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  • What if the oil spill just can’t be fixed?

    by David Roberts

    The BP Gulf oil disaster is reaching an interesting phase. People’s gut instinct, their first reaction, is to find someone to blame. They blame BP for negligence; the Obama administration for its tepid response; the Bush administration for lax regulatory enforcement. People have been casting about for some way to compartmentalize this thing, some way to cast it as an anomaly, an “accident,” the kind of screwup that can be meliorated or avoided in the future.

    We are, however, drifting toward a whole different kind of place. Tomorrow BP is attempting the “top kill” maneuver—pumping mud into the well. If it doesn’t work, well … then what? Junk shot? Top hat? Loony stuff like nukes? Relief wells will take months to drill and no one’s sure if they’ll work to relieve pressure. It’s entirely possible, even likely, that we’re going to be stuck helplessly watching as this well spews oil into the Gulf for years. Even if the flow were stopped tomorrow, the damage to marshes, coral, and marine life is done. The Gulf of Mexico will become an ecological and economic dead zone. There’s no real way to undo it, no matter who’s in charge.

    I’m curious to see how the public’s mood shifts once it becomes clear that we are powerless in the face of this thing. What if there’s just nothing we can do? That’s not a feeling to which Americans are accustomed.

    Once we know that accidents can be catastrophic and irreversible, it becomes clear that there is no margin of error. We’re operating a brittle system, unable to contain failure and unable to recover from it. Consider how deepwater drilling will look in that new light.

    The thing is, we’re already operating in those circumstances in a thousand different ways—it’s just that the risks and the damages tend to be distributed and obscured from view. They’re not thrust in our face like they are in the Gulf. We don’t get back the land we destroy by mining. We don’t get back the species lost from deforestation and development. We don’t get back islands lost to rising seas. We don’t get back the coral lost to bleaching or the marine food chains lost to nitrogen runoff. Once we lose the climatic conditions in which our species evolved, we won’t get them back either.

    We’re doing damage as big as the Gulf oil spill every day, and there’s no fixing it. Humanity has grown in power, wealth, and appetite to the point that there is no more margin of error anywhere. We’re on a knife’s edge, facing the very real possibility that for our children, all the world may be one big Gulf of Mexico, inexorably and irreversibly deteriorating.

    Perhaps if the public gets a clear taste of this, they’ll step back and contemplate whether the kind of energy we use is really as “cheap” as it looks. Maybe they’ll stop thinking about how to drill better and start thinking about how to avoid drilling altogether. Because some mistakes just can’t be undone.

    Related Links:

    By the way, is anyone checking on nuclear-plant safety plans?

    Fake BP Twitter account attracts lots of followers

    The 7 dumbest things in BP’s spill response plan






  • Intellect, rigor, tradition

    In the welcome shade of the verdant trees outside Harvard Hall on this scorching morning (May 25), Trevor Bakker ’10 and 71 other Phi Beta Kappa honorees lined up in their caps and gowns for the traditional fife-and-drum procession to Sanders Theatre.

    “It’s the beginning of a celebration,” said the Holland, Mich., senior, who said he landed among the University’s highest achievers without ever drinking coffee. “There are a few of us.”

    At Harvard, 24 juniors are elected to Phi Beta Kappa every spring, and 48 seniors each fall. Membership cannot exceed 10 percent of the graduating class.

    The Literary Exercises have been a Harvard tradition since the 18th century, and take place each year on Tuesday of Commencement Week. Harvard’s Phi Beta Kappa chapter, called Alpha Iota of Massachusetts since 1995, is the oldest continuously running chapter in the United States.

    Today’s Literary Exercises, the 220th, included three musical interludes by the Harvard-Radcliffe Collegium Musicum. The last (another tradition) is Harvard’s “College Hymn,” which exhorts new graduates “for Right ever bravely to live.”

    To help the graduates find rightness, two addresses are at the heart of the exercises ceremony. One is by a poet, who reads a work written for the occasion. The other is by an “orator,” a guest invited to offer timely discourse.

    This year’s Phi Beta Kappa poet was D.A. Powell, a Georgia-born writer who teaches English at the University of San Francisco. He was once the Briggs-Copeland Lecturer in Poetry at Harvard.

