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  • Spy Shots: 2011 Mercedes-Benz CLS shows off even more skin

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    Up until last week, Mercedes-Benz had been doing a rather admirable job keeping the 2011 CLS under wraps. But as we saw last Friday, that got blown out of the water as the forthcoming four-door was caught posing for the camera as part of what appeared to be a photo shoot. All that was missing was a nice clean shot from the front.

    Problem solved. This morning, a lone image has appeared that shows off the shapely new 2011 CLS’ SLS-inspired fascia with LED lighting, dramatically sloping roofline and its newly contoured bodysides. As we saw last week, a bit of comparison work proves that the production car will share the vast majority of its sheetmetal with the CLS Shooting Break (yes, we know… it should be Brake, but we didn’t name it) concept that M-B introduced just a few months back.

    In fact, the car in the spy shot looks so much like the conceptual CLS hatch that we had to open the two in their own windows the double check what we were looking at. See for yourself. In any case, we’re mostly digging this new fastback sedan shape and relishing the idea of a 5.5-liter turbocharged and direct injected AMG-fettled V8 engine underhood.

    [Source: SecretNewCars.com]

    Spy Shots: 2011 Mercedes-Benz CLS shows off even more skin originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 26 May 2010 15:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Japan plans to send robot to moon by 2015

    Just yesterday I was talking about the prospects for a robotic moon race. Here’s something from the Mainichi Daily News that could get those competitive juices flowing.

  • fidipidi: a Facebook app for sending real greeting cards


    fidipidi, aside from being a portmanteau of serendipity and Pheidippides, is a Facebook application that allows you to create real-world greeting cards that get sent through the U.S. Postal Service for delivery to real human beings. Think of it like all those e-card services that were so popular about a decade ago, except that the card gets delivered to the recipients actual mailbox instead of their email inbox. Looks fun, and easy to use.



    The first 15,000 people to sign up for fidipidi can use the code 1stCardFree to get their first card created and sent for free!

    For a variety of silly reasons I don’t really use Facebook, let alone any Facebook apps, so I can’t provide a real testimonial here. If Facebook is your kind of thing, this might be a good app to try.


  • Republicans Having Second Thoughts About Dirty Energy


    Are Republicans really Democrats to whom anything really bad has yet to happen? Now that America faces a crisis of almost Chernobyl-like proportions; fewer Republicans are thinking in chirpy slogans about scraping the bottom of the barrel for the last few drops of oil.

    The gusher on the sea floor is so far out of the range of the human expertise and abilities of oil industry technicians – let alone Government agencies – to rein it in; that it might as well be taking place in outer space. Yet last year 86% of Republicans told Rasmussen they were fine with Drill, Baby, Drill.

    But in a new Fox News poll, one month after the accident, Republicans’ support for off-shore oil drilling has now dropped to 68%. This brings overall support, according the Fox Poll, down to a new average low of 54% (including the views of Democrats and Independents), from a combined average of 72% support in August of 2009. (more…)

  • mocoNews Quick Hits 05.26.2010


    Ivdopia Viper Swiping Screen Grab

    »  Android is getting more traction in the U.S., whereas the iPhone is more global, according to AdMob, which will soon be acquired by Google (NSDQ: GOOG). [GigaOm.]

    »  Medialets has partnered with Mojiva to make its rich media ad formats for applications more widely available. It also has partnerships with Nexage and Jumptap. [Medialets blog.]

    »  Foxconn, the Chinese manufacturer known for making the iPhone, says it is reviewing its policies after a ninth employee between the ages of 18 and 24 committed suicide. The company has about 420,000 employees. [The New York Times.]

    »  In a survey conducted by the FCC, it found that one in six U.S. mobile phone users have been shocked by fees and charges in their monthly bills. [Reuters.]

    »  iVdopia, a mobile advertising network, has launched a so-called “Viper ad.” Users swipe their fingertip across the screen to reveal a menu of options. So far, more than 15 percent of users tried out the action and more than 71 percent watched the ad to the end. [See image.]


  • New Wind Farm Installs Set To Dip In 2010, Study Says

    Expected new wind power capacity for the 2010 – 2025 period

    2009 was great, 2010 won’t be as good, that’s the key take away of a study (U.S. Wind Power Markets and Strategies: 2010-2025) released today by IHS Emerging Energy Research, a Boston-based market research firm.

    IHS forecasts between 6.3 and 7.1 gigawatts of new wind installations in 2010, a 40- to -60 percent drop compared to the 9.8 gigawatts installed last year.

