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  • Review: 2010 Volkswagen GTI – It’s got its mojo workin’ again

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    2010 Volkswagen GTI – click above for high-res image gallery
    In 1983, Run-DMC was fresh (which meant dope), Volvo 760 Turbos weighed 3,300 pounds and the 2,200-pound Volkswagen GTI made its U.S. debut. In 2010, the Rabbit-turned-Golf entered its sixth generation and attempted to draw a clear line to the first-generation car. The historical link has been made especially clear in the 2010 Volkswagen GTI, though it’s gone through the typical changes you face when you hit your 30s. The GTI is now 1,000 pounds porkier, but it’s still as slick as a greased pig when it comes to handling.

    Inside, there’s plaid seat upholstery and higher-quality materials. Just like it was back in ’83, the underhood motivation is only available from a four-cylinder, a change from recent generations that could be stuffed with Volkswagen’s VR6. At a glance, the 2010 model promises to be more visceral than its direct predecessors, but does it come anywhere near the primal magic of the original, or is it just playing dress-up? Click through to the jump to find out.

    Photos by John Neff / Copyright (C)2010 Weblogs, Inc.

    Continue reading Review: 2010 Volkswagen GTI – It’s got its mojo workin’ again

    Review: 2010 Volkswagen GTI – It’s got its mojo workin’ again originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 26 May 2010 11:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • No Color Kindles In Near Future, Says Amazon

    Even though the company that manufactures the Kindle e-reader for Amazon has already developed color screens that still utilize the Kindle’s E Ink technology, the e-tailer’s CEO says a full-color Kindle isn’t on the immediate horizon.

    Talking to shareholders at a meeting in Seattle yesterday, Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos commented that the technology needed for a colorized Kindle is “still not ready for prime-time production” and that any plans to release their e-reader with a color screen are “still a long way out.”

    The lack of color in Kindles has been one of the main reasons some consumers have selected products like the Apple iPad, whose LCD display operates in full color.

    Color Kindle still ‘a long way out’ says Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos
    [NY Daily News]

  • Rob Glaser, RealNetworks Founder, Joins Accel Partners, Looks to Connect VC Firm with Seattle Entrepreneurs

    Rob Glaser
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Rob Glaser, the founder, chairman, and former CEO of Seattle-based RealNetworks (NASDAQ: RNWK), announced yesterday that he has joined Accel Partners, the Silicon Valley-based VC firm, as a part-time venture partner. Glaser will focus on digital media, social media, and mobile service investments—and he’ll do it from the Seattle area.

    Accel invested in RealNetworks back in 1995, so the two have a longstanding relationship. In an interview with Kara Swisher of All Things Digital, Glaser gushed, “I have never seen a more entrepreneurially aligned venture firm.”

    In a more in-depth chat with Dan Primack of PE Hub, Glaser said, “My sector focus will be on social media and the social intersection of mobile with physical location and other characteristics. The second element of my focus is that I’m Seattle-based, so I hope to introduce Accel to lots of great local entrepreneurs. There are four major mobile companies here—T-Mobile is headquartered here and AT&T is about half here—and we have a great tradition of mobile entrepreneurship like McCaw and others. Plus Microsoft—of which I’m an alum—Real, and Amazon.” (Check out the interview for tidbits on Glaser’s departure from Real, VC pitfalls, and political aspirations.)

    In any case, hiring Glaser seems like a shrewd move by a venture firm that, like all its competitors, needs to bolster its entrepreneurial talent, connections, and horsepower in a very challenging time for VC returns. If there’s anyone who might have a unique take on the opportunities at the intersection of mobile technology, physical location, and social media, it’s Glaser.

    Prior to RealNetworks, Glaser was a 10-year Microsoft veteran and, before that, the founder of Ivy Research, a maker of games for IBM personal computers (in 1981, while he was an undergrad at Yale University). Glaser has also been an early-stage angel investor in companies including TellMe, PlanetOut, and SmileBox.







