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  • En el Reino Unido 1.000 unidades de Renalut Clio costarán como en 1.990

    renault-clio_17_rt_5-door-1990.jpg
    El Renault Clio cumple 20 años, ya tiene edad para beber legalmente y para sacarse el carné de conducir, que ya es hora. En Inglaterra la filial de Renault ha decidido poner a la venta 1.000 unidades al precio original al que salió el vehículo: alrededor de los 8.000 €, que pensaba yo que sería menos todavía.

    El motor tendrá será el 1.2 de 16 v y 75 cv, que es la motorización menos potente en España y estos 1.000 Clio tendrán un equipamiento intermedio, no configurable claro está. Tampoco creo que los clientes pongan demasiadas quejas pudiendo disponer de un buen coche por 8.000 €.

    Es bonita desde luego la iniciativa: el departamento de márketing habrá hecho cuentas para que le salgan los números, pero antes que poner cualquier tipo de propaganda o descuento sin sentido inventarse una cosa curiosa como ésta creo que le da valor añadido a la marca. Desde luego los propietarios de esos 1.000 vehículos lo tendrán como algo muy especial.

    En España estaría bien que hiciesen algo similar, pero ya vemos que en Inglaterra van a otro nivel: hace poco publicamos los engendros (llamativos, a fin de cuentas) que Hyundai en Inglaterra ha diseñado para promocionar por todo el territorio nacional el próximo Mundial de Sudáfrica.

    Vía | Diariomotor



  • Review: The Zo Personal Subwoofer

    The Zo from digiZoid

    At the beginning of May digiZoid introduced the Zo personal subwoofer, which claimed to enhance a listener’s sonic experience by offering increasing degrees of bass contouring to any audio fed through it. Over the past week I’ve had the chance to take the Zo for a spin. Has it lived up to the claims of its manufacturer? Read on for a full review…
    Continue Reading Review: The Zo Personal Subwoofer

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  • Slipknot Bassist Paul Gray – Found Dead in a Hotel Room

    Paul Gray, bassist of the metal band Slipknot, found dead at Town Place Suites in Urbandale, Iowa on Monday. Gray, who just turned 38 last April 8, was expecting his first child to his wife, Brenna. His death was confirmed by Amy Sciarretto, the publicist of Slipknot, who did not give any further comment.The police found no evidence of foul play in Gray’s death, however the investigation still continues. His body was found by a hotel employee at around 10:50 in the morning. Gray was known as “#2” and “The Pig”. He was also the co-founder of Slipknot in 1995, together with drummer Joey Jordison and percussionist Shawn Crahan.  He was known by the public as the bassist who wore a grotesque mask. In the year 2006, Slipknot was awarded as the Best Metal Performance for “Before I Forget” from the prestigious Grammy awards.

    Gray was arrested in 2003 for drug-possession charges after the police had found small amounts of marijuana, cocaine and two syringes in his car after a traffic accident in Des Moines. His life seemed to have a turnabout since he married his girlfriend Brenna Paul two years ago.

    Nonpoint drummer Rob Rivera told MTV news, “I am deeply saddened to hear and read about the death of Paul Gray. Nonpoint had the pleasure of touring with Slipknot during the 2001 Ozzfest, and what we saw from Paul and the rest of Slipknot was a band that gave their all live and put their bodies on the line. To all in Slipknot and Paul’s family, Nonpoint send all our love, condolences and prayers out to you. You will be missed by all your friends and fans around the world. Rest In Peace my metal brother.”

    Related posts:

    1. Paul Gray Dead- No More Slipknot Bass Player: Farewell Slipknot Bassist!
    2. Paul Gray of Slipknot Found Dead
    3. Slipknot Bassist Found Dead

  • Yahoo teams up with Nokia for navigation services

    Yahoo Inc. will be providing Nokia, the largest mobile provider, mail and messaging capabilities through Nokia Ovia and Nokia iChat. Nokia, on the other hand, will be empowering Yahoo with navigation, location, and mapping services. The services will be available second half of this year and gear up in 2011, reports the Associated Press.

    Both have reached an agreement Monday to extend their services in the global market where advertising and Internet is becoming more accessible to users through mobile phones. However, the partnership covers both mobiles and computers.