    Powell, a prize-winning experimental poet, read his new poem “Panic in the Year Zero,” whose title was inspired by a 1962 movie about nuclear apocalypse. He is a lover of puns and edgy themes, including AIDS. His first three collections of poetry — “Tea,” “Lunch,” and “Cocktails” — are considered a trilogy on the disease.

    “In the time I have been alive,” said Powell, “we have lived under the threat of some sort of extinction. And I think that the mission of this poem is to say: enough.” As he writes:

    Enough with the apocalypse, already.

    Think of all the history you’ve read. It started somewhere.

    It started at absolute zero, is what you thought.

    Just because you couldn’t know what came before.

    But imagine: something did.

    Doing the honors as orator was Natalie Zemon Davis, A.M. ’50, LL.D. ’96, a pioneering cultural historian of the early modern period who teaches at the University of Toronto and is professor emerita at Princeton University. Her discourse, a glimpse at past orations and what they promise for the future, was titled “The Possibilities of Friendship.”

    Davis is a figure of some renown in the history of women and gender, and in 1971 at the University of Toronto co-founded one of the first courses on the subject in North America.

    Her oration marked how the concept of friendship — a central Phi Beta Kappa value — has waxed and waned over the years, as traditions of “sentimental union” through literature vied with stricter measures of academic excellence. But friendship is a mark of hope and excellence in the modern world, said Davis, who looked at the cooperation among Palestinian and Israeli doctors, whose nations are riven by war.

    Friendship can “blaze anew,” she said, “illuminating a landscape that may seem desolate but can still carry within in it bridges of truth, truth-telling, and understanding.”

    The Literary Exercises are also traditionally when the winners of the annual Alpha Iota Prize for Excellence in Teaching are announced. Prizes this year went to Lawrence Buell, Powell M. Cabot Professor of American Literature; Benjamin M. Friedman, William Joseph Maier Professor of Political Economy; and Richard J. Tarrant, Pope Professor of the Latin Language and Literature.

    Caps and gowns

    Caps and gowns

    Senior Phi Beta Kappa honorees congregate outside Harvard Hall before processing to Sanders Theatre.

    Excitement builds

    Excitement builds

    Johanna Rodda ’10 (from left), Liza Flum ’10, Caroline Bleeke ’10, and Diana Wise ’10 chat excitedly in the soaring heat before heading to PBK’s Literary Exercises, a Harvard tradition since the 18th century.

    Keeping the beat

    Keeping the beat

    Rap-rap-rapping her drum, Rachel Hawkins ’12 leads the procession of PBK honorees — and lets everyone know it.

    A green scene

    A green scene

    Amid the greenery of the Yard, PBK honorees mingle with attendees in a relatively small Commencement fete — on Commencement morning, the Yard fills with more than 30,000 visitors.

    There they go

    There they go

    PBK honorees make their way to Sanders Theatre, where they’ll be delighted by the poetry of D.A. Powell and an oration by Natalie Zemon Davis, A.M. ’50, LL.D. ’96, a pioneering cultural historian.

    No frowns here

    No frowns here

    Phi Beta Kappa inductee Trevor Bakker ’10 is just one of the 72 seniors being honored for academic excellence. And, surprisingly, he did it all without coffee’s jolt. “There are a few of us,” he said.

    The stage is set

    The stage is set

    Inside grand Sanders Theatre, the stage is illuminated with scholars who are winners of the annual Alpha Iota Prize for Excellence in Teaching.

    Steady now

    Steady now

    Director of choral activities Jameson Marvin conducts the Harvard-Radcliffe Collegium Musicum for three songs, including “College Hymn,” which exhorts new graduates “for Right ever bravely to live.”

    'The Possibilities of Friendship'

    ‘The Possibilities of Friendship’

    Natalie Zemon Davis, A.M. ’50, LL.D. ’96, takes the podium for her speech, “The Possibilities of Friendship,” which offered a glimpse at past orations and what they promise for the future.

    Three in a row

    Three in a row

    Harvard College Dean Evelynn Hammonds (center) is flanked by President Drew Faust and Everett Mendelsohn, continuing education/special program instructor and research professor of the history of science.

    'Panic in the Year Zero'

    ‘Panic in the Year Zero’

    Before reading his poem “Panic in the Year Zero,” poet D.A. Powell said, “In the time I have been alive, we have lived under the threat of some sort of extinction. And I think that the mission of this poem is to say: enough.”

