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  • Condé Nast And Adobe Return From Drawing Board With iPad App


    Wired iPad Launch Cover

    The tablet version of Wired magazine was in the final steps of preparation last month when Apple (NSDQ: AAPL) launched released its iPad last month, but the use of non-compatible Adobe (NSDQ: ADBE) Flash as a key feature in the mag’s app caused the publisher’s and the tech company’s developers to race back to the drawing board. So, after a feverish few weeks of revamping the Wired app in compliance with Apple’s no-Flash rules, the digitized June issue was approved for sale in the iTunes Store on Friday and became available for sale at $4.99—the same as the newsstand price—a few minutes before midnight on Wednesday.

    At a demo for the Wired app, Condé Nast editorial director Tom Wallace was quick to get the controversy between Apple and Adobe out of the way.  “We’re happy with Adobe and Adobe is extremely happy,” he said. “The partnership with continue at least through the summer and probably into 2011.” He conceded that the process for preparing the Wired was complicated by Apple’s decision to ban Adobe Flash from its apps. “But only a little,” Wallace was quick to add.

    The release of Wired for the iPad represents the ideal for what Condé Nast wants for its digital magazines—at least at this early stage. Over the past few months, the publisher has created iPhone and iPad paid apps for GQ and, most recently, Vanity Fair. Those apps do satisfy certain goals Condé Nast has said it wants from its digital replicas, including counting towards paid circ under the Audit Bureau of Circulations measurements.

    The Wired iPad app promises to go a few steps further in terms of bringing more digital features like 360 image views to advertisers, in addition to the video and links to marketers’ sits that is currently offered to premium ads on the other apps. “We’re in the early days of this, and we’re still experimenting with how users experience it,” Wallace said, noting that the publisher’s R&D group is already planning enhancements for the next month. At the outset, the Wired app does come with a number of interesting bells and whistles. The app offers a number of ways to find content, including a “stacks” feature that lets users view magazine articles according to length. Like the previous apps, the bottom of the screen sports a “scrubber,” which allows for fast left/right scrolling through the pages.

    But the best aspect, at least for those with a wifi-only iPad, is that the Wired download comes as a complete package with all photos, videos, audio and animation, allowing users to continue their experience with or without an internet connection as they peruse the mag. That encouraged the editors and creative team to give 41 of the 61 editorial pieces an interactive component.

    Howard Mittman, Wired’s publisher, also noted that there are nine premium advertisers in the issue. While it wasn’t clear that the expectation of the June iPad issue—with Toy Story 3 on the cover—drove greater interest from advertisers, he did point out that mag pages were trending upward.

    Ultimately, the work on Wired has helped focus the R&D team and editors on what they want digital magazines to be. “There is a certain physicality to a magazine that we’re trying to preserve here,” said Scott Dadich, Wired’s creative director. “The magazine is not a website, and the website isn’t an app. So when it comes to designing features for each, we’re careful to see where overlaps occur and where they wouldn’t.”

    In trying to ensure the three formats remain distinct, Wired’s Wallace said that there was little concern that some readers would want opt to just read the website for free on Apple’s Safari browser than pay to download the digital magazine through iTunes. “That assumes that the audience for the web overlaps the person who buys the magazine,” he said. “That’s open to debate, but we think are some differences in the reader who comes to us from a search engine and one comes to Wired because they seek out the brand.”

    That idea that there are specific audience behaviors that can be reached through different vehicles also animates the thinking for the next big iPad app release this fall for Glamour. In addition to Wired, GQ and Vanity Fair, the R&D team is also working with The New Yorker, whose audience skews a bit older than the affluent, educated men and women who read VF, while Wired is almost 70 percent young men. “This structure will give us a broad overview of our audience and we expect to learn a lot of this summer,” Wallace said.

    At this point, the executives didn’t want to make any guesses for how well the Wired iPad app—the iPhone version will also be different and will be ready later this year—will do, though they said that GQ has so far sold 63,000 apps across both the iPhone and iPad since November. But because Apple doesn’t separate out how many are for the iPad, it’s a bit uncertain. Hence the reason for waiting a bit before releasing another version.