    “On the PC side, any of the mapping services by definition give us, especially in the local arena ,a good platform for advertising…and as mobile increasingly becomes important for advertising, the same thing will happen in the mobile application,” enthused Yahoo CEO Carol Bartz. Location, she added, is important since people want to know where they and their friends are. Yahoo has prioritized other areas that left it tailing behind Google.

    As for Nokia, the partnership will provide increased mobile presence in the U.S. where it is being outsmarted by iPhone (Apple Inc.) and BlackBerry (Research In Motion Ltd.).

    Reuters quoted Nokia CEO Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo saying, “Location, maps and navigation will get more mind-share, will get more attention in the U.S. and many more users in the North American market.”

    If the team up will work, Neil Mawston of Strategy Analytics sees it as an opportunity to bring about closer ties in mobile advertising for longer terms.

    Related posts:

    1. Yahoo and Nokia team up in online services
    2. Nokia sues Apple again
    3. Apple Welcomes the new iAd mobile advertising

  • NASA hones in on next-gen satellite-aided search and rescue technology

    NASA's DASS next-gen search and rescue system will pinpoint those in distress faster

    The satellite-aided search and rescue technology pioneered by NASA is credited with saving more than 27,000 lives worldwide since its inception nearly three decades ago. Now the agency has developed new technology that will more quickly identify the locations of people in distress and reduce the risk to rescuers. ..
    Continue Reading NASA hones in on next-gen satellite-aided search and rescue technology

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  • Here Comes A Horrendous U.S. Trading Day After Stocks Smashed Globally

    Update 6:46 AM ET: Dow futures are now of 215. All indices pointing downo ver 2%.

    Original post: Stocks have been hammered around the world. Britain’s FTSE is down 2.9% while Germany’s DAX and France’s CAC 40 have fallen 2.8% and 3.4% respectively. The euro is tanking.

    Asia has been rattled by North Korea conflict fears, with Japan’s Nikkei down 3%, Hong Kong’s Hang Send down 2.9%, and China’s CSI 300 down 2.1%. Korea’s KOSPI has recovered somewhat from an earlier 3.3% drop, but is still down 2.7%.

    Chart

    Australia is down 3%, and MSCI Asia’s Apex 50 is down 3.4% as a whole.

    Gold is slightly weaker, at $1,189 while the dollar index (DXY) is rising again, at 87.12. Oil has fallen further, hitting $68.2 for light sweet crude.

    Futures are pointing to an ugly U.S. open, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq down 2% and 1.75% each:

    UPDATE: Futures now off by even more:

    Chart

    From FinViz:

    Chart

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Sprint EVO 4G first impressions and hands on video

    Yes, I was one of the lukcy 5,000 people who received a Sprint HTC EVO 4G at Google I/O.

    Several sites have already posted their reviews, but I believe the EVO is one of the most important phone launches in Android’s history. We want to spend the proper time with the device before posting our final thoughts, so look out for a bunch of mini posts this week that will cover all things EVO.

    First up, I just wanted to cover the basics of the EVO for those new to the device. Sprint begins selling the EVO 4G on June 4th for $199 with 2 year contract. Customers are required to pay $10 for the 4G premium data add-on and the mobile hotspot feature is an additional $29 per month.

    From the moment I first held it, the EVO became my new favorite Android device based purely on the hardware specs. The 4.3 inch display is just massive and it is a joy to play with. HTC is using the new Atmel maXTouch sensor and the touch input is more precise than what I experienced on the Nexus One.

    Powering the EVO is the 1 GHz Snapdragon. I’ve been the using the Nexus One which also features the same processor, so the performance between the two phones (and the HTC Incredible) is comparable. The only difference I can mention is that the Nexus One was noticeably faster when upgraded to Android 2.2, but we expect HTC will do the same for the EVO later this year.

    The most notable feature of this phone (and most marketed) will be its 4G support. Sprint claims their 4G WiMAX network is 10x faster compared to other 3G networks (6 Mbps vs. 600 Kbps) and we will see how that promise holds up in a comprehensive speed test over the next few days. All I can say right now is that I think many of you will be shocked by my 4G speed results.

    I’ve been out of town the last few days so I have yet to get an accurate reading on how well the battery performs. I will be taking a daily log this week and see how it does with 4G data left on and turned off.

    I have barely tested the camera at all and there will be an entire dedicated post for picture and video quality. No micro HDMI cable was included with the unit, so I still need to locate one in town and film the results on my HD TV set.

