Category: News

  • Samsung Behold II owners consider legal action over lack of Android 2.x upgrade

    T-Mobile launched the Samsung Behold II with Android 1.5, but led customers to believe the phone would eventually be upgraded to Android 2.0 in 2010. This claim came from a promotional YouTube video which has since been pulled.

    Now it looks like Samsung might have reversed course as customers are reporting they were told the Behold II “will never qualify for the Android 2X update”. This information supposedly came from Samsung technical support, but T-Mobile has the final say about firmware upgrades for their phones.

    We reached out to T-Mobile to see if they had any new information regarding Android upgrades and they responded the new myTouch 3G Slide includes Android 2.1 and they would let us know when they have more details to share about existing phones.

    Behold II owners are understandably upset and some are considering legal action if something is not done. Customers are also demanding an upgrade on the official T-Mobile forums and have started an online petition.

    If you are a Behold II owner, I would suggest patiently waiting a little longer and see what action T-Mobile takes. There is no need taking your anger out on Samsung Mobile because they will only develop and release an upgrade when T-Mobile makes the request. For all we know, this could have been done months ago and T-Mobile could be waiting till after the Slide launches (June 2nd) before upgrading older Android phones.

    At the same time, this doesn’t bode well for Samsung’s reputation. It might be the carriers responsibility to upgrade their phones, but other Samsung Android phones (like the original Galaxy) are also stuck on Android 1.5.

    We can’t say for sure who produced the promotion video, but it clearly features the Samsung Mobile logo at the beginning and fits the wacky style of other campaigns for the Behold II. Just the fact that the video got pulled gives the appearance that someone was trying to scrub this evidence offline. A copy of the original video is included below for your viewing pleasure.

    “The SGH-T939 will never qualify for the Android 2X update. Your continued interest in Samsung products is appreciated.”Samsung Technical Support

    Related Posts

  • In Praise of the Teacher Bailout

    States are facing record budget shortfalls, which almost always result in huge cuts to education. So the jobs bills moving through Congress propose a $23 billion infusion to public schools to save between 100,00 and 300,000 teacher jobs. Neil McCluskey at the New York Post shrugs at the “teacher bailout,” noting that 300,000 jobs lost would be “only” a 4.8 percent cut to the teacher labor force.

    On the other hand, he’s pretty concerned about the deficit.

    So there is indeed a looming education catastrophe — but it’s not
    funding or job cuts. It is the bailout now moving through Congress that
    ignores the reality of inefficient public schooling, and adds to the
    already crushing burden of our federal debt.

    Well, if we’re playing the put-it-in-context game, $23 billion is “only” 0.6% of the 2010 budget. An unfortunate bailout, perhaps, but hardly catastrophic, especially when you consider that 200,000 lost jobs has a tangible cost on its own: to local demand, to student achievement, and to federal coffers when more people become eligible for benefits like unemployment insurance.

    McCluskey’s point about soaring education costs is fair. The rise in tuition and school fees have outpaced even medical inflation in the last 30 years. Education is one of our greatest job engines, but it’s also something of a black hole where money enters, disappears and makes an ambiguous impact on student test scores. Smart education reform includes clear incentives for administrators to control costs and teachers to demonstrate achievement against a reasonable baseline. But we don’t want schools firing teachers willy nilly in the fog of deep budget cuts that could wipe out programs based on their cost rather than their effectiveness.

    At the risk of invoking a cliche, our education system is a bit like a painkiller junkie who just had his wisdom teeth pulled. In the long term, we probably want to wean the patient off drugs. In the short term, the patient happens to be in dire need of some drugs. Sec. Arne Duncan seems to acknowledge this conflict, and when the fog lifts, I hope he continues to pressure the teachers’ union to loosen its grip on the bottle and allow administrators to better assess which teachers are actually teaching, and which are mostly collecting checks.





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  • Japan Plans 2 Billion Dollar Robot Moon Base For 2020 [Space]

    The year 2020 on Earth: American Idol has replaced the Executive Branch of the U.S. government and everyone’s arguing about whether to say “twenty-twenty” or “two thousand and twenty.” The year 2020 on the Moon: BIG F-IN’ ROBOT PARTY. More »










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  • Rising Corruption and Violence in Kingston Concern for the US

    In the last few weeks nearly dozens of people were killed in the fighting between gunmen drug lords and policemen in Kingston, Jamaica. In the operation of anti-drug offensive, the city witnessed running battles between the gunmen and security forces. The gunmen belong to a suspected drug lord who is also sought by the US. But the whereabouts of the alleged drug lord Christoper ‘Dudus’ Coke is unknown.

    An Organization for American States body expressed “deep concern” over the ongoing violence and expressed that such power acquired by the drug lords in Caribbean nation is a matter of concern for the United States. The street gun battle has left at least 67 dead including few policemen.

    However the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights has urged the Jamaican State to conduct an impartial investigation of the events that led to the deaths of some innocent people too. The effort of the desperate police to arrest Dudus Coke, has resulted in the arrests of nearly 500 people and widespread confiscation of arms and ammunition. Live combat could be seen on Television between Policemen and supporters of Coke in neighborhoods of Denham Town and Tivoli Gardens.

    Deputy Police Commissioner Glenmore Hinds said that the effort is still on to arrest Coke, but they are still clueless about his whereabouts. Authorities are making provisions for press and reporters to enter the conflict zone with caution. The government also urged businessmen to stop backing the drug lords that will threat peace of the nation.

    Related posts:

    1. Bloodshed In The Streets As Six Police One Civilian Dead In Mexico
    2. Kabul’s defense shaken by suicide bomber
    3. Gang Rape on Child: 27 arrested

  • False Tsunami Alarm For Vanuatu 7.2 Earthquake

    vanuatuAfter the Vanuatu has been struck by a stunning 7.2 Quake, authorities at first sent out a tsunami warning but it was later on canceled. The Quake was felt near the coast of the South Pacific island republic of Vanuatu. The United States earlier had issued a tsunami warning for islands New Caledonia, Solomon and Vanuatu.

    According to the Tsunami Warning Center, readings of the sea level didn’t show signs of an incoming tsunami.