    Over here!

    Over here!

    Sarah Yun ’10 (front) and Melissa Tran ’10 look for friends and relatives inside the theater.

    Photo slideshow: Phi Beta Kappa Literary Exercises 2010

    Kris Snibbe/Harvard Staff Photographer

  • Fiat taking Chrysler production back to China within four years

    Filed under: , ,

    As recently as two years ago Chrysler and Chery were more than cozy and working on Chinese-market products that would eventually make their way this way. Nothing ultimately came of it, but Chrysler hasn’t given up on the Chinese dream. Or more accurately, Fiat hasn’t given up on the Chinese dream on behalf of Chrysler.

    Fiat, which has had its own setbacks in trying to find the right joint venture required to do business in China, is now working with Guangzhou Auto. It isn’t clear how or even if Chrysler would immediately try again, since The Pentastar’s “models were as popular as Chen Shui Bian towards the end of their tenure.”

    Another route would be for the Chrysler Group to let Jeep lead the charge, since the Jeep brand and small SUVs are a more welcome option for Chinese buyers. It is inevitable that Chrysler will keep trying to crack the world’s largest auto market, and if we were presumptuous enough to suggest a way to do it, we’d only need two words: Dodge Hornet.

    [Source: China Car Times]

    Fiat taking Chrysler production back to China within four years originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 25 May 2010 17:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Dell Streak Heading To The UK June 2010

    Found under: Dell, Streak, Mini 5, Android, Google, Tablet, O2, June, Summer,

    The sexy Dell Streak is coming to the UK next month this is a device running Android if you have forgotten and Dell is calling it a tablet. What we have here is a feature rich device that is packing a 1GHz snapdragon processor so you know it is a fast one sadly they chose to implement Android 1.6 instead of 2.1.The display is a neat 5 WVGA capacitive touchscreen it just looks so gorgeous and should work really well when watching videos and viewing pictures. There is also 2GB interna

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  • Greenhouse owners rebuild after winter storm

    From Your4state.com

    MIDDLETOWN, MD – The heavy snow that slammed the Four State region in February seems like so long ago, but many are still dealing with the aftermath. One Middletown man, whose greenhouse collapsed under the weight of the snow, is rebuilding and he’s taking the “green” in greenhouse to a whole new level.

    >>Watch the video

  • Mindy McCready 911 Call

    A rep for country singer Mindy McCready has fired back at reports that the country star suffered a drug overdose in her Fort Myers, Florida home this week, instead insisting the crooner’s mother “overreacted” when she called 911 after finding the troubled McCready passed out early Tuesday after taking prescription painkillers for an injury to her toe.

    The star has a history of alcohol and drug abuse, and even attempted suicide in the summer of 2008.


  • Seat belt usage hits record high 84%, 45 million Americans still not buckling up

    Click it or Ticket

    Ray LaHood, U.S. Secretary of Transportation, said yesterday that while seat belt use has increased to a record high 84 percent nationwide, 45 million Americans are still not buckling up. LaHood said that the Department of Transportation is now kicking off its Click It or Ticket program, a national enforcement mobilization that encourages all motorists to wear their seat belts. Those caught not wearing their seat belt will be ticketed.

    “We’ve made great strides to get Americans to buckle up, but we must not rest on our laurels,” said LaHood. “Not wearing your seat belt is a serious, life-threatening practice. If you are one of the 45 million Americans who won’t buckle up, our Click It or Ticket enforcement mobilization will be looking for you.”

    “On any given day about 38 people who are not buckled-up are killed in motor vehicle crashes, according to statistics from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA),” DOT said in a statement. “In 2008 alone, nearly 14,000 unbuckled passenger vehicle occupants lost their lives on U.S. roadways. Nearly half of them could have been saved if they had been belted. Click here to view map.”

    The “Click It or Ticket” campaign is set to run from May 24 through June 6, 2010.

    – By: Omar Rana


  • Autoblog Podcast #179 – We answer your queries

    Filed under: , , , , , , , , , , ,

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

    We solicited your questions for Episode #179 of the Autoblog Podcast, and then Chris, Sam, Dan, and Chris Paukert proceeded to answer them. News topics we cover are the Buick Regal GS, Toyota and Tesla getting together, Ford’s next-generation Explorer Police SUV, and the push for increased fuel economy standards by 2025.