    “2010 marks the first time since 2004 that the U.S. wind industry will not surpass the previous year’s growth level,” says IHS Senior Analyst Matthew Kaplan, one of the study’s authors, in a prepared statement.

    Why the slowdown? Kaplan, in no particular order, cites the ongoing effects of the global financial crisis, which continue to make access to funding difficult and regulatory uncertainty. The closest thing the U.S. has to a long-term renewable energy policy are the temporary, stimulus-funded 1603 direct cash grants as well as the investment and production tax credits. Last summer the House passed the American Clean Energy and Security act and the Senate is set to debate its own version of a climate change and energy bill, however prospects for passage aren’t good.

    Also to blame for the expected slow down are historically low natural gas prices. As huge shale gas reserves are starting to hit the market electric utilities will likely favor cheaper natural gas power plants over more expensive wind farms.

    Overall, over the next 15 years, the IHS forecasts robust investments averaging more than $330 billion in new wind investments, of which 90 percent will support onshore wind projects. The Midwest, Great Plains and Rocky Mountain states will act as major wind export hubs. Offshore wind is expected to account for only 5 percent of total U.S. wind build by 2025.

    Map: IHS Emerging Energy Research

  • R6 by 6876 Capandula Pilot Bag

    Canvas bags are a must for getting around the streets this time of year. R6 by 6876 has the Capandula Pilot Bag which should work well with whatever you are trying to store and transport from point A to B. It’s also a stylish and functional way to keep items with features such as webbing handles, stud zippers and pockets, detachable shoulder straps, pouch pockets and more. And the fact that it’s showerproof is even a bigger plus. Available now at Scoutthestore.










  • Lawmakers approve controversial video gambling bill

    Posted by David Kidwell and Ray Long at 3:23 p.m.; updated at 3:53 p.m.



    A controversial video poker bill state gambling regulators fear will allow the operators of illegal machines to stay in business throughout the state was approved 81-26 Wednesday in the Illinois House.



    The measure, which expands on the General Assembly’s legalization of video gambling in bars and restaurants last year, now goes to Gov. Pat Quinn for final approval.

    The legislation seeks to define the Illinois Gaming Board’s power to deny licenses. Gaming board Chairman Aaron Jaffe says the legislation would require a felony conviction on gambling charges before regulators could deny a license to operate video gambling machines in
    Illinois. He criticized the measure as a “disaster” for gambling enforcement in Illinois.

    But supporters said the legislation would allow a variety of ways to deny a person a license, ranging from a gambling-related conviction to having a shady past.

    The provision was quietly amended to a bill without opposition in the Senate earlier this month, but has stirred quite a debate since gambling regulators were made aware of it.



    “My main concern with this bill is that it is midnight legislation adopted just a short time before the end of the session,” said Art Bilek, executive vice president of the Chicago Crime Commission. “It it is such a good thing for the people of this state, then why did it have to be done in such a surreptitious manner.”



    The bill is designed to rein in a new gaming board rule that would have required applicants to attest under oath that they had never operated the machines before they were legalized.



    It was shepherded by some well-connected lobbyists for the Illinois Coin Machine Operators Association, including Joseph Berrios, a longtime ally of House Speaker Michael Madigan and Madigan’s choice to become the next Cook County assessor.



    Berrios, who also is the chairman of the Cook County Democratic Party, has been spending time campaigning for assessor and lobbying for the bill. His campaign issued a statement praising the legislature for its favorable vote.



    "I’m pleased that I could help get this bill passed during such a difficult fiscal time," Berrios said in an e-mail from his campaign. "However, as I have noted since last fall, once I become assessor I will resign as a lobbyist and my sole priority will be serving the people of Cook County with fairness and efficiency."



    Berrios and other supporters of the measure have argued that Jaffe’s rule is too broad and vague to be applied in an even-handed way. They say the gaming board retains authority to deny video gambling licenses for wide range of reasons.



    "At a time when the state is struggling for revenue, this measure will bring in $250 million to $500 million a year for use in state capital projects like roads and school construction," Berrios said. “It’s a win-win for the state. Our unemployment rate is at an all-time high and our schools are crumbling. This new revenue will help in so many ways."

    In addition to what critics call an “amnesty” provision for all those operators who have been illegally paying off on the video machines, the bill also extends to truck stops and VFW posts the right to operate the machines. Last year’s law only allowed bars and restaurants to operate the video poker games.

    Rep. Lou Lang, D-Skokie, told colleagues on the House floor the Gaming Board already has “broad and substantial powers” to deny a license to anyone found by the board to have a criminal record, bad reputation or activities that would pose a threat to the public.

     

    At the center of the debate is that the Gaming Board created a rule that determined any establishment caught operating illegal games after Dec. 16 would be unable to get licensed, Lang said.