    “If a tsunami was generated, it does not pose a threat to any areas outside the epicentral region,” it said in a bulletin sent out this afternoon.

    The eye of the Earthquake was around 300 miles northwest of Port Vila with a depth of 22 miles. The time the Quake struck was 1:45 p.m. Eastern Time. Local officials frequently updated themselves on the quake and tsunami warning.

    Professionals said that Hawaii would be out of danger. Japan, which is the world’s most earthquake prone country in the whole world, according to their local police no serious inquries or damage were done by the 7.2 quake.

    “I would think any damage from a quake this size is unlikely,” an official with the police, Shimpachi Higashizato, told the Associated Press.

    Related posts:

    1. Authorities rule out Tsunami fear after 7.2 Quake near Vanuatu
    2. An earthquake shook Puerto Rico
    3. Earthquake Hits Chile

  • Morgan Stanley: Euro Has Way More To Fall, Eurozone Breakup Odds Are Real

    Today’s bout of optimism notwithstanding, Morgan Stanley (MS) remains very bearish on the euro, forecasting big declines to come.

    Here’s Stephen Hull

    We have made some changes to our currency forecasts,
    expecting the dollar to strengthen further in 2010. Having
    reached our 1.24 target in EUR/USD, we now expect a
    decline to 1.16 by year-end and for the euro to trade at a
    discount to fair value (1.17) in early 2011, reaching a trough
    around 1.12 before recovering later in the year.

    Why?

    The shift from the initial fiscal problem in the
    periphery (Greece) has now become a fiscal problem for core
    Europe; more importantly for the euro, it has also undermined
    the credibility of the ECB. The ECB’s priority has not been to
    focus on the euro as a store of value but has shifted to
    helping stabilize the situation. Its role as lender of last resort
    has been fully tested and arguably its independence
    undermined now that it is buying government bonds to help
    ease Europe’s debt problem. There is little doubt in our minds
    now that through this crisis there is growing evidence that the
    euro is no longer a hard currency like the deutschemark but
    something softer. If this is true then those that hold euros
    might be less willing to hold them and, as Exhibit 5 shows,
    investors – especially central banks and equity investors –
    have bought significant amounts of euros since its inception in
    1999.

    chart

    Separately, Morgan Stanley’s Joachim Fils writes:

    To be clear, we neither advocate a EUR break-up nor is this
    our main scenario. However, the risk that it happens is far
    from negligible and the consequences for financial markets
    would be severe.  Given recent developments, a break-up
    scenario has clearly become more likely, for two reasons. 

    First, the lesson for other euro area members from the Greek
    bail-out package is that no matter how badly you violate the
    SGP guidelines, financial help will be forthcoming, if push
    comes to shove. This introduces a serious moral hazard
    problem into the European equation. Fiscal slippage in other
    countries has now become more rather than less likely in our
    view.

    Second, the ECB’s climb-down on its collateral rules
    regarding lower-rated bonds, which ensures that Greek
    government bonds will still be eligible as collateral in ECB
    tenders beyond 2010, adds to this moral hazard problem and
    confirms that the ECB is not immune to political
    considerations and pressures.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • BREAKING: FoMoCo executives working on plan to kill Mercury

    Mercury

    After selling Jaguar, Land Rover, Aston Martin and Volvo, FoMoCo executives are now preparing to kill Mercury. According to sources familiar with the plans, the Dearborn automaker’s top executives are currently working on a proposal to kill Mercury that will be presented to directors in July.

    Mercury sales have fallen 74 percent since 2000 and FoMoCo is not planning any new vehicles for the brand, which was created in 1939 by Edsel Ford, the son of founder Henry Ford.

    “Mercury is a forgotten brand,” John Wolkonowicz, an auto analyst with IHS Global Insight in Lexington, Massachusetts told Bloomberg. “Many Americans probably already think it has been discontinued. Mercury was too similar to Ford from the very beginning.”

    The timing of Mercury’s death all depends on how fast executives can convince directors and dealers to shutdown the unprofitable brand.

    – By: Omar Rana

    Source: Bloomberg


  • Cosmetics Retailers Tell You That Looking Good Makes You Healthy

    Research conducted for the National Association of Chain Drug Stores has revealed that in order to be healthy, you first have to look really hot: “The first stage of health and wellness is beauty,” said researcher Thom Blischok, during an event on “Redefining Health and Beauty Care for Untapped Profit Potential.”

    Blischok, of SymphonyIRI Group, continued his exegesis:

    “People want to look good to feel good. This is a major shift in thinking. Health and wellness is holistic and not about medicines only or beauty used in salons or the home. It is about a concept.”

    Or, as translated by our exclsuive Meggelfish®: “What part of ‘Redefining Health and Beauty Care for Untapped Profit Potential’ don’t you get?”

    Blischok told the drug retailers that they should “position their departments as health, beauty, wellness rather than health and beauty care to take advantage of the shopper’s focus on wellness going forward.” Or,as Meggelfish® translates it: “What are you, deaf? Redefining Health and Beauty Care, people. Untapped Profit Potential. Jesus, somebody get me a frickin’ drink, and put some pomegranate juice in it for the wellness and sh*t.”

    Beauty Care Seen as First Step to Wellness [Supermarket News]

  • Report: Ford considering shutting down Mercury division

    Filed under: , ,

    Mercury spokesmodel Jill Wagner – Click above for high-res image gallery

    According to a report from Bloomberg, which is citing two unnamed sources who are supposedly “familiar with the plan,” Ford is planning to close the doors on its Mercury division after 70 years of existence. If true, Mercury will join recently departed brands ranging from Plymouth, Oldsmobile, Pontiac, Saturn and Hummer.

    We can’t say that this news comes as a shocker, as analysts far and wide have been predicting such an event for the last few years, but Ford has repeatedly denied any plans to cancel its interplanetary division when questioned.

    For what it’s worth, the Mercury brand has seen its sales fall by nearly three-quarters since the year 2000, now representing less than two percent of Ford’s annual sales. What’s more, Mercury is scheduled to lose two of its four models next year. At this point, the only thing we’ll miss if Mercury leaves us is spokesmodel Jill Wagner.

    Stay tuned for more as the story develops.