  • Djou Faces Hawaiian Electorate That’s More Pro-Democrat Than Pro-Incumbent

    Even before Rep. Charles Djou (R-Hawaii) was sworn in Tuesday, less than a week after his special election victory against a pair of feuding Democrats, pundits were already debating whether he would be able to win a full term in November. One thing some believe will work in his favor is his incumbency — and conventional wisdom states that Hawaii is one of the most pro-incumbent states in the nation. But at least one political expert says what appears to be state voters’ pro-incumbency attitude is actually just a case of being pro-Democrat.

    “Generally I don’t think it’s any different than the rest of the country, which votes incumbents in most of time,” said Neal Milner, a political science professor at the University of Hawaii. “I think what’s important about Hawaii is not incumbency, it’s how strong it is for the Democrats.”

    Djou won May 22 with only 39.4 percent of the vote, while his two Democratic opponents split a combined 58.4 percent. The district he now represents, which mainly covers the Honolulu metropolitan area, is overwhelmingly Democratic — Obama bested McCain here 70-28 percent. Before Saturday, the district had also not previously elected a Republican since 1988, when Pat Saiki won what would be her only re-election campaign. Djou has history on his side: In the more than 50 years since Hawaii became the 50th state, its voters have never voted out an incumbent member of its congressional delegation. But before his election, just two of those incumbents were Republicans: Saiki and Sen. Hiram Fong.

    While voters have soured nationally on incumbents, even in their own districts, Hawaiians have somewhat bucked the trend. In a poll released March 26, Rasmussen Reports found that 51 percent of state voters felt their local representative deserved re-election, while 28 did not. (The broader meaning of that poll, though, is dubious, since at the time of its release, Hawaii had only one representative in Congress, the popular Mazie Hirono.) They were evenly divided about incumbents nationally — 38 percent said it was better for most incumbents to be re-elected while 37 percent felt most incumbents should be defeated.

    A national Rasmussen poll released February 9 — the poll released closest to the Hawaii one — showed a far more anti-incumbent electorate. Just 38 percent of voters thought their local representative deserved re-election, while 39 percent did not. Sixty-three percent felt it was better for most incumbents to lose re-election, while 19 percent disagreed.

    The dynamics that have affected politics in the continental United States over the past year — particularly the emergence of the Tea Party movement — have not influenced Hawaii’s races to the same degree, Milner said.

    “We haven’t had the degree of outside anger and anti-incumbency pressure that you see elsewhere,” he said. “I’m still a little bit skeptical about how much that’s going to make a difference by the time November rolls around nationally, but right now Hawaii doesn’t have that same kind of dynamic.”

    That may change now, as the national parties appear poised to do battle over Djou’s seat.

    “The national parties don’t even send people out here for the pr0esidential elections,” Milner said. “It’s not worth the resources generally because they’re not close elections. So this really is different, and I think it’s going to change the nature of the campaign just since the National Republican Congressional Committee already did a lot of strategizing to affect the race between the two Democrats. This is not something that I’ve ever seen.”

    While the state remains largely Democratic, Milner said, Djou has a chance of winning a full term if he runs the right kind of race.

    “Djou’s a good campaigner,” Milner said. “I think he’s got options. None of them are particularly good, but they’re about as good as you’re going to get for a minority party there. One option is to try to mobilize the anger and get the independents to vote Republican. Another is to argue in ways that bring other left-leaning independents over to his party. The Republican base is small enough that he can’t rely on that, so he’s got to figure out other things. So one of the things is to see if he can mobilize some of that anger. But he’s not that kind of guy.”

    The Democratic primary campaign continues to be nasty as tensions persist between former Rep. Ed Case and Sen. Daniel Inouye, who strongly backed state Senate President Colleen Hanabusa’s candidacy in the special election. If the Democrats remain divided up to the Sept. 18 primary, Djou may be able to exploit their divisions again, Milner said.

    “The best thing Djou may have going for him is all the antagonism that the Democratic primary may create,” he said. “That may move independent voters, who already lean a little more to the right nationally than they did two years ago, into Djou’s camp. But he’s got a problem because of the numbers.”