    But he argued that the board “curiously” added a provision that said anyone operating illegal games before Dec. 16 “may” be unable to be licensed, a standard that was too vague.



    Thousands of potential applicants “have a right to know the rules and regulations and laws and statutes … don’t say ‘may,’” Lang said. “They have a right to know … what will be investigated and what won’t be investigated.”



    Lang also advanced a follow-up proposal that would allow a restaurant to have video games in its own establishment if it, for example, rents space to an off-track betting parlor. The restaurant and OTB parlor would be prohibited from sharing proceeds from the video gambling.



    Anti-gambling activist Anita Bedell told the House Executive Committee that the move represented a further “foot in the door” to a broader expansion of gambling throughout Illinois. The panel voted 10-1, sending the legislation to the full House.

  • Sandra Bullock Will Accept “MTV Generation Award” During 2010 MTV Movie Awards

    Academy Award winner Sandra Bullock will forge her career comeback at the MTV Movie Awards in Universal City next month.

    “She will be attending,” the actress’ rep confirmed to PEOPLE Magazine on Wednesday in response to online reports that Bullock would appear at the annual show. The appearance will be the star’s first on the red carpet since husband Jesse James admitted to mass infidelity in a headline-snatching sex scandal in March.

    The Blind Side star — who is nominated for Best Female Performance, Best Kiss, and Best Comedic Performance at the event — will be honored with the coveted MTV Generation Award, the network said Wednesday.

    “Sandra Bullock will receive the MTV Generation Award during the 2010 MTV Movie Awards for her riveting and diverse contributions to the film industry and for entertaining generations of the MTV audience over the last two decades. The first female recipient to be honored with this revered award, Bullock is one of the most accomplished, multifaceted and beloved actresses of her time. She has made legions of moviegoers both laugh and cry through heartfelt and wide-ranging roles that continue to break the mold and box-office records,” MTV Chief Stephen Friedman said in a release.

    “Sandra is one of those rare individuals who is adored by our audience as both an actress and a role model. Recognizing her remarkable talent, amazing range of films and her visceral connection to our audience around the globe, we are honored to present her with our ‘MTV Generation Award.’”

    Hosted by Aziz Ansari, the 2010 MTV Movie Awards will broadcast live from the Gibson Amphitheater in Universal City, Calif., on Sunday, June 6 at 9PM/8PM C.


  • Copyright Infringement Charged Over Tao Te Ching… Which Is Only Two Millennia Old

    It’s not often you hear of a copyright claim concerning a text that was supposedly written more than 2,500 years ago. The Hollywood Reporter has the news that Wayne Dyer, a “self-help” guru, has been sued for copyright infringement for using text from “Tao Te Ching: A New English Version,” by Stephen Mitchell, in his own book. But, of course, if the Tao Te Ching is from two plus millennia ago, what’s the copyright claim? Well, it turns out that Mitchell is now claiming that his new English version is very new indeed. So new that it’s not actually a translation at all, but more or less his own version of what he thought the Tao Te Ching really meant:


    As a result, “rather than provide a literal translation, the book embodies language that conveys Mitchell’s version of Lao-tzu’s meaning and the spirit of his teaching,” the complaint says. “Accordingly, Mitchell’s book is a highly original work.”

    If true, there certainly could be a new copyright on the work, though it does seem a bit odd to rewrite it, and then still call it the Tao Te Ching. Basically, it looks like Mitchell wants the best of both worlds. To be able to pretend his version is the ancient version when it works for marketing purposes, but then to consider a brand new work when it comes to copyright.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • HTC HD2 extended battery demoed

    Pocketnow have uploaded this video showing the HTC HD2 Official Extended battery in action.  They report the 2300 mAh battery, which costs about $50 ad also fits the US HD2, provides up to 2.5 days of active use, which seems pretty low for the bulk, but the kick stand still looks pretty cool and does a lot to make up for the brick-like nature of the resulting unit.

    The battery is available from Clove here.

    Read more at Pocketnow here.


  • MeeGo 1.0 for Netbooks Released

    It wasn’t that long ago that Moblin and Maemo joined forces to form the MeeGo variant of Linux for mobile devices. In a rush to release, MeeGo 1.0 for Netbooks is available as a free download for those of you who like to play with alternate OSes. Brad Linder of Liliputing grabbed MeeGo and has recorded a video overview of the OS running on his MSI Wind netbook. MeeGo looks surprisingly complete and even though Brad is running it on a USB flash drive it is very responsive. It looks very much as I would expect Chrome OS to eventually look like.