    [Source: Bloomberg]

    Report: Ford considering shutting down Mercury division originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 27 May 2010 15:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • South Asia Initiative offers grants for summer

    Since its inception in 2003, the South Asia Initiative (SAI) has raised the profile of South Asian studies at Harvard and internationally; generated interdisciplinary research; sent faculty and students to South Asia for study, research and service learning; and conducted high-profile seminars and conferences. The SAI has forged links and synergies across Harvard’s Schools and has enriched intellectual life on campus by organizing academic seminars and conferences that cut across various disciplines.

    he South Asia Initiative offers grants each year to students pursuing interests in South Asia. This year, 10 graduate students were selected to participate in the SAI Graduate Associate Program for 2010-11. This summer, the SAI will support 49 undergraduate and graduate students traveling to South Asia to conduct research, perform fieldwork, participate in internships, and pursue South Asian language study.

    For a complete list of grant recipients, visit the South Asia Initiative Web site.

  • Is It Time To Look To Washington?

    As I write this, the Illinois State Legislature is putting the final touches on next year’s budget and spending plan. Everything that is being passed is woefully inadequate to safeguard the needs of Illinois citizens. Continue a deficit of at least $7 billion? No problem. Continue to hold off paying bills for six or more months, putting schools and clients of social service agencies in jeopardy? No problem. Needing to fight to get one vote to make the pension payments now even though the decision would save the state $20 billion later?  Standard practice. It doesn’t look much like the state will do anything to save up to 20,000 educator jobs and do the right thing for our children and our most at-risk citizens.

    But 20,000 is less than 7% of all the education jobs currently at risk around the U.S. Nationwide, state budget problems are expected to generate over 300,000 educator pink slips this spring.  That represents a major challenge building a quality education  program AND to the fragile economic recovery in this country. That is why the NEA has opened its “Speak Up For Education and Kids” campaign.

    The campaign started on Wednesday, May 26 when over 12,000 calls were made to members of Congress. This national call-in urged our representatives to support adding education jobs to an emergency funding bill.  A press conference featuring NEA President Dennis Van Roekel, Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, and Congressional Committee Chair Congressman Dave Obey (D-Wisconsin) and Congressman George Miller (D-California) highlighted these efforts.

    NEA is also running television ads and radio spots in critical media markets. A campaign has also started on Facebook and other social network services. 

    It is not too late to participate. You can help save 300,000 teaching jobs – maybe even your own. So while you are working hard lobbying your state legislators to do the right thing in Illinois, take a moment to e-mail or call your member of Congress at 866-608-6355 and the Representative to protect the future of our children by supporting funding to save education jobs in the emergency funding bill.

    When you are done, don’t forget to tell your family and friends to also stand up for the future, and contact their representatives as well.

  • “Six Degrees Of John Mayer’s Penis!”

    Park it, Kevin Bacon: GQ Magazine has put its trusty graphics team to work on a comprehensive chart of John “My Body Is A Wonderland Only For White Girls” Mayer’s alleged conquests for a feature in the magazine’s June issue. From Jennifer Aniston to Jennifer Love-Hewitt, Mayer has made his rounds with various Hollywood ladies. But until now, no one has ever charted exactly how many people the musician is connected to through his junk.

    Only two celebrities separate Mayer from acting sweetheart Sandra Bullock. Who knew?


  • NOAA expects “active to extremely active” Atlantic hurricane season – 95% of above normal seasons have 2 Gulf hurricanes, 50% have at least one in June-July

    Across the entire Atlantic Basin for the six-month season, which begins June 1, NOAA is projecting a 70 percent probability of the following ranges:

    *  14 to 23 Named Storms (top winds of 39 mph or higher), including:
    *  8 to 14 Hurricanes (top winds of 74 mph or higher), of which:
    *  3 to 7 could be Major Hurricanes (Category 3, 4 or 5; winds of at least 111 mph)

    Hurricane Ike.NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center issued its seasonal outlook today.

    It is a worrisome.  Administrator Lubchenco, says, “If this outlook holds true, this season could be one of the more active on record.”

    What is the biggest uncertainty in the forecast?

    “The main uncertainty in this outlook is how much above normal the season will be. Whether or not we approach the high end of the predicted ranges depends partly on whether or not La Niña develops this summer,” said Gerry Bell, Ph.D., lead seasonal hurricane forecaster at NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center. “At present we are in a neutral state, but conditions are becoming increasingly favorable for La Niña to develop.”

    The CPC report explains:

    La Niña contributes to reduced vertical wind shear over the western tropical Atlantic which, when combined with conditions associated with the ongoing high activity era and warm Atlantic SSTs, increases the probability of an exceptionally active Atlantic hurricane season (Bell and Chelliah 2006). NOAA’s high-resolution CFS model indicates the development of La Niña-like circulation and precipitation anomalies during July.

    One of the three key factors leading NOAA to this forecast is the high sea surface temperatures:

    Warm Atlantic Ocean water. Sea surface temperatures are expected to remain above average where storms often develop and move across the Atlantic. Record warm temperatures – up to four degrees Fahrenheit above average – are now present in this region.

    Here is more of the forecast:

    An important measure of the total overall seasonal activity is the NOAA Accumulated Cyclone Energy (ACE) index, which accounts for the intensity and duration of named storms and hurricanes during the season. We estimate a 70% chance that the 2010 seasonal ACE range will be 155%-270% of the median. According to NOAA’s hurricane season classifications, an ACE value above 117% of the 1950-2000 median reflects an above-normal season. An ACE value above 175% of the median reflects an exceptionally active (or hyperactive) season.

    And what about the Gulf where a massive oil spill resides:

    Because of the ongoing oil crisis in the Gulf of Mexico, we are including some historical statistics of tropical cyclone activity for this region (excluding the Bay of Campeche) based on past above normal seasons. These statistics do not represent an explicit forecast for tropical cyclones in the Gulf of Mexico during 2010, as it is impossible to reliably predict such activity so far in advance. Historically, all above normal seasons have produced at least one named storm in the Gulf of Mexico, and 95% of those seasons have at least two named storms in the Gulf. Most of this activity (80%) occurs during August-October. However, 50% of above normal seasons have had at least one named storm in the region during June-July.