    Related


  • Oil fouls coast of Louisiana, no end is in sight

    Oil fouls coast of Louisiana, no end is in sight
    Author’s note: This is bad…really bad. Anyone else having nightmares about this? Excerpt: For weeks, the magnitude of the oil disaster in the Gulf has been something people have read about. Now it is reality for the residents on the coast of Louisiana. Even CNN, between sound bytes of the latest celebrity and entertainment news, reported that “there […]

  • Favored GOP Candidate Loses in Upset

    Favored GOP Candidate Loses in Upset
    Raul Labrador (R) won an upset primary victory in Idaho’s 1st congressional district last night, defeating military veteran Vaughn Ward (R), the favored candidate of the Washington Republican establishment, Politico reports.

    Labrador will face Rep. Walt Minnick (D-ID) in the general election.

    The Fix: “Ward becomes the latest establishment favorite to go down in defeat, although his loss will more likely be chalked up to his campaign’s myriad gaffes.”

    Obama Approval on the Rise
    A new Quinnipiac poll finds that 48% of American voters approve of the job President Obama is doing, while 43% disapprove.

    It’s the first time since December that more voters give him a thumbs up rather than thumbs down.

    Said pollster Peter Brown: “The increase in President Barack Obama’s job approval is a welcome step for the White House. His ratings have been in the no man’s land of just below parity for some time and now the question is whether this is the beginning of an upward trend or just a blip.”

    Democrats Grab Back Lead in Generic Ballot
    A new Quinnipiac poll finds American voters prefer a Democrat over a Republican in this year’s midterm elections by a 42% to 36% margin, reversing a 44% to 39% Republican lead just two months ago.

  • It’s Conference Time in Progressive America — Will You Be Attending?

    It’s Conference Time in Progressive America — Will You Be Attending?
    Summer is the season when American progressives gather to assess the political moment and mobilize their troops for the ongoing battle.

    Summer is the season when American progressives gather to assess the political moment and mobilize their troops for the ongoing battle.

    The Corporate Stranglehold: How BP Will Make out Like Bandits from Its Massive, Still Gushing Oil Disaster
    The existing $75 million cap on damages for offshore drilling companies is a bailout every bit as disgusting as those recently bestowed upon Wall Street.

    The existing $75 million cap on damages for offshore drilling companies is a bailout every bit as disgusting as those recently bestowed upon Wall Street.

    How Obama’s Election Drove the American Right Insane
    For huge numbers of dedicated right-wing Americans, November 5, 2008, was the end of the world. Or at least, the end of America as they knew it.

    For huge numbers of dedicated right-wing Americans, November 5, 2008, was the end of the world. Or at least, the end of America as they knew it.

    The Tea Party: At Last a Citizen Movement the Corporate Media Can Love
    The hateful, ignorant, haphazardly-organized Tea Party movement receives a level of press coverage few progressive citizen groups will ever see.

    The hateful, ignorant, haphazardly-organized Tea Party movement receives a level of press coverage few progressive citizen groups will ever see.

  • GE collaborates with LEEDCo to give US its first freshwater offshore wind farm

    offshore wind farm

    Eco Factor: Offshore wind farm uses direct-drive wind turbines.

    There is no denying that offshore wind power in the Great Lakes holds great potential, so to drive further growth of the industry GE and the non-profit Lake Erie Energy Development Corporation have come together. The duo has recently announced at the American Wind Energy Association’s annual WINDPOWER Conference in Dallas that they will jointly develop a wind farm off the shores of Ohio near Cleveland. The project is said to be the first fresh water offshore wind farm in the US.

    (more…)

  • Blogging & The Brain

    Blogging & The Brain
    There are two serious critiques of Internet culture circulating in the academy these days. The Internet is shortening your attention span, making it harder for you to do deep thinking. The Internet is turning us all into tribal denizens, only…


    Social SciencesPsychologyNicholas CarrWall Street JournalLondon

    Presented By:

    Nukes: How Low Can We Go?
    In an op-ed in today’s New York Times, Gary Schaub and James Forsyth make the case for a greatly reduced U.S. nuclear arsenal — a reduction of 4,802 warheads, to be exact. That would leave the total at 311. Their…

  • Lindsay Lohan May Lose Role In Willie Nelson-Assisted Movie “The Dry Gulch Kid”

    Lindsay Lohan wasn’t pulling our legs when she told a Los Angeles judge she had a movie lined up in Texas and therefore couldn’t afford to be fitted with a SCRAM bracelet and relegated to the confines of LA — the hard-partying starlet is in negotiations to star alongside music legend Willie Nelson.