    Autoblog Podcast #179: We answer your queries



    In the Autoblog Garage:

    Ford Taurus SHO
    Dodge Dakota
    GMC Terrain

    News:

    Hosts:
    Chris Shunk, Chris Paukert, Dan Roth, Sam Abuelsamid

    Runtime: 1:18:02


    Get the podcast:
    [iTunes] Subscribe to the Autoblog Podcast in iTunes
    [RSS] Add the Joystiq Podcast feed to your RSS aggregator
    [MP3] Download the MP3 directly

    Feedback:

    Email: Podcast at Autoblog dot com
    Voicemail: 734-288-8POD (734-288-8763)

    Review the show in iTunes
    and take our survey

    Autoblog Podcast #179 – We answer your queries originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 25 May 2010 17:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • DOJ Lawyers Draft Challenge to AZ Law

    A team of Justice Department attorneys reviewing the new immigration law in Arizona has recommended that the U.S. government challenge the state law in federal court, but the recommendation faces an uncertain future and tough scrutiny from others in the Justice Department, sources with knowledge of the process tell Fox News.

    Staff attorneys within the Justice Department recently sent higher-ups the recommendation. At the same time, the Justice Department’s Civil Division, which oversees the majority of immigration enforcement issues for the department, has drafted a “civil complaint” that would be filed in federal court in Arizona, sources said.

    The draft complaint challenges the Arizona law as unconstitutional, saying it is illegal because it impedes federal law, according to the sources, who would not offer any more details about the draft complaint or the arguments made in it.

    Two weeks ago, Attorney General Eric Holder told lawmakers such an issue was being considered by Justice Department lawyers reviewing the new law, which outlines and possibly broadens the authority of police to detain those suspected of being in the country illegally.

    “We are examining the [Arizona] law and trying to determine if it contravenes the federal responsibility [toward] immigration, whether or not what the Arizona legislature has tried to do is actually preempted by federal law, by federal statutes.” he told the House Judiciary Committee on May 13. “The regulation of our borders and the immigration that occurs by crossing our borders is something that is inherently something I believe for the national government to take responsibility for.”

    He also said it would not be “an extended period of time” before his department decides whether to take action on “preemption” grounds, adding that the Justice Department’s “view of the law will be expressed relatively soon.”

    Two sources with knowledge of the review said the draft complaint, which is now receiving input from the attorney general’s office and other Justice Department offices, is not an indication that the Justice Department will ultimately file a lawsuit.

    One source said the Arizona law has sparked a “huge battle” with national implications, and the Justice Department is therefore conducting a “slow analysis of all of the options.”

    If Justice Department higher-ups decide to move forward with the civil complaint, concrete action likely would not take place for some time, according to the source, who predicted it will be “a while before anything would be filed.”

    “This is going to be slow going,” the source said.

    Holder echoed that sentiment when he was on Capitol Hill.

    “There’s a wide variety of things that go into the determination that ultimately we will have to make, and I want to make sure that we take as comprehensive a look as we can before we make what I think is going to be a very consequential decision,” he said.

    If the Justice Department’s Civil Division decides against filing the complaint, others within the Justice Department could step in. In fact, the attorney general’s office, the deputy attorney general’s office and the Civil Rights Division are all reviewing options.

    Holder told lawmakers that the Civil Rights Division will be monitoring the application of the Arizona law, set to go into effect in late July, and could take subsequent action.

    “We are concerned about the potential impact that it has and whether it contravenes federal civil rights laws, potentially leading to racial profiling,” he said. “We would constantly be monitoring it to see if there are civil rights violations, civil rights concerns, that are generated by the implementation of the law.”

    He said such monitoring would occur in any case.

    Kris Kobach, a Republican law professor who helped author the Arizona law, said the legislation “expressly prohibits racial profiling.” As for the issue of preemption, he said the law was “drafted extremely carefully to avoid any preemption problems at all.”

    Holder said the Justice Department will also be looking at other issues, including “the history that is involved in all of this” and memos or opinions from other offices within the Justice Department.

    Holder himself has raised concerns that the Arizona law could push a “wedge” between police officers and the communities they serve, something he’s expected to discuss during a meeting with police chiefs, including three from Arizona, at the Justice Department on Wednesday morning.