    If you want a comprehensive discussion of what a Gulf hurricane might mean for the oil disaster, Dr. Jeff Masters has a good post, “What a hurricane would do the Deepwater Horizon oil spill.”

    Related Post:

    How accurate are the NOAA seasonal hurricane forecasts?  Click here.  Summary at Wunderblog.

  • Authorities rule out Tsunami fear after 7.2 Quake near Vanuatu

    The sudden warning of Tsunami created tense moments at the many Coastal regions of Pacific Ocean when an earthquake of 7.2 Richter scale hit 244 km northwest of Santo on the Island of Vanuatu in the South Pacific Ocean. Vanuatu lies in the circle of volcanic arcs and oceanic trenches which is called ‘Ring of Fire.’

    Vanuatu lies on the so-called Ring Of Fire, a series of volcanic arcs and oceanic trenches which encircle the Pacific basin. After the earthquake Tsunami Center told Reuters that an earthquake of size that has the potential to create destructive Tsunami has been detected and they warned the coastal regions.

    However later, authorities have ruled out the Tsunami warning. Even the US had issued a warning for New Caledonia, Vanuatu and Solomon Islands. The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said that the sea level readings after the quake showed no signs of any impending danger. They further said that even if Tsunami was generated that was not strong enough to cause any destruction outside the epicenter of the earthquake.

    The Vanuatu local authorities are still alert and are checking for any information they could gather for any impending danger. So far they have no vital information and suggestion for the people. The Pacific Tsunami Warning Center also ruled out any immediate risk to Hawaii. Japan too reported no immediate reports of injury or damage from the earthquake in the ocean.

    Related posts:

    1. False Tsunami Alarm For Vanuatu 7.2 Earthquake
    2. Earthquake Hits Chile
    3. Taipei, Taiwan Earthquake

  • Google Officially Acquires AdMob [Google]

    After months of uncertainty amid FTC investigations, Google’s acquisition of AdMob is finally totally 100% complete. Now, Google’s shiny ads and Apple’s shiny ads will compete for your eyeballs and you will try your best not to let them bother you too much. [Google Blog] More »










    GoogleSearchingSearch EnginesCompaniesTools

  • Independence of models and errors

    Roger Pielke’s blog has an interesting guest post by Ryan Meyer, reporting on a paper that questions the meaning of claims about the robustness of conclusions from multiple models. From the abstract:

    Climate modelers often use agreement among multiple general circulation models (GCMs) as a source of confidence in the accuracy of model projections. However, the significance of model agreement depends on how independent the models are from one another. The climate science literature does not address this. GCMs are independent of, and interdependent on one another, in different ways and degrees. Addressing the issue of model independence is crucial in explaining why agreement between models should boost confidence that their results have basis in reality.

    Later in the paper, they outline the philosophy as follows,

    In a rough survey of the contents of six leading climate journals since 1990, we found 118 articles in which the authors relied on the concept of agreement between models to inspire confidence in their results. The implied logic seems intuitive: if multiple models agree on a projection, the result is more likely to be correct than if the result comes from only one model, or if many models disagree. … this logic only holds if the models under consideration are independent from one another. … using multiple models to analyze the same system is a ‘‘robustness’’ strategy. Every model has its own assumptions and simplifications that make it literally false in the sense that the modeler knows that his or her mathematics do not describe the world with strict accuracy. When multiple independent models agree, however, their shared conclusion is more likely to be true.

    I think they’re barking up the right tree, but one important clarification is in order. We don’t actually care about the independence of models per se. In fact, if we had an ensemble of perfect models, they’d necessarily be identical. What we really want is for the models to be right. To the extent that we can’t be right, we’d at least like to have independent systematic errors, so that (a) there’s some chance that mistakes average out and (b) there’s an opportunity to diagnose the differences.

    For example, consider three models of gravity, of the form F=G*m1*m2/r^b. We’d prefer an ensemble of models with b = {1.9,2.0,2.1} to one with b = {1,2,3}, even though some metrics of independence (such as the state space divergence cited in the paper) would indicate that the first ensemble is less independent than the second. This means that there’s a tradeoff: if b is a hidden parameter, it’s harder to discover problems with the narrow ensemble, but harder to get good answers out of the dispersed ensemble, because its members are more wrong.

    For climate models, ensembles provide some opportunity to discover systematic errors from numerical schemes, parameterization of poorly-understood sub-grid scale phenomena and program bugs, to the extent that models rely on different codes and approaches. As in my gravity example, differences would be revealed more readily by large perturbations, but I’ve never seen extreme conditions tests on GCMs (although I understand that they at least share a lot with models used to simulate other planets). I’d like to see more of that, plus an inventory of major subsystems of GCMs, and the extent to which they use different codes.

    While GCMs are essentially the only source of regional predictions, which are a focus of the paper, it’s important to realize that GCMs are not the only evidence for the notion that climate sensitivity is nontrivial. For that, there are also simple energy balance models and paleoclimate data. That means that there are at least three lines of evidence, much more independent than GCM ensembles, backing up the idea that greenhouse gases matter.

    It’s interesting that this critique comes up with reference to GCMs, because it’s actually not GCMs we should worry most about. For climate models, there are vague worries about systematic errors in cloud parameterization and other phenomena, but there’s no strong a priori reason, other than Murphy’s Law, to think that they are a problem. Economic models in the climate policy space, on the other hand, nearly all embody notions of economic equilibrium and foresight which we can be pretty certain are wrong, perhaps spectacularly so. That’s what we should be worrying about.

  • ACCESS releases cross platform VOIP service for Windows Mobile, other OS’s

    diagram4

    ACCESS CO. today announced NetFront™ IP-Phone, a full scale VoIP solution with 3G and Wi-Fi air interfaces designed to support all three major smartphone operating systems: iPhone, Android™ and Windows Mobile®. Jointly developed by ACCESS and OAT, NetFront IP-Phone is designed for commercial use by operators, Internet Service Providers (ISPs?and Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNOs). The solution will be available from ACCESS worldwide as of June 2010.

    NetFront IP-Phone, which supports air interfaces for 3G and wireless LAN (Wi-Fi) connections and major global standards, provides a standard middleware application as well as an implementation solution service. NetFront IP-Phone is able to communicate with a variety of IP telephony servers, making it possible for ISPs and MVNOs to offer high-quality VoIP services to smartphone users while substantially reducing development time and costs.