  • Universities push more cleantech discoveries out of lab, into market

    Scientists researching the chemical and physical sciences related to cleantech have struggled to commercialize their discoveries. Slowly, though, change is afoot. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), University of Michigan, Stanford University, and University of California (UC) Berkeley all have developed strong programs to help scientists start thinking earlier about the applications of their research and to ensure that their discoveries make the transition from the lab to the real world. “While a lot of the dot-com start-ups were started by students out of their dorm rooms or basements, in the cleantech world you need a lot more than a desktop and a good internet-based idea,” says Shawn Lesser, president and founder of Atlanta-based venture fund Sustainable World Capital. That’s the same conundrum VCs and other investors face when looking at cleantech. While most big-name VCs cut their teeth and made their first millions on IT investments that required little upfront capital, the majority of cleantech investments require lab space, teams of scientists, and time.

    Increasingly, private companies are stepping up to fund more cleantech research at the university level. And as private investors and venture funds demonstrate interest in university research, scientists are becoming more savvy about how their work might translate into commercialization. For example, universities have started everything from cleantech incubators and student-led cleantech venture funds (University of Michigan) to high-profile cleantech prizes (MIT) to cleantech-focused research institutes (Stanford). These institutions and others are benefiting more now than they ever have from private investment in cleantech research.

    UC Berkeley also has launched a Cleantech-to-Market (C2M) program, pairing students from the business school — as well as a handful of students from law and engineering programs — with scientists conducting cleantech-related research. The idea, at least initially, was to give business students a real-life case study to work on. But the business students also improved the scientists’ ideas. “They took my ideas, put a creative spin on them, and went in a direction I hadn’t even thought of,” says Cyrus Wadia, co-director of the C2M program, who earned a PhD in UC Berkeley’s Energy Resources Group and has been researching ways to develop photovoltaic solar cells from earth-abundant materials to make solar energy affordable and accessible worldwide.

    Source:  SolveClimate.com

  • A Q&A With Google Chrome’s UI Designer [Chrome]

    Lifehacker’s got a quick Q&A with one of Chrome OS‘s UI designers. It’s quite interesting if you want to get into their mindset about how they make a browser into an entire OS. Plus, they’re thinking about touch! [Lifehacker] More »










    GoogleGoogle ChromeLifehackerClientsWWW

  • Innova Dynamics Raises $5.5 Million Series A Financing

    Innova Dynamics, a developer of advanced materials that can be used in the cleantech industry, has raised $5.5 million as part of an inaugural financing led by Rho Ventures. MentorTech Ventures also participated in this Series A round.

    Innova, a spinout of the University of Pennsylvania, says it will use the cash to scale and commercialize its flagship Innlay technology.

    The company launched in 2007 as a developer of water purification technologies but is now looking to deploy its IP across various industries, including greentech. We’ve called Innova in Philadelphia for more details on what the Innlay technology does and its potential applications. We will post with any update.

    In a prepared statement Innova Dynamics CEO Alexander Mittal, said:

    Innova Dynamics’ initial business priority is to focus the commercialization efforts of the company’s flagship Innlay(tm) technology.

  • The Next iPhone Is Due Mid-June? [Rumor]

    According to BGR’s source in AT&T, the next iPhone will be available in June, and “not even late June.” Such seems incredible, but not impossible, given that we haven’t seen the new iPhone appear at the FCC yet. [BGR] More »










    IPhoneSmartphoneHandheldsAppleBGR

  • LG Fathom (Verizon) – Unboxing and Hands-On

    Is this the last Windows Mobile 6.5 phone ever? Noah gets the LG Fathom for Verizon out of its box and into the wild.


  • Nissan LEAF Pre-Orders Reach 13,000; LEAF “Sold Out”

    Despite some serious efforts by nearly every major automaker to get an electric car on the roads within the next five years, EVS are still being met with a lot of skepticism. Some say the limited range will lock it into city driving, and others are say the driving public isn’t ready to jump behind the wheel of something so similar to a gas-car, and yet so different.