    Brad’s only physical problem with MeeGo was getting it downloaded, the installation was without event and he seems pleased with the results. There is an app store cleverly dubbed the MeeGo Garage, but it is a garage that is currently pretty bare with little content available. MeeGo is using the Chrome browser and in the video response is good and browsing is nice. I like the MeeGo “zones” that make working with running programs very easy to do. The whole running experience is optimized for small screens with good mouse controls. If you try MeeGo, let us know in the comments how it is working for you.

    Related research on GigaOM Pro (sub req’d): Report: The Future of Netbooks



    Atimi: Software Development, On Time. Learn more about Atimi »

  • Rock Band 3’s Keyboard Is Actually a Keytar? [Accessories]

    The keyboard accessory we were looking forward to in Rock Band 3 is supposedly actually a KEYTAR. Good, I suppose, for mobility and rockitude, but not for learning how to actually play the keybo…oh god I’ve become an old man. [Ars Technica] More »










    MusicArts and EntertainmentRock Band 3Bands and ArtistsCanada

  • Morris Stockholm – Spring/Summer 2010 Collection

    Morris Stockholm’s Spring/Summer 2010 collection is a mixture of high class prep, beach wear, and casual day attires. The brand has a very colorful way of telling their fashion story this season and it extends not just from your regular slacks and tops worn in the city, but also to the life around the beach. There’s a dandyesque quality to the range which some will appreciate, especially if a coastal vacation is in your sites this summer.

    Continue reading for more images.



























  • EVO’s Front-Facing Camera Shows Mirrored Image… Tsk Tsk

    Our buddy Andrew over at Androinica has brought up something rather disturbing about the EVO’s front-facing camera–it shows everything as a mirrored image. This “glitch” shows itself when taking photos, videos, and while video chatting/streaming.

    When video chatting with Skype, for example, the program will show you as a mirror image to yourself (since people are used to looking in the mirror) , but to the person you’re speaking with, it will show you normally, as you’d appear if he or she was looking right at you. However, on the EVO, you still show up as a mirror image to your friend. This is very strange behavior for a camera. You can see exactly what I’m talking about if you watch my video of Qik in action (pay attention to when the guy swipes his hand up and down when demonstrating the delay).

    Click here to view the embedded video.

    When you use the camera on the back of the phone, images and videos come out normally. Why should the front-facing one be any different? Since the problem exists in both the camera app as well as Qik, it’s safe to say that the problem is due to a software issue on HTC’s part. As far as we know, there’s no way to manually flip it back to normal. This can probably be fixed with a simple software update, though we don’t know if HTC, or Sprint, has anything in the works.

    I have sent an email to Sprint regarding the issue and will update this post if I hear anything back.

    Might We Suggest…

    • The EVO 4G in Action; Qik Video Chatting Rocks
      Last night I attended the Sprint EVO 4G event in New York city. Of course, I brought along my handy little video camera, just in case I saw something you AndroidGuys would like. Sure enough, Sprint ai…


  • Apple Bites Microsoft, Becomes World's Most Valuable Tech Company

    Apple overtook Microsoft this afternoon as the world’s most valuable technology company, and the second most valuable US company behind Exxon Mobil (as if it needed a spotlight).

    Apple shares rose 1.8
    percent, giving the company a value of $227.1 billion, as shares of Microsoft fell, which gave the company a market
    capitalization of $226.3 billion, according to the New York Times.

    Where’s Google, you wonder? A bit behind, with a market cap value of about $150 billion according to Yahoo Finance. Rounding out the top six, as of March 2010, according to the Financial Times Global 500, are Wal-mart, Berkshire Hathaway, and General Electric.






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  • PH.D. Public Defense

    CAUSAL PRODUCT KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT
    by
    Yun Seon Kim
    Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering
    Advisor: Kyoung-Yun Kim, Ph.D.
    May 28th 2010 from 2pm -4pm at Conference room in the IME building (4815 4th St., Detroit)

     

    Abstract


    The US engineering industry base is facing a significant loss of knowledge due to large numbers of employees retiring in the next decade. Problems in various product developments including product design may arise when the expertise is no longer available or the knowledge is forgotten. Also, most of product design knowledge is not reusable, because product design knowledge in an organization
    remains un-codified. Generally, knowledge-based system can solve or infer these problems. However, knowledge-based systems have been developed solely through the use of rule-based approach, which allows for easy modeling of expert reasoning, but such an approach is not general and for a specific use;
    thus, existing experience and analyses show that this approach has serious limitations on associations between observable findings and diagnostic hypotheses. Furthermore, the product development knowledge cannot be appropriately acquired, represented, and reused by these techniques. To address
    these challenges, this research develops new methodologies and tools to capture, represent, store, and reuse domain knowledge from experts and implement a novel web-based causal product design knowledge management system to systematically utilize the knowledge from experts, who are currently
    working or retired. The particular emphasis is on these research areas: 1) design knowledge acquisition,2) causal knowledge representation, 3) causal knowledge evaluation and index, 4) causal knowledge integration, 5) and causal design knowledge management system.