    The NetFront IP-Phone interface is compliant with 3GPP?Third Generation Partnership Project?, OMA?Open Mobile Alliance? and IETF?Internet Engineering Task Force? industry standards. NetFront IP-Phone is not bundled with specific services, so ISPs and MVNOs can customize it to offer differentiated IP telephony services.

    NetFront IP-Phone was developed based on a single design concept for all three major smartphone operating systems (iPhone, Android and Windows Mobile). The high quality VoIP environment was made possible thanks to two key technologies: NetFront™ IMS Client, which supports a base IMS framework, and a standard user interface developed by ACCESS that delivers a rich user experience. The IMS framework deploys eSound™, high-quality VoIP technology developed by OKI, that enables voice communication over IP networks with realistic voice tones that are far superior to conventional phone quality.

    NetFront IP-Phone is designed with a flexible modular architecture, enabling providers to implement unique VoIP applications and combine VoIP services with other applications. Applications are also available as APIs, allowing operators to customize their own UI.

    A VoIP trial server for NetFront IP-Phone is available for providers to evaluate the performance of the service, resulting in reduced cost and evaluation time.

    "Thanks to the combination of world-class mobile software from ACCESS, high-quality audio technology from Oki Electric Industry and IMS technologies from OKI ACCESS, we have produced full scale VoIP solution for smartphones," said Tomihisa Kamada, president, CEO and co-founder of ACCESS. "We will continue to partner with OKI ACCESS and Oki Electric Industry to create new multimedia communications business opportunities."

    "Since the foundation of our company, OKI ACCESS Technologies has focused on developing advanced IMS solutions that create value-added services by integrating OKI’s industry-leading information technologies and ACCESS’ mobile software technologies. We are confident that NetFront IP-Phone will contribute to the growth of mobile VoIP markets," said Osamu Nakazawa, president of OKI ACCESS Technologies.

    "OKI has been driving the innovation of global information and communication technologies that enrich people’s lives. We are honored that our VoIP technology has contributed to the development of NetFront IP-Phone. We will continue to pursue our vision of developing advanced technologies that promote the ubiquitous society," said Hidetoshi Saigou, executive officer and general manager of Telecom Systems Business Division at OKI.

    ACCESS and OKI ACCESS Technologies plan to launch future versions of NetFront IP-Phone to support additional platforms for smartphones and connected home appliances.

    Read more at Access here.


  • Morning glories

    It is the jewel of Harvard’s weeklong Commencement celebration, the morning on which the Yard is crowded with graduates old and new, and in which pomp and play and pride seek full measure.

    “That’s the idea, that nothing changes,” said Victor Ford ’53 of the Commencement pageantry today (May 27). Ford, pastor emeritus at First Church in nearby Charlestown, where College benefactor John Harvard worshiped, stood with his cane near Johnston Gate.

    Beginning the day was the traditional Senior Class Chapel Service at the Memorial Church. The dais belonged to Rev. Peter J. Gomes, the Plummer Professor of Christian Morals and Pusey Minister in the Memorial Church.

    “You have not survived four years here simply to be lost in the universe,” Gomes told the seniors, some of them sitting up on the altar and some spilling into the aisles. “Something of the greatness and the goodness that is in each of you will survive, and in certain cases even prevail.”

    He cautioned the students against striving for the kind of greatness that is too often tied to a drive simply to achieve. Instead, Gomes urged the graduating class to aim, above all, for goodness.

    Gomes acknowledged that some listeners may perform great deeds, such as finding a cure for cancer or a “sensible way of explaining the economy,” and that he would be grateful for their successes. But he suggested that most of the graduates would simply be “called upon to do small and ordinary things as well as possible.”

    Gomes added, “If you do that well, you will have remade our world and your little corner of it, you will have justified our high hopes in you, and you will have given substance to the ancient vision for a new heaven and a new Earth.”

    “Know that the world will be a better place,” he said, “for your honest participation in it.”

    Gomes’ message resonated with Laurel Macey of Winthrop House, a human evolutionary biology concentrator who will work in a research lab at the Harvard School of Public Health in the fall.

    “I liked that he reminded us that we should not strive for greatness, we should just strive for goodness, and then great things will follow,” she said. “That’s an important message for Harvard students … that sometimes it is more important to just be good.”

    Excitement rose in the Old Yard as seniors, alumni, faculty, and staff gathered to form their long procession lines. The parade, an annual ritual replete with bright, multicolored academic gowns and hoods, processes through the Yard and into Tercentenary Theatre, the outdoor area between the Memorial Church and Widener Library, which was first used in 1936 as a ceremonial gathering point to celebrate the College’s 300th anniversary.

    Fred Abernathy, Gordon McKay Professor of Mechanical Engineering and Abbott and James Lawrence Research Professor of Engineering, stood atop his traditional small podium near Johnston Gate and organized the procession. He called out facts and figures from years gone by to correspond with a particular alumni class, as well as humorous quips.

    “Slowly for the honorands. Don’t march too fast; it is not a race,” said Abernathy of the group of speedy honorary degree recipients hurrying by, which included actress Meryl Streep. She wore tinted glasses and a pair of impressively high wedge shoes.

    Inside the Yard, Sheriff of Middlesex County James V. DiPaola opened the Morning Exercises with three sharp raps of his silver-tipped staff. His call was loud, resonant, and stentorian: “This meeting will be in order.”

    The words are one of the traditions during Commencement Week’s biggest day. But a few things do change — the degree recipients, for one, all 7,125 of them this year, on the 359th Commencement. The recipients of honorary degrees change too. There were 10 this year, from retired U.S. Supreme Court Associate Justice David H. Souter ’61, LL.B. ’66, to education innovator Freeman A. Hrabowski III and iconic actress Meryl Streep.

    But even the honorands can’t escape at least one short-term Harvard tradition: the tight, bright, punning descriptions of them by President Drew Faust. “A formidable man of steel,” she called sculptor-in-metal Richard Serra, “he has knocked sculpture off its pedestal.”