    Nelson and actor Kerry Wallum recently launched their own production company, Luck Films, and are eager to get Lohan on board for the firm’s first film, The Dry Gulch Kid, Wallum told WENN Wednesday.

    “We are in negotiations with Lindsay and look forward to possibly working with her. The Dry Gulch Kid is a really good story and the film will feature myself, Willie Nelson and a host of other well-known names.”

    In court on Monday, Lohan’s lawyer Shawn Chapman Holley objected to strict restrictions placed on the actress by hardnosed judge Marsha Revel. Not only is Lohan prohibited from leaving the Los Angeles area, she must submit to random drug and alcohol testing, and keep a alcohol-detecting bracelet around her ankle at all times.


  • Arizona Superintendent: It?s A Big Problem If Teachers Have Accents And Pronounce ?Comma? As ?COH-ma?

    Arizona Superintendent: It?s A Big Problem If Teachers Have Accents And Pronounce ?Comma? As ?COH-ma?
    Late last month, the Wall Street Journal reported that the Arizona Department of Education “recently began telling school districts that teachers whose spoken English it deems to be heavily accented or ungrammatical must be removed from classes for students still learning English”: State education officials say the move is intended to ensure that students with limited […]

    Late last month, the Wall Street Journal reported that the Arizona Department of Education “recently began telling school districts that teachers whose spoken English it deems to be heavily accented or ungrammatical must be removed from classes for students still learning English”:

    State education officials say the move is intended to ensure that students with limited English have teachers who speak the language flawlessly. But some school principals and administrators say the department is imposing arbitrary fluency standards that could undermine students by thinning the ranks of experienced educators. […]

    This is just one more indication of the incredible anti-immigrant sentiment in the state,” said Bruce Merrill, a professor emeritus at Arizona State University who conducts public-opinion research.

    At one school, for example, state auditors complained that teachers pronounced “words such as violet as ‘biolet,’ think as ‘tink’ and swallow the ending sounds of words, as they sometimes do in Spanish.” The principal at that school acknowledged that teachers “should speak grammatically correct English” but said they shouldn’t be punished for having an accent.

    The man in charge of this project, far-right Arizona superintendent Tom Horne — who is running for attorney general — has been going on national media in recent days to defend his policies. Yesterday he went on Hannity, and this morning he went on Fox and Friends. Yesterday he was also on CNN and argued that he isn’t targeting teachers with accents — just people who use “faulty English.” However, the “faulty English” he cited was an example of someone having an accent:

    HORNE: We’re not going after any accents, including Spanish accents. It has to be faulty English. If students are being taught English, and they’re going to refer to a “comma” as a “COH-ma,” people are going to misunderstand them.

    Watch it:

    Horne is the same person who has taken an active role in ridding the state of ethnic studies classes, saying that they encourage “ethnic chauvanism.” Earlier this year, he took heat from Arizona Latinos for referring to venerated civil rights leader Dolores Huerta as a “former girlfriend” of Mexican American labor leader Cesar Chávez — even though she was actually his sister-in-law.

  • Microsoft not planning any Windows Phone 7 tablets

    Windows Phone 7 tablet mock-up

    No Windows Phone 7 tablets planned by Microsoft

    Steve Ballmer has re-iterated their intent not to shoehorn Windows Phone 7 on tablets in the near future.

    Speaking at the Imagination Cup awards in Singapore he reportedly said:

    We’re focused on putting Windows Phone 7 in phones, no plans for tablets.

    He claimed that Microsoft’s current strategies went far enough in responding to market pressures and competition at present:

    Every Windows phone, every Kin, is Microsoft branded. It’s not Microsoft produced, it’s not priced by Microsoft, the Kin is actually manufactured, produced by Sharp. But it’s advertised by Microsoft, it’s branded by Microsoft. Will we go further than that? No plans at this time.