    Don’t tell that to Nissan though. The Japanese company’s LEAF electric car has been met with thunderous applause. Now, just a little over a month after Nissan sent out the first pre-order emails, CEO Carlos Ghosn has announced that the first 3 months of LEAF supply is officially “sold out” with 13,000 $99 reservations on the books.

    (more…)

  • I eat weeds

    by Steph Larsen.

    The first edible plant to poke its head out
    of the ground at my farm early this spring wasn’t lettuce, arugula,
    broccoli, or any other hardy plant widely seen at early farmers
    markets.

    It was stinging nettles.

    As a child, I nicknamed Urtica dioica “itch weed” because of the blistering rash that appears if you brush
    against it. It wasn’t until graduate school that I found out nettles
    are edible once dried or sautéed, which neutralizes the tiny stinging hairs they have.

    After this past long Nebraska winter, I was
    starving for something fresh and green, so when I found them growing in
    our field I grabbed my garden gloves and started harvesting. Brian, my partner, took a little convincing when I suggested we make rotini alfredo with
    nettles, but he was brave. I’m happy to report that he thought they had
    a pleasant, nutty flavor. I think it’s the only time I’ve chopped
    anything for dinner with gloves on, but I’ll bet it’s not my last.

    The
    rest of the yard began sprouting not long after the nettles appeared,
    and we discovered a carpet of violets between our outbuildings. The
    purple and white flowers made a nice contrast with the yellow
    dandelions, and I knew then that spring had arrived.

    I was
    surprised, then, when Brian started picking the flowers and munching
    them while we pondered where to put the garden. Turns out that violets
    have a fresh taste and a pleasant crunch that goes well with deep
    thinking. I was so excited about this that I briefly considered
    planting our 5-acre pasture entirely to violets and selling the edible
    flowers to high-end restaurants to use in salads and as garnish,
    thereby making a fortune.

    Clearly Mother Nature was listening
    when I joked about this plan, and she is not without a sense of irony.
    By far the biggest weed problem I have in my garden right now is
    violets. It seems that when violets are tilled, the broken root pieces
    are still viable and can sprout new plants. I’ve tried to make a deal
    with the violets that they can have the rest of the yard if I can have
    just my garden violet-free, but so far they haven’t taken me up on it.

    The word “weed” has such a negative connotation, but really weeds are just “plants out of place,” as someone once said. I’m
    starting to realize that plants I didn’t intentionally put on our farm
    can be very useful. For example, I don’t think of it as “mowing grass”
    at our house—instead, we’re harvesting mulch for the sapling trees
    we planted. The wild asparagus is delicious, the bromegrass keeps the sheep fed while the pasture grows, and the garden phlox makes my house smell lovely. Someday I’d like to brew dandelion wine, but I think that’s for another year.

    Even kudzu, the invasive weed nicknamed “the vine that ate the South,”
    has important uses as a starchy food, a medicine to treat hangovers and
    control alcohol cravings, and for lotions and soaps. I first learned
    about kudzu from the book My Year of Meats by Ruth Ozeki,
    and it occurred to me then that one way to control a weed is to find
    enough ways to use the plant so that people want to harvest it.

    As
    useful as weeds can be, they can still get in the way of plants I’m
    trying to grow. Still, when I’m in a bad mood, there’s nothing quite as
    satisfying as to take my aggression out on a patch of stubborn
    crabgrass. Just don’t tell my neighbors, or soon I’ll have everyone
    inviting me over to weed their gardens, too.

    Recipe: Fettuccine with Nettle & Ricotta Pesto

    I use nettles in soup, pasta, eggs, sauteed with butter and garlic as a
    side—anywhere you’d use spinach or kale. But this recipe, courtesy
    of Mariquita Farm’s newsletter, looks especially tasty.
    Created by Armando “Tiny” Maes of Lavanda in Palo Alto, it serves 8 people.