  • From Ivy to military

    On the eve of their graduation from Harvard College, 11 of the military’s newest officers received their commissions at a ceremony today (May 26) in crowded, sun-splashed Tercentenary Theatre.

    Honored from the Class of 2010 were David F. Boswell, Josue Guerra, Sarah A. Harvey, and Karl J. Kmiecik (U.S. Army second lieutenants); Talya Havice and Shawna L. Sinnott (U.S. Marine Corps second lieutenants); and Joshua D. Foote, Michael B. Kaehler, Christi E. Morrissey, Katherine E. O’Donnell, and Olivia Volkoff (U.S. Navy ensigns).

    A 10th student, Alex Prado, will receive his U.S. Army commission this summer. He graduates Thursday (May 27) with a master’s degree in public policy from the Harvard Kennedy School.

    Administering their oaths was Michael G. Vickers, U.S. assistant secretary of defense for special operations, low-intensity conflict, and interdependent capabilities. During the 1980s, he masterminded the Central Intelligence Agency’s arming of the Mujahideen rebels in Afghanistan, a step that many say spelled doom for invading Soviet troops.

    Vickers thanked the parents of the new officers for instilling in them “honor, courage, respect, and selfless service.”

    He called the dozen students arrayed on stage “the very best our nation has to offer,” praising them for volunteering in a time of war. “You have elected to forgo a more comfortable life,” said Vickers, a Special Forces soldier from 1973 to 1986, “and with eyes wide open have courageously and selflessly offered to put yourselves in harm’s way on behalf of your fellow citizens.”

    He warned them too, saying that the hardest challenges are still ahead, and that to surmount those obstacles they would do well to listen to the combat-seasoned soldiers under their command.

    Former interim U.S. Sen. Paul G. Kirk Jr. ’60, J.D. ’64, a Boston lawyer and veteran — as well as a Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (ROTC) graduate at Harvard — offered more words of praise and advice.

    “You were the first in your class to answer a fundamental question,” he said of the new officers, not “What shall I do with my Harvard degree? No, your question was more profound. You asked yourselves … what shall I do with my citizenship?”

    Kirk added, “A Harvard College education also teaches us to remember always our responsibilities as American citizens.”

    He praised the students for volunteering. “In doing so, you bring honor to yourselves and to your families. You bring honor to your classmates and to this University, and — not least — you have honored your country.”

    Kirk was an aide to U.S. Sen. Robert F. Kennedy during his presidential run in 1968, served as chairman of the Democratic National Committee, and most recently filled a Senate seat following the death of Sen. Edward M. “Ted” Kennedy of Massachusetts.

    Harvard President Drew Faust, herself the daughter of a decorated World War II veteran, was also on hand, as she always is during ceremonies honoring the University’s links to the military.

    “Take what Harvard has given you,” she told the new officers, praising them for their fitness, intellect, and courage. “Generate a new surge of ideas to use in the nation’s service. Help reinforce the long tradition of ties between Harvard and the military, as we share hopes that changing circumstances will soon enable us to further strengthen those bonds.”

    Student cadets and midshipmen drill and study with units at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. This year, Harvard has 20 undergraduates enrolled in ROTC.

    A pioneering former ROTC member took a bow at the ceremony, Charles “Chuck” DePriest ’77. He cross-enrolled at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, opening a new route — after much University debate — to such training. A radiologist, DePriest spent 10 years on active duty with the U.S. Air Force and retired as a major. With him was Oscar “Butch” DePriest ’74, who took his ROTC commission while in dental school at Boston University. He is a brigadier general in the U.S. Army Reserves.

    The brothers are great-grandsons of Chicago Republican Oscar Stanton De Priest (1871-1951), the son of former slaves who was the first African American elected to Congress in the 20th century.

    Just before the ceremony, David Boswell ’10 stood waiting, his uniformed shoulders bare of insignia. Behind him was a boyhood in the Solomon Islands, where he scoured the jungles for World War II artifacts. Ahead is a career as an officer in the Army Medical Service Corps, where he will train as a medical evacuation helicopter pilot.

    Is ROTC the end of a long adventure? “Yes,” said Boswell, “and the beginning of another long adventure.”