    In many ways releasing Windows Phone 7 on large format devices may be seen as a missed opportunity, given the “panoramic” user interface paradigm which implies a view into an application already presented on a big screen.

    Of course just because Microsoft is not planning to use Windows Phone 7 does not mean multiple other companies are not planning to use the Windows CE base to do the same job, but of course this will lead to multiple user interfaces, the lack of a cohesive market place, and no access to the music and media features which has been the major hallmark of most successful consumer computing devices recently.

    Is Microsoft making a mistake? Let us know below.

    Via WMExperts, ChannelNewsAsia


  • Maryland governor candidates hope to win big with casinos

    Maryland governor candidates hope to win big with casinos
    PERRYVILLE, MD. — Gov. Martin O’Malley strode Tuesday into a shell of a building here in Maryland’s northeastern corner that, if all goes according to plan, will be transformed into the state’s first slots casino just a few weeks before Election Day.



    United StatesMarylandPoliticsGovernorCandidates and Campaigns

    Shadow of politics hangs over D.C. budget as Fenty tangles with council members
    The mayor’s budget lacks, some of his critics charge, imagination and grit — ignoring tough decisions and continuing to borrow from the city’s already weakened reserve funds to close a $550 million gap.


    Adrian FentyWashington DCUnited StatesPoliticsOrganizations

    Obama, GOP adversaries to meet in closed-door session
    President Obama will submit to a polite but pointed grilling from his Republican Senate adversaries in the Capitol’s LBJ room Tuesday afternoon, a rare show of bipartisanship in an increasingly hostile city.


    RepublicanUnited StatesBarack ObamaPresidentGovernment

    Popular benefit of health-care law excludes military families
    By the time Congress passed the national health-care overhaul, anxiety about it was so widespread that Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates issued a statement reassuring military families. The legislation, Gates said, “will not negatively impact the TRICARE medical insurance program” for members of …


    United StatesHealthPoliticsHealth careHealth Care Reform

  • Go big or go home: Nissan CEO Carlos Ghosn says automaker’s size matters

    Renault/Nissan CEO Carlos Ghosn with Daimler AG CEO Dieter Zetsche

    Speaking at a luncheon at the Detroit Economic Club at the Cobo Center yesterday, Renault and Nissan CEO Carlos Ghosn said that size matters when it comes to an automaker’s survival in the industry. He said that to cope with rising cost, a successful automaker must be able to compete in every market, segment and technology.

    “No 3 million-unit carmaker can make it,” Ghosn said, talking about his companies (Renault-Nissan) recently announced alliance with Daimler AG. “You also must be in every market — and it’s not just Japan, Europe and the United States anymore but also Brazil, Russia, China and India. And you better be in Indonesia, too.”

    Ghosn said that every large automaker must be able to simultaneously develop gasoline, diesel, hybrid and electric-vehicle technology since it is difficult to predict which one of those will take center-stage in the future.

    Ghosn also announced that Nissan has officially sold out its 13,000 allocation for the LEAF electric-vehicle here in the United States.

    – By: Omar Rana

    Source: Automotive News (Subscription Required)


  • Apple Speaks Out About Foxconn Suicides [Foxconn]

    Foxconn has gone into serious damage control this week, with CEO Guo Tai-ming inviting 100 members of the press to view the facilities today. Even Apple and Dell, two companies whose products are produced in Foxconn’s factories, have spoken out. More »










    AppleFoxconnDellChinaSuicide

  • La Fórmula 1 regrasará a Estados Unidos en 2012

    Tras los cientos de rumores que afirmaban la creación de un posible circuito urbano en Nueva York, la noticia se ha confirmado a medias. La Fórmula 1 regresará a Estados Unidos en el año 2012 pero no lo hará en la ciudad de Nueva York, sino en Austin (Texas).