    1 lb fettuccine (preferably fresh)
    1/2 pound nettles
    6 oz. ricotta
    5 oz. pine nuts
    1/4 cup pecorino
    2 tablespoons parmesan
    3 tablespoons green garlic (chopped)
    1 1/4 cup Olive Oil
    8 tablespoons sea salt
    6 tablespoons butter

    First, blanch the nettles in salted water. Bring a gallon of water and 4 tablespoons of the sea salt to a boil. Blanch for about 1 minute. (Trick:
    put the nettles in a strainer, then set the strainer in the pot of
    water. After a minute, take the strainer out. It saves having to
    fish the leaves out.) Roughly chop the cooked nettles and squeeze out
    excess water.

    Place the nettles into a blender or food processor; add
    oil, 4 ounces of pine nuts (saving the rest as a garnish), and the green
    garlic. Blend until all ingredients are combined, about 30 seconds to 1
    minute.

    Place the combined ingredients in a bowl, add pecorino,
    parmesan, and ricotta. Finish the pesto by folding in the three cheeses
    just until it looks like everything has come together.

    In
    a separate pot, bring 2 quarts water and the remaining 4 tablespoons of the sea salt to a boil to cook the
    pasta. (You should be able to taste the salt in the water; if not, add
    more.)

    In another large saucepan or large sauté pan, place about
    just less than half of the pesto mixture and 6 tablespoons butter and heat until hot but not boiling
    or popping. In the pot, cook the pasta for approximately 2 to 4 minutes, remove 1/4 cup
    of the pasta water and reserve in case you need to thin the pesto.

    Pull the pasta from the water, drain, and toss with the warmed pesto sauce,
    then cook on medium heat for just about 2 to 3 minutes so that the sauce has
    time to infuse into the pasta. Serve with good bread.

    Related Links:

    Feeling sheepish: An exercise in small-town networking

    What the Kerry-Lieberman climate bill means for farmers

    Ask Umbra on pasta, Clorox wipes, and a satisfied customer






  • Flash White BlackBerry 9700 now available from T-Mobile

    If you’re a fan of the BlackBerry 9700 but black just doesn’t go with your outfit, I’ve got some good news for you today.  The “Flash White” colored T-Mobile branded BlackBerry 9700 is now available to purchase online via T-Mobile.  If you want to sign your life away, you can get the phone for $99.99 after a $50 mail in rebate, or if you’re like me and don’t want to be tied down, $449 will get you the phone with no strings attached (just a dent in your wallet).  I just checked out the Best Buy website and they are also carrying the device, though it appears to be on backorder already.  The site claims the device will ship from the warehouse in 1-2 weeks (if I read it right).  Chances are when it’s no longer on backorder you’ll be able to get similar pricing sans the $50 MIR (they usually take care of that for you instantly).  Now if only I had the right shoes and belt to go along with it.  If a white BBerry is your thing, let us know in the comments!

    Via TmoNews


  • HTC Evo 4G to get an HDMI dock

    We’ll start with the bad news: according to some early stage testing done by PCMag, the HDMI output on the HTC Evo might kinda-sorta suck. While they haven’t quite pinned down the source of their woes, various TVs are all showing various issues.

    On the upside: it looks like the HTC Evo is getting a fancy-pants micro-HDMI docking port, making it super easy to blast content onto your TV without having stray cables everywhere.

    Them crazy cats over at AndroidAndMe scrounged up the shot above. That image up top contains just about everything we know so far: HTC EVO Docking Station! Coming Soon!

    No pricing or availability details beyond “soon” unfortunately — but seeing as the EVO 4G isn’t.. you know, available yet, there probably aren’t too many people dying to buy this. Except for I/O attendees, of course.


  • Docs to Go version 3.0 [#io2010]


    [YouTube link]

    Sat down (erm, stood up) at Google IO with our pals from Dataviz to take a look at Docs to Go version 3.0. We got a glimpse of it at Mobile World Congress in February, but now it’s ready for public consumption, though it won’t be available in the Android Market for a few more weeks. And if you’re looking for an easy method of syncing your important documents between your computer and phone, this is it. Check it out.