    “Arizona police chiefs are concerned that the new … law in Arizona will drive a wedge between the community and the police, and will damage the trust that police agencies have worked to establish over many years with members of all their communities,” a statement from the police chiefs said.

    Others have raised concerns that a 2002 memo from the Office of Legal Counsel could complicate federal challenges to the Arizona law, especially preemption-related challenges. The 2002 memo said state and local police can arrest illegall immigrants for violating federal law.

    But after reviewing the Arizona law and options for challenging it, at least some Justice Department lawyers have concluded that the 2002 memo would not pose a problem because, in their view, it is narrow enough in scope to permit a challenge.

    As for whether the U.S. government will end up challenging the Arizona law in any form, Holder recently insisted that’s still up in the air.

    “I don’t know exactly … what we are ultimately going to do with regard to our review of the law,” he told lawmakers.

    But, he said, there is “certainly an illegal immigration problem that this country needs to face,” and he understands the “frustration” of Arizona citizens.

    A Justice Department spokesman declined to comment for this article.

  • Motorola Shadow Spotted At Verizon Gym

    Found under: Verizon, Motorola, Shadow, DROID 2, Android, Leak,

    Pictures of the Motorola Shadow aka the Motorola DROID 2 has been popping up all over the Internet lately this big and sexy Verizon exclusive device is looking to be just as successful as the first Droid. The phone is alleged to be spotted in a Verizon gym the employee that found the phone made known the specs of the device you wont be disappointed.Its odd how the employee only took one picture this makes things interesting because it puts this story in the realms of all made up cra

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  • Charice “Glee” Casting In The Works

    International singing sensation Charice Pempengco is in chats to join the cast of television’s breakout musical hit, Glee.

    According to an Asian tabloid, the Filipana pop star is on the verge of signing on as a series regular for the forthcoming second season of Glee.

    “Yes, it’s true, Charice will soon join Glee,” Charice’s manager Grace Mendozar reportedly told The Inquirer Tuesday. “And not just as a guest, but as part of the cast in a new season.”


  • Reader Request: Standard WM 6.5.5 ROM for HD2

    HTC HD2 with Windows Mobile 6.5.3With the recent release of the LG Fathom, a very vanilla Windows Phone, with hardly any third party software, reader Alamfour has a request for something similar for the HTC HD2.

    Hi All,

    Could one of the cooks please create a ROM similar to the following?

    I have a need for a Vanilla WM 6.5.5 ROM. That is without sense, htc comm manager, or any htc customizations that are not essential for the ROM.

    I would like no Youtube app and viewing youtube videos from m.youtube.com enabled as they are currently disabled and they redirect to youtube app. Also when viewing Youtube videos in IE and I try to go full screen it goes to fullscreen portrate mode, could landscape fullview be enabled also?

    If their is already a ROM like this could someone please point me in the right direction as I have been searching for a few weeks now and found none. I did try Energy ROM titanium but it was too customized for my liking.

    I would prefer not to have to cook my own ROM as I am not very good at it. I used to cook my own ROM’s for my Touch Diamond but I always had problems so I have given up on cooking.

    Thank you

    Does anyone have a favourite vanilla HTC HD2 ROM? Let us know below.

    This post was submitted by alamfour.


  • The Cause of the Earth’s Climate Change Is the Sun by Dr Jeffrey Glassman

    Article Tags: Jeffrey Glassman

    article image

    FINALLY, Dr Jeffrey Glassman’s recent paper is available in pdf form: its hosting site also offers a good summary of the direction his research has been taking.

    The CrossFit Journal is proud to present this extraordinary article by Dr. Jeff Glassman. Formerly the Division Chief Scientist for Missile Development and Microelectronics Systems Divisions for Hughes Aircraft, Dr. Glassman has dedicated his career to improving the quality of science methodology among his peers and the community at large.

    For years he has been disturbed by the lack of credible science identifying human activity as a cause of global warming. This paper is the latest of six papers published on his blog, Rocket Scientist’s Journal, and the first to advance the Sun as the cause of global climate change in the fine detail of the temperature record since the invention of the thermometer.