    Además, no será un circuito urbano, se construirá un circuito permanente tal y como ha declarado Bernie Ecclestone hace cuestión de unas horas:

    Por primera vez en la historia de la Fórmula 1 en los Estados Unidos, una instalación de clase mundial será construida especialmente para acoger el evento. Fue hace treinta años cuando se celebró el GP de Estados Unidos de Fórmula 1 por última vez en un circuito permanente en Watkins Glen, NY (1961-1980), que tuvo un gran éxito. Desde entonces, la Fórmula Uno ha sido organizada en Long Beach, Las Vegas, Detroit, Dallas y Phoenix todos circuitos callejeros temporales. Indianápolis se unió a las filas de las ciudades sede en 2000 cuando se agregó un circuito dentro en el famoso óvalo. Lewis Hamilton ganó el último GP de Estados Unidos en 2007, marcando el fin a ocho años en el Indianápolis Motor Speedway. Sin embarogo, será la primera vez que se construya una instalación desde cero específicamente para la Fórmula 1 en los EE.UU.

    Por el momento desconocemos cualquier característica de este nuevo trazado aunque si hacen un buen trabajo, podría ser una parada permanente del campeonato de la máxima categoría del motor.

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  • Angola: Travelling the Luena to Kuito Highway

    27 years of civil war have affected Angola in many ways. Richard Casson finds out how peace is making recovery possible.

    A market along the Luena to Kuito Highway. Photo: Michael Bingham/Oxfam

    A market along the Luena to Kuito Highway. Photo: Michael Bingham/Oxfam

    The Luena to Kuito Highway is the main route between the province of Bie in central Angola and the rural eastern province of Moxico. It’s a 400km road that, by European standards, can barely even be called a road. Crater-ridden, stomach-churning, suspension-busting dirt-trail is about as close as I can describe it. It’s a road where tropical rains appear out of nowhere and quickly turn the dusty track into a raging torrent of water, and a toilet stop is a quick squat behind the nearest eucalyptus tree. It’s a journey that should only be attempted in a 4×4 or a Russian Kamaz truck – and one that I endured when we visited Oxfam’s project work in Angola this February.

    The 12-hour drive from Luena to Kuito was an incredible experience for me, not only because of the bruises and bumps it left me with, but also because it was a lesson in the impact of war.

    The road lies in an area of Angola locally referred to as The Corridor – a passage of land that cuts through some of the most remote and isolated parts of the country. Many of the towns and villages here experienced ferocious fighting during Angola’s 27-year civil war.

    Few Europeans have travelled this route, and those that do must either know the tracks off by heart or be accompanied by someone who does. When I made the journey I was lucky enough to be accompanied by two staff from Oxfam’s office in Angola: Titus, Oxfam’s Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Co-ordinator; and Joao, our driver, a man with the finest collection of laid-back Portuguese driving music I’ve ever had the pleasure of listening to.

    Broken infrastructure

    A tank along the Luena to Kuito Highway. Much of Angola's land remains uncultivated because of landmines. Photo: Michael Bingham/Oxfam

    A tank along the Luena to Kuito Highway. Much of Angola’s land remains uncultivated because of landmines. Photo: Michael Bingham/Oxfam

    Titus has worked on humanitarian projects across Africa and knows well that recovery from long-term conflict takes decades. As we drove past broken railway lines and burned-out train stations, he waved toward the destroyed infrastructure and described how until war began in the mid-1970s, the trip from Luena to Kuito could be made by train. “When war broke out, everything changed,” Titus explained. “Both sides ripped up the train tracks to prevent the other from gaining control of the area.”

    As war raged on, Angola’s rail network was replaced with a web of poverty that still cripples many rural areas to this day – eight years after peace was officially declared. The lack of a decent infrastructure means farming communities, most of whom live far outside the nearest town, remain unable to get their crops to market. The little food that does make it through is expensive because of transport costs. High food prices mean that few people are able to afford a balanced diet. And the lack of good food means that nutrition is poor and people become sick more often.

    Sparsely populated villages spring up every 20km or so along the road between Luena and Kuito. Many of the people that live in these earth-red, mud-brick-walled homes are subsistence farmers who make their living from the land. Though the people living here pick fresh mangoes, bananas and pineapples from the trees nearby, vast areas of Angola’s land remain uncultivated because of landmines, so the profits available from farming are limited. Since the war ended, the Angolan government and a number of international organisations have invested lots of resources to clearing the mines, but still no one knows how many are left – estimates range from hundreds of thousands right up to several million.