    This is a post by Android Central. It is sponsored by the Android Central Accessories Store

  • Peru judge orders release of US woman held for involvement with rebel group

    Photo source or description

    [JURIST] A Peruvian judge on Tuesday ordered the release of Lori Berenson [advocacy website], a US citizen held since 1995 for collaboration with a Marxist rebel organization. Judge Jessica Leon Yarango cited [press release, in Spanish] good behavior, Berenson’s renunciation of violence, and the completion of “re-education, rehabilitation and re-socialization,” in deciding to grant parole. Berenson will not be allowed to leave the country until her parole period has ended and must make monthly court appearances. The prosecution has appealed the decision. Berenson was arrested in 1995 for involvement with the Tupac Amaru Revolutionary Movement (MRTA) [GlobalSecurity backgrounder], a Marxist rebel group. She is alleged to have trained guerrillas [Guardian report] and moved weapons for the MRTA in addition to assisting the group in carrying out an attack on the Peruvian Congress [official website, in Spanish] by gaining access to the body using press credentials.

    In 2005, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights [official website] denied an appeal request to reinterpret its November 2004 ruling [JURIST reports] that upheld Berenson’s conviction. Lawyers for Berenson claimed that her trial failed to meet international standards for fairness, and sought to have her conviction and 20-year sentence overturned. In a 2000 CBS News interview [text], Berenson characterized her original trial proceedings as hostile and coercive, saying that she had faced a panel of hooded judges and that armed guards had aimed assault rifles at her and her lawyer’s heads during the 10-minute proceeding. She was initially sentenced to life imprisonment by a military court, but the sentence was reduced to 20 years in a civil retrial in 2001.

  • Hugh Hefner Stoli Vodka Campaign Spokesperson [Commercial]

    Better watch it, Diddy: Everyone’s favorite womanizing fossil is giving the ever-popular Ciroc Vodka a bit of competition at the bar after throwing his support behind Stoli Vodka instead. Hugh Hefner has signed on as the new face of the alcohol brand and is featured prominently in their new “Would You Have A Drink With You?” campaign.

    Stoli — which prides itself on being the first imported Russian vodka to the US and first vodka brand to launch a line of flavored vodkas — will be unveiling new limited-edition Stoli flavors in Pomengranik and Ohranj, stamped with the Playboy Bunny logo, available just in time for the holiday season.


  • Spy Shots: 2011 Mercedes-Benz CLS caught almost uncovered

    Spy Shots: 2011 Mercedes-Benz CLS

    The new Mercedes-Benz CLS was caught hanging out for a photo shoot prior to its debut at the 2010 Paris Motor Show in October. As you can see from the pictures, the next-generation CLS is heavily inspired by the Mercedes-Benz F800 Style Concept.

    The model in the pictures is the CLS 350CGI, which is powered by Mercedes-Benz’s V-Generation 3.5L engine making 302-hp and 273 lb-ft of torque.

    We’ll have more details later this year. For now check out the pictures over at AutoExpress.

    – By: Kap Shah

    Source: AutoExpress


  • Marc Faber: “The Banks Are Gone”

    Marc Faber spoke with Bloomberg Television about his bearish views on markets yesterday, and they remain as bearish as always.

    “The banks are gone,” according to Marc Faber, and are only being kept alive by European Central Bank and government aid programs.

    Faber, though, feels in the near term that things are oversold, and that there will be a summer rally. The bottom won’t get here until October and November, when more stimulus should come in and challenge sovereign debt yet again.

    Faber thinks the economy will settle much lower in the future.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Europe Is So Toast, Says Hedgeye’s Keith McCullough: France, Italy Will Crash Next

    You already know that Greece is bust and that Spain is probably right on its heels. But we bet you haven’t worried enough about the next European disaster-in-the-making–FRANCE.

    That’s right–the land of wine, cheese, and Lance Armstrong.  Keith McCullough, CEO and founder of research firm Hedgeye, says that upcoming debt maturities will blow up France (and Italy) as soon as next quarter.  And the U.S. is next.

    Don’t Miss..

