effective the product really is.  But how about the other show?  The one that took it over the moon in terms of claims?  Why didn’t it sell there? I’ve got my suspicions as to why that I’ll talk about it a bit.

    Right now we’re scratching our heads about what to do with this phenomenal product. I put it up on the catalog part of our website, but no one really knows what it is, so we haven’t really sold much Protexid that way.

    Which brings me to the point of this meandering post.  We’ve worked on this project for going on three years now and the Protexid we’ve got left is going to expire soon.  It really isn’t going to expire in terms of efficacy, but it’s going to expire based on the dates the manufacturer printed on the bottles.

    There are two versions.  The first, pictured to the right, is the original that is the product used in the published study.  It’s in a blue bottle and is called Protexid. (In case you’re wondering, Triparadol is what the name is in Brazil) The other is in an orange bottle and is called Protexid ND.  The Protexid ND has lower doses of a couple of ingredients and seems to work as well as the regular strength product.  I’ve used both – I use whichever I happen to have at hand when I need it – and haven’t seen a difference.  The Brazilian doctor uses the lower dose all the time and in his follow-up paper he used the lower dose, but we made the higher dose so we thought we could use the first paper that compared Protexid to the prescription drug.  Had we used the first published paper to support the claims for the product with the lesser dosage, we would have been hammered.

    We have about 80 of so bottles of the blue, full-strength Protexid, but it expires at the end of November.  We have more bottles of the Protexid ND, which expires at the end of December 2009.  I don’t know off hand how many Protexid ND we have, but substantially more than the other.  As I say, as far as I can tell, they both work the same.

    Get it free!

    Anyone who wants to try this product can get it absolutely free by ordering on our website.  The price should be set at $0.  All you will have to pay is the shipping and handling, which is minimal.  Please, though, no more than two per person.  That’s TWO per person.  It can be one of each or two of one kind, but not two of both kinds.  I want to make sure that everyone who wants to try Protexid gets a chance, and there really is a limited amount left.  No obligations on your part.  You don’t have to sign up for more.  Just grab it and run.  So, if you or someone you know has the problem, give it a try.

    I don’t think Protexid will ever be a good infomercial product because due to government regulations it can’t be promoted in a way that explains what its real benefits are.  And without the explanation no one really wants to purchase a product that ‘may offer relief from occasional heartburn.’  And the obvious problem with GERD is that it hurts and that some people actually spit up acid and burn their throats.  These problems can be solved with prescription medicines – or, as in my case, with OTC meds.  But without the explanation as to why these aren’t the best solutions, why would anyone have the impetus to pay for Protexid when prescription drugs that relieve the symptoms can be had for the price of a co-pay.

    So we are changing course to look at selling Protexid into the retail market and/or through health practitioner’s offices. I have a friend who is a naturopathic physician who works in an integrative pharmacy, which is one that does compounding and sells a lot of nutritional supplements along with prescription medicines.  She tells me that almost 70 percent of people who come into the pharmacy (who aren’t coming in specifically to get a prescription filled) are looking for something for GI problems, and that most of those are having problems with GERD.  The pharmacy in which she works is in an upscale part of Los Angeles, and she says most of the people coming in have a prescription for Nexium or one of the other similar drugs, but are looking for natural alternatives.  This is the group we need to be marketing Protexid to, but our whole team are skilled only in the DR way of marketing.  None of us have a clue as to how to get a product into a pharmacy.  I’m constantly amazed at the collective wisdom of people who read this blog.  Maybe someone out there is experienced in retail placement or other means of distribution that they could direct me to.  If so, I would love to hear from you.

    And if anyone has used this Protexid ( you know who you are) and wants to tell about the experience – good or bad – send it to the comments, and I’ll post for all to read.

    Until we get our marketing strategy worked out, we’re probably not going to manufacture any more Protexid, so gets yours free while they last.

    One last thing.  I’ve given Kristi, our long suffering assistant who works for slave wages, time off for good behavior, so she is leaving tomorrow for Thanksgiving with relatives.  She may not be able to get some of these orders out until Monday.  Thanks in advance for your patience.

  • Autoblog Podcast #154

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

    Episode #154 of the Autoblog Podcast is here for your tryptophan-addled pleasure. Chris, Sam, and Dan kick it, starting with the BMW 5 Series, then move on to such appetite supressants as the Lexus GX, Acura ZDX and its pricing, and Infiniti’s re-style of the massive QX56 rig. Before we become an emetic, we move on to the pretty new Infiniti M, the ongoing anticipation for a US-bound Chevrolet Spark, and Hyundai’s new 2.4 liter direct-injection 4 cylinder for the next Sonata. We hit some questions, and wrap it up in time for pie.

    If you’re looking to bulk up on podcast excellence over the Thanksgiving holiday, 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 #154

    Autoblog Podcast #154 originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 24 Nov 2009 19:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Hacker Puts Mac OS X On Sony VAIO X


    mac-vaio-x

    Ever heard of a hackintosh? If not, it’s essentially someone loading OS X on non-Mac hardware. According to some pictures that have surfaced on Facebook, a Chinese hacker was able to put OS X on the Sony VAIO X. This is rather amusing because the notebook already has been compared to the Macbook Air due to their similarities. I’m not sure how well the VAIO X handles OS X, but with up to 2GB of RAM and a speedy SSD I can imagine that the experience is probably pleasing. It’s a shame that Apple doesn’t let other hardware manufacturers build systems with its operating system, as I’m sure there are consumers out there who would probably enjoy the option of buying something like this as standard.

    mac-vaio-x-2

    Thanks, GadgetMix.

  • Audi RS6 Avant driver reportedly caught going 133 MPH with nearly 2,000 pounds of pot

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    Audi RS6 Avant – Click above to for high-res image gallery

    If you read publications about cars long enough, you’ll no doubt catch on to our pro-wagon bias. In fact, if us auto-journo types ran things, SUVs, CUVs and sedans would be banned, and all passenger cars would either be mid-engined, 500 horsepower coupes or 600 hp wagons. With manuals and roll up windows. No, really. This is the type of thinking required to join our vaunted profession. However, one of the many reasons we want mega-burly wagons isn’t to haul one ton of dope around.

    Seems that a twin-turbo, Lambo-V10 engined Audi RS6 Avant (good for at least 580 hp) was busted outside of Seville, Spain for not only going 133 mph, but for carrying 2,000 pounds of pot. Twenty-seven bundles of hashish to be specific. Value? €120,000, or about $180,000 USD. That’s a lot of grass, man. And probably about one thousand pounds more than a RS6 sedan could have carried. Er… umm… we mean…. “Bad RS6 Avant, bad!”

    [Source: Motor Pasion]

    Audi RS6 Avant driver reportedly caught going 133 MPH with nearly 2,000 pounds of pot originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 24 Nov 2009 18:56:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • UK Prisoners Go on Holiday

    As prisoners in the United Kingdom near the end of their sentences, they are sometimes eligible to leave prison for a week or more at a stretch to perform community service and begin the process of reconnecting to their families and communities. The program isn’t new, but it’s drawing fresh criticism because its use has tripled in the last three years.

    This holiday, however, doesn’t look much like the photo at left.

    The program isn’t markedly different from house arrest or conditional parole — prisoners often perform community service or stay with family under strict rules. Critics of the program are stuck in a world of long sentences set in stone, and that’s a mistake.

    Programs like this should be available to prison administrators to offer reentry prisoners opportunities to transition successfully back to society. It must be carefully targeted at prisoners who deserve the privilege, however, and it should also be accompanied by state services, as we’ve seen that the first 48 hours are critical to a successful reentry.

    (more…)