    Angola is gradually recovering

    Despite still facing many problems, some parts of Angola are recovering. Peace has led to greater freedom of movement, and it is now possible for Oxfam and other development agencies to carry out work in areas of the country that were impossible to access during the war. Water pumps are gradually being installed in remote villages. Hygiene and sanitation education programmes are helping to limit the outbreak of deadly diseases such as cholera. And in Luanda, the capital city, some people are profiting from Angola’s massive oil, iron and diamond reserves.

    Having taken the road from Luena to Kuito, it’s clear to me that there is still much to be done before Angola fully recovers. Factories must still be rebuilt, and decent homes built for much of the population. And the railway lines are yet to be replaced. But an end to war is gradually making this possible. As Joao said as we slowly coasted through a bustling town at one stage during our trip: “peace is everything.”

    Where we work: Angola

  • Amazing: The Daily Oil Forecast Has Replaced The Weather Report On TV

    This is pretty wild. The daily oil forecast has replaced the daily weather forecast in the Gulf.



    WKRG.com News

    Join the conversation about this story »


  • ‘Bring Me Back To Life’- Britney Spears To Be Frozen After Death

    Blooming singer, Britney Spears, has announced that she would want her body to be frozen after she dies. The lady is reported to be working out a deal to get herself frozen after her death. The move is being made to bring her back to life, sources revealed her view. The singer who is famous of rocking the stage while performing wants her body to be preserved in liquid nitrogen, a process more known as ‘cryogenic’ freezing.

    Spears interest grew after she heard of rumors that Walt Disney was preserved in the same way. She is expecting that the process keeps the body preserved and can be brought back to life when someone wishes. A close source further revealed that the lady was only waiting for an approval from her father, after which she would sign the draft.

    The ‘Alcor Life Extension Foundation’, a company based in Arizona specializes in Cryogenics, which is being tagged as the company responsible for preserving her body. Spears even wishes to invest in the company and promote this new fashion.

    She knows that no one can be brought back to life but is thinking of the time in future when some sort of technology is made and it is possible to bring her back to rock the world.

    Alcor Life’s website stated:

    “Using ultra-cold temperature to preserve human life with the intent of restoring good health when technology becomes available to do so.”

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  • Who Won Dancing With the Stars 2010? Congratulations Nicole Scherzinger!

    Who Won Dancing With the Stars 2010 Congratulations Nicole ScherzingerDancing With the Stars“ winner 2010 is Pussycat Doll Nicole Scherzinger and her partner Derek Hough. “Dancing With the Stars” 2010 has came to an end, a show that pairs up celebrities to dance with proffesional ballroom dancers in a competition.

    This week all the pairs have chosen Argentine Tango. The competition was tough, but Nicole and Derek always positioned among the favorites, not only because of the great dancing skills shown by the pussycat dolls singer but the chemistry between Scherzinger and Hough made their Argentine Tango exceptional.



    Nicole Scherzinger was competing in the final of “Dancing With the Stars” against Van Evan Lysacek and his partner Anna Trebunskaya, and Erin Andrews and her partner Maksim Chmerkovskiy.

    The Nicole Scherzinger, Derek Hough couple won the competition with a perfect scoring for their jive, so they took the Mirror Ball trophy.

    Related posts:

    1. Who Won Dancing With the Stars 2010?
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  • Sandra Bullock MTV Movie Awards 2010 Comeback?

    Sandra Bullock has been keeping an almost non-existent profile since finding herself entangled in estranged husband Jesse James’ far-reaching infidelity scandal in March, but the blogosphere is abuzz with reports that the new mom may be forging a comeback at next month’s MTV Movie Awards.

    E! Online Gossip Guys Ted Casablanca and John Boone claim the Oscar winner “is prepping to make return to the red carpet” at the event – where she nominated for a litany of roles for her box office hit The Blind Side. In fact, we hear Sandra’s stylist is already rounding up dresses for Sandra to select from “should she” decide to hit the red carpet.

    The 2010 MTV Movie Awards — hosted by Aziz Ansari — will air live from Los Angeles on June 6.


  • Improvements to the Google Docs Document Editor

    Google recently introduced a new documents editor for Google Docs. It’s still in a beta of sorts and not enabled by default, but it’s getting better and already receiving new features. They’ve been introduced gradually and Google is now making a round-up of the latest bigger additions to the new documents editor. A new, simpler &… (read more)