    – How To Invest Like Warren Buffett And Peter Lynch

    – The Small Pool Of Smart VCs In New York Has Expanded

    Produced By: Kamelia Angelova & William Wei

    More Video: CLICK HERE >

     

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Take your passport and go, Amanpour says

    CNN international correspondent Christiane Amanpour urged Harvard’s graduating class to take a year before plunging into the job market and head overseas to work on the myriad problems facing the world.

    “I hope you will take this moment to think about traveling,” Amanpour said. “There is so much opportunity out in the developing part of the world … where I have been for the past 27-odd years. People are waiting for you. They’re waiting for an army of energetic idealists like you to help build small businesses, to run schools, to teach class … It will change your lives, and it will set you on the road to your future.”

    Amanpour, who has been a fixture on the front lines of conflicts and disasters overseas, was the main speaker for this year’s Class Day ceremonies, traditionally organized by the seniors and held the day before Commencement. In her 25-minute speech Wednesday (May 26), Amanpour hearkened back to the Marshall Plan, the massive European aid effort unveiled at Harvard’s 1947 Commencement by Secretary of State George Marshall. Just two years after the end of World War II, he outlined the assistance that was pivotal in helping Europe to rebuild from its rubble. Today, Amanpour said, America’s challenge is similar, involving stabilizing Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Yemen, and Haiti, all important to America’s peace and security.

    “Beyond the armies and treasure of the United States deployed to these places, they need armies of people like you who are graduating today, civilians wielding … high ideals, smart ideas, smartly deployed to really make development work,” Amanpour said.

    Amanpour delivered her address in Harvard Yard’s Tercentenary Theatre. Amanpour said she too was graduating, after a fashion, moving on after 27 years at CNN to host ABC’s Sunday morning “This Week” program.

    She was one of several speakers to address the seniors during Class Day, which offers a less formal setting than Commencement’s scripted rites and provides a chance for class members and College officials to address those attending.

    Harvard College Dean Evelynn Hammonds briefed the students on what was coming Commencement Day, describing the exercises as “full of incantation and free of explanation,” and warning the students that the time will likely pass quickly for them, joking that it may seem especially quick since they probably won’t be paying attention.

    Hammonds said the students will be sent into the world to “advance knowledge, promote understanding, and serve society,” goals she hoped they’d advance. She also added a personal farewell to the students and wished them luck.

    The ceremonies also featured two Harvard orations, delivered by MacKenzie Sigalos and Benjamin Schwartz, the humorous Ivy orations, delivered by James Wilsterman and Alexandra Petri, and remarks by class officers and the president-elect of the Harvard Alumni Association, Robert Bowie.

    Bowie said that though departing Harvard will be tinged with sadness for the students, they are embarking on an exciting journey. Although the closeness of House life will be gone, the students will become part of an alumni network that spans the world and can prove helpful virtually anywhere.

    The Ames Awards, given annually to the man and woman who have dedicated themselves to service, this year went to Talya Havice, who took a leave from Harvard in 2001 to join the Marine Corps and who was commissioned a second lieutenant earlier in the afternoon, and Adam Travis, who worked tirelessly for the Harvard Square Homeless Shelter.

    Amanpour, who got her start at then-fledgling CNN in 1983 after graduating from the University of Rhode Island, urged students to take risks and work in some field that they’re passionate about, that will spur them to work hard, and increase their chances of becoming successful.

    “Mastery, mission, purpose: Those … were my greatest motivators,” Amanpour said. “Right now, I passionately wish for all of you to find something that sets you on fire, that fills you with joy, and love, and commitment.”

    Despite the economic difficulties now facing journalism, Amanpour said, there is still as large a need for quality, professional journalism as ever. Amanpour called journalism “a public trust” and a critical element of democracy.

    Other prominent speakers who have headlined Class Day include NBC’s “Today” show anchor Matt Lauer last year, Federal Reserve Board chairman Ben Bernanke in 2008, and former President Bill Clinton in 2007. Earlier speakers have ranged from the serious (humanitarian Mother Teresa) to the silly (comedian Sacha Baron Cohen).