    Source: library.crossfit.com

    Read in full with comments »   


  • Bezos: Don’t Hold Breath For Color Kindle


    Jeff Bezos Holding Kindle

    OK, Jeff Bezos didn’t exactly say not to hold your breath for a color Kindle but he did explain to shareholders at Amazon’s annual meeting why they shouldn’t count on one any time soon. Or, put his way, why it’s “still a long way out.” According to AP, Bezos didn’t dismiss the idea but said the versions he’s seen in the lab aren’t read yet for “prime-time” production.

    The iPad’s LCD color screen is beautiful in standard light but almost unreadable in the sun or any kind of bright light. (I write from experience.) The Kindle’s black-and-white e-ink is more readable in circumstances that don’t require additional light or backlight. Unlike the iPad, though, the Kindle isn’t usable in the dark.

    Amazon (NSDQ: AMZN) shareholders are similarly in the dark when it comes to how many Kindles have been sold. Amazon continues to brag that the e-reader is its top seller but won’t hang a number on the boast. All Bezos would say today: “millions.”


  • After Decade of Development, Cymer Moves Into OLED Display Manufacturing

    TCZ logo
    Bruce V. Bigelow wrote:

    When San Diego-based Cymer (NASDAQ: CYMI) announced its first-quarter financial results last month, the company noted almost parenthetically that it’s just beginning to roll out technology to manufacture OLED display screens.

    In the 24 years since it was founded, Cymer’s business has been focused almost entirely on making advanced lasers that serve as the light sources in the photolithography process used in semiconductor manufacturing. The ability of Intel, AMD, and other semiconductor makers to produce chips with smaller and smaller microcircuit designs is due in part to Cymer’s ability to make lasers that produce light at ever-tighter wavelengths. The company now has about 3,300 lasers operating in semiconductor plants around the world; its most advanced lasers, which cost about $1.7 million apiece, are sold to ASML, Canon, and Nikon for integration into scanners—the big machines used to put microcircuits on silicon wafers.

    Cymer logoCymer’s success in keeping pace with chipmakers has given the company a commanding global market share, and Cymer spokesman Blake Miller says Japan’s Gigaphoton is its only remaining competitor. As a semiconductor tool supplier, however, Cymer has faced an extraordinarily volatile market. In the winter of 2008-09, for example, Cymer laid off at least a third of its worldwide workforce as the recession deepened. Cymer has long needed another business to dampen the vicious swings of its core semiconductor business.

    So it was noteworthy, to say the least, when Cymer said its TCZ display division has installed its first system for making ultrathin OLED displays at the facilities of an unnamed customer in South Korea. While the first system undergoes integration and testing, Cymer says it plans to deliver its second OLED manufacturing system to another unnamed customer in China by the end of October.

    OLED technology itself has been 20 years in the making, according to David Knowles, a 12-year Cymer veteran who now heads the company’s TCZ division.

    Knowles says one of the key innovations underlying TCZ’s OLED technology is a process that creates a uniform grid of transistors on the semiconducting material that forms a …Next Page »

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  • Froyo – Hands-On with Android OS 2.2

    Last week I was pretty much blown away by what Google demoed and promised out of the next update to Android: Version 2.2 “Froyo.” From major speed increases to a comprehensive cloud to device API and then some, Android 2.2 brings a lot to the table and makes Google’s mobile OS an even more formidable player in the smartphone scene.

    While the update is currently available to anyone with a Nexus One device, I turned to the man himself for an expert’s take on what many are calling the most significant Android update since 1.5: Our own John Walton. Froyo, as John says, is major:

    Despite my Sense fanboyism of the past, flashing the Android 2.2 ROM has caused me to fall back in love with vanilla Android, and madly.”

    John’s overview of 2.2 is embedded here for your viewing pleasure. For more, head over to DroidDog where John and Andrew Steffy serve up five more Froyo vids along with screen grabs galore. And that’s just on the page I linked to – browse around DDog for more Android than you can wag a tail at.

     

    {Widget type=”youtube” id=”8aNi_7PxRx0″}

     


  • Why HP, Dell and Toshiba Aren’t Benefitting Fully From Netbook Sales

    With sales up 43 percent year-over-year in the first quarter of 2010, according to Gartner — the highest rate of growth in nearly eight years — the mobile PC market is flexing its muscle. And it’s no coincidence that of the top five vendors in terms of market share, the two showing the most growth — Acer and ASUS — were among the first to embrace the netbook market.