    Harvard Provost Steven Hyman brought his own game to Faust’s wordplay. “Merrily we honor,” he said in an introduction, “Meryl Streep.” The Academy Award-winning actress, who sat on stage next to Souter, stood and blew a kiss to the audience when her degree was conferred. Though it wasn’t her hardest role (Streep has been nominated 16 times for the Oscar, winning two), it was the performance everyone had been waiting for. The crowd went wild.

    There were also wild crowds, School by School, as degrees were conferred on the graduates. The newest grads of Harvard Law School waved wooden gavels. Kennedy School grads threw inflatable globes into the air, and those of the Graduate School of Education waved books.

    For more serious traditions, there are the three orations by graduates.

    The Latin Salutatory by Mary Anne Marks ’10 included a phrase that most observers recognized, “multum laboris,” or, “a great deal of work.” That’s university life, in any language.

    Chiamaka Lilian Nwakeze ’10 delivered the Senior English Address, “Poetry for Chemists,” an argument that a liberal arts education deepens understanding of the sciences. It is “a scaffold on which individuals are formed,” she said, a broad education that bestows “an interconnected consciousness … for a total picture of reality.”

    Comedian James “Jimmy” Tingle, who received a master’s degree in public administration from the Kennedy School, rocked the house with the Graduate English Address, even while confessing he spent his boyhood thinking of Harvard as simply “a good place to steal bicycles.”

    Tingle started as a street performer in Harvard Square. “I don’t want to brag, but two years ago I performed in Europe,” he said, and then paused. “And I have to say: excellent country.”

    Tingle also described his temporary academic stumbling block, a required course in statistics. If he can pass statistics at Harvard, he said, then one other thing is certainly possible: “world peace.”

  • House committee passes bill that will require brake override and black boxes

    President Barack Obama, Vice President Joe Biden dine with House Energy and Commerce Committee

    The U.S. House Energy and Commerce Committee passed a sweeping auto-safety bill that would require installation of brake-override systems and event-data recorders. This bill comes in the wake of the Toyota unintended acceleration crisis, and much pressure from the public to hold automakers more accountable for safety. Regulators would also have to consider industry-wide standards for foot-pedal placement, electronic systems, push-button ignition systems, and transmission configuration. The NHTSA would be the ones to devise a timetable by which the manufacturers would have to be in compliance.

    An earlier version of the bill required that black boxes record crash data for 75 seconds before a crash, and eliminated the cap on penalties to automakers. Those provisions have been dropped; the NHTSA will now determine an appropriate recording window, and the cap has been set at $200 million.

    One other major point of the House bill is the expansion authority and increase in funding to the NHTSA, and that auto-safety information would be more transparent to consumers. A similar bill has been introduced in the Senate; one major difference however, is that the Senate bill would eliminate the cap on fines.

    NHTSA funding will be increased through an automaker fee of $9 per vehicle, and by doubling federal funding to $280 million over three years. There will also be a process in place for the Transportation Department to publicly order recalls in certain situations, and impose a ban on federal employees leaving the Transportation Department to go work for automakers immediately afterwards.

    – By: Stephen Calogera

    Source: Automotive News (Subscription Required)
    Image Source: Official White House photo by Pete Souza


  • Text of Justice David Souter’s speech

    When I was younger I used to hear Harvard stories from a member of the class of 1885.  Back then, old graduates of the College who could get to Cambridge on Commencement Day didn’t wait for reunion years to come back to the Yard.  They’d just turn up, see old friends, look over the new crop, and have a cup of Commencement punch under the elms.  The old man remembered one of those summer days when he was heading for the Square after lunch and crossed paths with a newly graduated senior, who had enjoyed quite a few cups of that punch.  As the two men approached each other the younger one thrust out his new diploma and shouted, “Educated, by God.”

    Even with an honorary Harvard doctorate in my hands I know enough not to shout that across the Yard, but the University’s generosity does make me bold enough to say that over the course of nineteen years on the Supreme Court, I learned some lessons about the Constitution of the United States, and about what judges do when they apply it in deciding cases with constitutional issues.  I’m going to draw on that experience in the course of the next few minutes, for it is as a judge that I have been given the honor to speak this before you.

    The occasion for our coming together like this aligns with the approach of two separate events on the judicial side of the national public life:  the end of the Supreme Court’s Term, with its quickened pace of decisions, and a confirmation proceeding for the latest nominee to fill a seat on the Court.  We will as a consequence be hearing and discussing a particular sort of criticism that is frequently aimed at the more controversial Supreme Court decisions:  criticism that the Court is making up the law, that the Court is announcing constitutional rules that cannot be found in the Constitution, and that the Court is engaging in activism to extend civil liberties.  A good many of us, I’m sure a good many of us here, intuitively react that this sort of commentary tends to miss the mark.  But we don’t often pause to consider in any detail the conceptions of the Constitution and of constitutional judging that underlie the critical rhetoric, or to compare them with the notions that lie behind our own intuitive responses.  I’m going to try to make some of those comparisons this afternoon.

    The charges of lawmaking and constitutional novelty seem to be based on an impression of the Constitution and on a template for deciding constitutional claims that go together something like this.  A claim is made in court that the government is entitled to exercise a power, or an individual is entitled to claim the benefit of a right, that is set out in the terms of some particular provision of the Constitution.  The claimant quotes the provision and provides evidence of facts that are said to prove the entitlement that is claimed.  The facts on their face either do or do not support the claim.  If they do, the court gives judgment for the claimant; if they don’t judgment goes to the party contesting the claim.  On this view, deciding constitutional cases should be a straightforward exercise of reading fairly and viewing facts objectively.

    There are, of course, constitutional claims that would be decided just about the way this fair reading model would have it.  If one of today’s 21 year old college graduates claimed a place on the ballot for one of the United States Senate seats open this year, the claim could be disposed of simply by showing the person’s age, quoting the constitutional provision that a Senator must be at least 30 years old, and interpreting that requirement to forbid access to the ballot to someone who could not qualify to serve if elected.  No one would be apt to claim that lawmaking was going on, or object that the age requirement did not say anything about ballot access.  The fair reading model would describe pretty much what happened.  But cases like this do not usually come to court, or at least the Supreme Court, and for the ones that do get there, for the cases that tend to raise the national blood pressure, the fair reading model has only a tenuous connection to reality.