    WW Mobile PC Vendor Unit Shipment Estimates for 1Q10 (in thousands)
    1Q10 Shipments 1Q09 Shipments Growth Rate
    HP 9458.1 7676.3 23.21%
    Acer 9122.5 6147.6 48.39%
    Dell 5662.4 4254.3 33.10%
    Toshiba 4573.9 3395.3 34.71%
    ASUS 4324 2030.5 112.95%
    Other 16233.1 10921.9 48.63%

    Netbook sales grew 71 percent from the prior year quarter after cresting 36.3 million units in 2009 — a figure expected to top 58 million in 2010, estimates ABI Research. So why isn’t the strong netbook market doing more to help sales growth of HP, Dell and Toshiba? Answers vary based on the company in question. I uncovered one of them yesterday, while attending the Netbook Summit.

    Eric Tilton, manager of networks and engineering for the Fresno Unified School District, told me his organization helped refine early HP netbook designs to optimize them for the education market. He suggests that HP netbooks are poised to do well in this market — over the next four to five years. Schools commonly run though long budgetary cycles, so HP can’t reap rewards in this market any faster. Consumers don’t face such cyclical fiscal constraints, yet HP netbooks can be pricey for the general public — last time I checked, a fully decked-out HP netbook could run you $700, near the current average selling price ($732) of a full notebook.

    Toshiba, meanwhile, only offers two netbook models to choose from — one of which, I should note, I bought last year and absolutely love it — the netbook has a trackpad larger than that of some notebooks I’ve used. But as computers become smaller, they also become more personal, a thesis presented in our GigaOM Pro report, “The Future of Netbooks” (subscription required). And with only two netbook models, Toshiba can’t compete on personal choice with Acer and ASUS, each of which offer scores of different models.

    On the other hand, Dell netbooks do provide many customization options. The base netbooks typically start at under $300, which sounds like a good deal initially, but these often run on the Intel Atom Z-series processors, which are really intended for lower performing devices. To Dell’s credit, changing the specifications is an easy, though time-consuming, experience. Often, it results in a machine comparable in price or performance to a specific ASUS or Acer model that could be had without the configuration hoops.

    While all the mobile computer vendors are enjoying growth, there’s something to be said when you’re first to a new market. Assuming you implement your product plan well, you’re likely in the best position to reap the largest rewards.



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

  • Android 2.2 update for Nexus One may not be ‘official’ release

    Froyo Nexus One

    While there are probably many of you out there humming along with Froyo on your Nexus One without a problem, you may be interested to learn that that version of Android 2.2 may not be the “official release” that Google intends to push out to all users.  SlashGear has reported that a Google employee named “Ry Guy” has stated that Nexus One users will get an OTA update from Google once the official update goes live.  However, no one knows if the OTA “official release” will be any different than the version that is in use right now, so there may be no need to update.  Also, as long as you got the update from Google itself, it’s not like running that build of Froyo will do any harm to your device.  Ry Guy went on to say that Google is working to bring the official update “ASAP,” so it should hit some time in the next couple of weeks.  Are any of you running Android 2.2 on your Nexus One?  Tell us your experience with the update!


  • Video: Froyo Browser Speed Test With Flash

    Found under: Android, Froyo, Browser, Speed, Flash, Adobe, Testing, Mobile Safari, Opera Mobile, HTC HD2, iPhone 3GS, Google Nexus One,

    Flash 10.1 is here for Android in the Android 2.2 Froyo update but not only that the Android browser is faster than every other mobile browser that should make Android fanboys quite a happy bunch knowing their beloved platform is maturing quite handsomely. Sadly there is a draw back here with Flash 10.1 installed the browser speed is slower than other competing mobile browsers and this might force some people to uninstall Flash from their Nexus One for the time being.PocketNow test

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  • Verizon Bill Collector Threatens To Blow Up Man’s House

    A man in New Mexico is suing Verizon Wireless over a series of harassing phone calls made by Verizon bill collectors last year. The man, Al Burrows, says the calls were concerning a relative’s unpaid cellphone bill. When he hung up on one of them, the disconnected Verizon rep called back, said she knew where Burrows lived, and added, “I am gonna blow your mother fucking house up.”

    “Verizon Rep Threatens To Blow Up Man’s House Over Unpaid Bill” [Sante Fe Reporter]