    Even a moment’s thought is enough to show why it is so unrealistic.  The Constitution has a good share of deliberately open-ended guarantees, like rights to due process of law, equal protection of the law, and freedom from unreasonable searches.  These provisions cannot be applied like the requirement for 30 year-old senators; they require more elaborate reasoning to show why very general language applies in some specific cases but not in others, and over time the various examples turn into rules that the Constitution does not mention.

    But this explanation hardly scratches the surface.  The reasons that constitutional judging is not a mere combination of fair reading and simple facts extend way beyond the recognition that constitutions have to have a lot of general language in order to be useful over long stretches of time.  Another reason is that the Constitution contains values that may well exist in tension with each other, not in harmony.  Yet another reason is that the facts that determine whether a constitutional provision applies may be very different from facts like a person’s age or the amount of the grocery bill; constitutional facts may require judges to understand the meaning that the facts may bear before the judges can figure out what to make of them.  And this can be tricky.  To show you what I’m getting at I’ve picked two examples of what can really happen, two stories of two great cases.  The two stories won’t, of course, give anything like a complete description either of the Constitution or of judging, but I think they will show how unrealistic the fair reading model can be.

    The first story is about what the Constitution is like.  It’s going to show that the Constitution is no simple contract, not because it uses a certain amount of open-ended language, but because its language grants and guarantees many good things, and good things that compete with each other and can never all be realized, altogether, all at once.

    The story is about a case that many of us here remember.  It was argued before the Supreme Court of the United States on June 26, 1971, and is known as The Pentagon Papers.  The New York Times and the Washington Post had each obtained copies of classified documents prepared and compiled by government officials responsible for conducting the Vietnam War.  The newspapers intended to publish some of those documents, and the government sought a court order forbidding the publication.

    The issue had arisen in great haste, and had traveled from trial courts to the Supreme Court, not over the course of months, but in a matter of days.  The time was one of high passion, and the claim made by the United States was the most extreme claim known to the constitutional doctrines of freedom to speak and publish.  The Government said it was entitled to a prior restraint, an order forbidding publication in the first place, not merely one imposing a penalty for unlawful publication after the words were out.  The argument included an exchange between a great lawyer appearing for the Government and a great judge, and the colloquy between them was one of those instances of a grain of sand that reveals a universe.

    The great lawyer for the United States was a man who had spent many Commencement mornings in this Yard.  He was Irwin Griswold, Dean of the Law School for 21 years, who was serving a stint as Solicitor General of the United States.  The great judge who questioned the Dean that day was Mr. Justice Black, the first of the New Deal justices, whom Justice Cardozo described as having one of the most brilliant legal minds he had ever met with.  The constitutional provision on which their exchange centered was the First Amendment, which includes the familiar words that “Congress shall make no law… abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press.”  Although that language by its literal terms forbade Congress from legislating to abridge free expression, the guarantees were understood to bind the whole government, and to limit what the President could ask a court to do.  As for the remainder of the provision, though, Justice Black professed to read it literally.  When it said there shall be no law allowed, it left no room for any exception; the prohibition against abridging freedom of speech and press was absolute.  And in fairness to him, one must say that on their face the First Amendment clauses seem as clear as the requirement for 30 year old senators, and that no guarantee of the Bill of Rights is more absolute in form.

    But that was not the end of the matter for Dean Griswold.  Notwithstanding the language, he urged the Court to say that a restraint would be constitutional when publication threatened irreparable harm to the security of the United States, and he contended there was enough in the record to show just that; he argued that the intended publications would threaten lives, and jeopardize the process of trying to end the war and recover prisoners, and erode the government’s capacity to negotiate with foreign governments and through foreign governments in the future.

    Justice Black responded that if a court could suppress publication when the risk to the national interest was great enough, the judges would be turned into censors.  Dean Griswold said he did not know of any alternative.  Justice Black shot back that respecting the First Amendment might be the alternative, and to that, Dean Griswold replied in words I cannot resist quoting:

    “The problem in this case,” he said, “is the construction of the First Amendment.

    “Now Mr. Justice, your construction of that is well-known, and I certainly respect it.  You say that no law means no law, and that should be obvious.  I can only say, Mr. Justice, that to me it is equally obvious that “no law” does not mean “no law,” and I would seek to persuade the Court that that is true.

    “As Chief Justice Marshall said, so long ago, it is a Constitution we are interpreting…”

    The Government lost the case and the newspapers published, but Dean Griswold won his argument with Justice Black.  To show, as he put it, that “no law” did not mean “no law,” Dean Griswold had pointed out that the First Amendment was not the whole Constitution.  The Constitution also granted authority to the government to provide for the security of the nation, and authority to the President to manage foreign policy and command the military.

    And although he failed to convince the Court that the capacity to exercise these powers would be seriously affected by publication of the papers, the Court did recognize that at some point the authority to govern that Dean Griswold invoked could limit the right to publish.  The Court did not decide the case on the ground that the words “no law” allowed of no exception and meant that the rights of expression were absolute.  The Court’s majority decided only that the Government had not met a high burden of showing facts that could justify a prior restraint, and particular members of the Court spoke of examples that might have turned the case to go the other way.  Threatened publication of something like the D-Day invasion plans could have been enjoined; Justice Brennan mentioned a publication that would risk a nuclear holocaust in peacetime.

    Even the First Amendment, then, expressing the value of speech and publication in the terms of a right as paramount as any fundamental right can be, does not quite get to the point of an absolute guarantee.  It fails because the Constitution has to be read as a whole, and when it is, other values crop up in potential conflict with an unfettered right to publish, the value of security for the nation and the value of the President’s authority in matters foreign and military.  The explicit terms of the Constitution, in other words, can create a conflict of approved values, and the explicit terms of the Constitution do not resolve that conflict when it arises.  The guarantee of the right to publish is unconditional in its terms, and in its terms the power of the government to govern is plenary.  A choice may have to be made, not because language is vague but because the Constitution embodies the desire of the American people, like most people, to have things both ways.  We want order and security, and we want liberty.  And we want not only liberty but equality as well.  These paired desires of ours can clash, and when they do a court is forced to choose between them, between one constitutional good and another one.  The court has to decide which of our approved desires has the better claim, right here, right now, and a court has to do more than read fairly when it makes this kind of choice.  Choices like the ones the Justices envisioned in the Papers case make up much of what we call law.

    Should the choice and its explanation be called illegitimate law making?  Can it be an act beyond the judicial power when a choice must be made and the Constitution has not made it in advance in so many words?  So much for the notion that all of constitutional law lies there in the Constitution waiting for a judge to read it fairly.

    Now let me tell a second story, not one illustrating the tensions within constitutional law, but one showing the subtlety of constitutional facts.  Again the story is about a famous case, and a good many of us here remember this one, too:  Brown v. Board of Education from 1954, in which the Supreme Court unanimously held that racial segregation in public schools imposed by law was unconstitutional, as violating the guarantee of equal protection of the law.

    Brown ended the era of separate-but-equal, whose paradigm was the decision in 1896 of the case called Plessy v. Ferguson, where the Supreme Court had held it was no violation of the equal protection guarantee to require black people to ride in a separate railroad car that was physically equal to the car for whites.  One argument offered in Plessy was that the separate black car was a badge of inferiority, to which the Court majority responded that if black people viewed it that way; the implication was merely a product of their own minds.  Sixty years later, Brown held that a segregated school required for black children was inherently unequal.

    For those whose exclusive norm for constitutional judging is merely fair reading of language applied to facts objectively viewed,  Brown must either be flat-out wrong or a very mystifying decision.  Those who look to that model are unlikely to think that a federal court back in 1896 should have declared legally mandated racial segregation unconstitutional.  But if Plessy was not wrong, how is it that Brown came out so differently?  The language of the Constitution’s guarantee of equal protection of the laws did not change between 1896 and 1954, and it would be hard to say that the obvious facts on which Plessy was based had changed, either.  While Plessy was about railroad cars and Brown was about schools, that distinction was no great difference.  Actually, the best clue to the difference between the cases is the dates they were decided, which I think point to the explanation for their divergent results.

    As I’ve said elsewhere, the members of the Court in Plessy remembered the day when human slavery was the law in much of the land.  To that generation, the formal equality of an identical railroad car meant progress.  But the generation in power in 1954 looked at enforced separation without the more revolting background of slavery to make it look unexceptional by contrast.  As a consequence, the judges of 1954 found a meaning in segregating the races by law that the majority of their predecessors in 1896 did not see.  That meaning is not captured by descriptions of physically identical schools or physically identical railroad cars.  The meaning of facts arises elsewhere and its judicial perception turns on the experience of the judges, and on their ability to think from a point of view different from their own.  Meaning comes from the capacity to see what is not in some simple, objective sense there on the printed page.  And when the judges in 1954 read the record of enforced segregation it carried only one possible meaning: it expressed a judgment of inherent inferiority on the part of the minority race.  The judges who understood the meaning that was apparent in 1954 would have violated their oaths to uphold the Constitution if they had not held the segregation mandate unconstitutional.

    Did the judges of 1954 cross some line of legitimacy into law making, stating a conclusion that you will not find written in the Constitution?  Was it activism to act based on the current meaning of facts that at a purely objective level were about the same as Plessy’s facts 60 years before?  So much for the assumption that facts just lie there waiting for an objective judge to view them.

    Let me, like the lawyer that I am, sum up the case I’ve tried to present this afternoon.  The fair reading model fails to account for what the Constitution actually says and fails just as badly to understand what judges have no choice but to do.  The Constitution is a pantheon of values, and a lot of hard cases are hard because the Constitution gives no simple rule of decision for the cases in which one of the values is truly at odds with another.  Not even its most uncompromising and unconditional language can resolve the potential tension of one provision with another, tension the Constitution’s Framers left to be resolved another day; and another day after that, for our cases can give no answers that fits all conflicts, and no resolutions immune to rethinking when the significance of old facts may have changed in the changing world.  These are reasons enough to show how egregiously it misses the point to think of judges in constitutional cases as just sitting there reading constitutional phrases fairly and looking at reported facts objectively to produce their judgments.

    The fair reading model has all that to answer for, but more than just that.  For the tensions that are the stuff of judging in so many hard constitutional cases are, after all, the products of our aspirations to value liberty, as well as order, and fairness and equality, as well as liberty.  And the very opportunity for conflict between the good and the good reflects our confidence that a way may be found to resolve it when a conflict arises.  That is why the simplistic view of the Constitution devalues those aspirations, and attacks that confidence, and diminishes us.  It is a model of judging that means to discourage our tenacity (our sometimes reluctant tenacity) to keep the constitutional promises the Nation has made.

    So, it is tempting to dismiss the critical rhetoric of law making and activism as simply a rejection of at least some of the hopes we profess to share as the American people.  But there is one thing more.  I have to believe that something deeper is involved, and that behind most dreams of a simpler Constitution lies a basic human hunger for the certainty and control that the fair reading model seems to promise.  And who has not felt that same hunger?  Is there any one of us who has not lived through moments, if not years, of longing for a world without ambiguity, and for the stability of something unchangeable in human institutions?  I don’t forget my own longings which heartily resisted the pronouncement of Justice Holmes, which I read as an undergraduate, that certainty generally is illusion and repose is not our destiny.

    But I have come to understand that he was right, and by the same token I understand that I differ from the critics I’ve described not merely in seeing the patent wisdom of the Brown decision, or in espousing the rule excluding unlawfully seized evidence, or in understanding the scope of habeas corpus.  Where I suspect we differ most fundamentally is in my belief that in an indeterminate world I cannot control it is possible to live fully in the trust that a way will be found leading through the uncertain future.  And to me, the future of the Constitution as the Framers wrote it can be staked only upon that same trust.  If we cannot share every intellectual assumption that formed the minds of those who framed the charter, we can still address the constitutional uncertainties the way they must have envisioned, by relying on reason that respects the words the Framers wrote, by facing facts, and by seeking to understand their meaning for the living.

    That is how a judge lives in a state of trust, and I know of no other way to make good on the aspirations that tell us who we are, and who we mean to be, as the people of the United States.

    D.H.S.