    If you have any special request for a video idea or other things to include in the review, please leave me a comment. I admit some our previous phone reviews kinda sucked, but we have listened to all your feedback and the entire team is spending extra time on this review to make sure it stands above the rest.

    Make sure to hit up the source link if you wish to view the hands on video in HD.

    Highlights of the Sprint EVO 4G include:

    • Simultaneous voice and data capability in 4G and Wi-Fi coverage areas, enabling Web surfing and more while the conversation continues.
    • Offering a new way to search with pictures instead of words, Google Goggles works with everything from books, DVDs and barcodes to landmarks, logos, artwork and wine labels.
    • Superfast 1GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon processor, ensuring a smooth and quick movement within phone menus.
    • Two cameras – an 8.0 megapixel auto-focus camera with HD-capable video camcorder and a forward-facing 1.3 megapixel camera.
    • Built-in mobile hotspot functionality allowing up to eight Wi-Fi enabled devices to share the 3G or 4G experience on the go with a laptop, camera, music player, game unit, video player, or any other Wi-Fi enabled device.
    • Integrated HD video capture with the ability to capture and share live video via the Qik Web site, Facebook, YouTube or Twitter(TM).
    • Ability to easily watch video with the device on an HDTV via an HDMI cable (sold separately).
    • Custom Web browser optimized for the 4.3 inch display and Sprint 4G speeds to deliver a full, no-compromise Internet experience.
    • A handy kickstand built into the back, making it easy to watch videos on-the-go.
    • Adobe Flash technology ensures that rich Internet content, such as embedded video and animation, are displayed the way they are meant to be seen.
    • Pinch-to-zoom and automatic text reflowing provide easy Web page views.

    Related Posts

  • McLaren announces the 35 markets where it will sell the MP4-12C

    McLaren MP4-12CIn an effort to raise sales in the next two years and for it to be able to hit its goal of 4,000 units a year, McLaren is developing a global dealership network.

    McLaren Automotive aims to create a network of 35 dealers in 19 countries by 2011, with 12 in Europe and 8 in North America. McLaren intends to expand this network further in 2012 but it isn’t expected to reach more than 70 dealers. McLaren is set to announce 23 new dealers before the MP4-12C is launched in July. McLaren will have representations in global cities such as Chicago, Toronto, Sydney, Dubai and Zurich.

    The cars will still be produced along with its Formula One vehicles at its Technology Centre (MTC) in Woking, England. It becomes obvious that the company seeks to connect with customers through its Formula One credentials.

    McLaren wants to keep its image as a highly specialized maker of high-performance cars that differentiate it from other luxury and premium brand competitors, which may be known more for making more conventional sedans and coupes.

    In a press release, Antony Sheriff, Managing Director at McLaren Automotive, said that the company aims to have a global network that has “fewer retailers than [its] competitors, selling a smaller volume of higher quality cars.” This July, the MP4-12C is expected to debut at the Goodwood Festival of Speed in the U.K. For 2011, McLaren is slated to produce and sell a thousand 12Cs.

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    Source: Car news, Car reviews, Spy shots

  • Toshiba Camileo BW10 Is Their First Waterproof Camcorder [Camcorders]

    Only a year ago did Toshiba say that making a camcorder waterproof jacks the price up by close to 200 per cent. Good on them then for launching their first waterproof and weather-resistant model for the equivalent of $185. More »










    CamcorderToshibaElectronicsVideoHome

  • Diesel-powered Mercedes-Benz E-Class making U.S. debut in September

    2010 Mercedes-Benz E-ClassEarlier today, we told you that the new 2011 Mercedes–Benz SLK will make its U.S. debut next year in April and will be followed by the new M-Class by summer. These words came from Ernst Lieb, CEO of Mercedes-Benz USA.

    From the same Ernst Lieb, we also found out that a diesel-powered Mercedes-Benz E-Class will come in United States in September. Regarding a C-Class with a diesel engine, Lieb said that this engine will arrive in the next-generation which will make its debut in 2013. The GLK compact crossover will also receive a diesel engine. Regarding the new four-cylinder engines in the United States, it appears that these engines will debut in the new B-Class and C-Class in 2013!

    2010 Mercedes-Benz E-Class2010 Mercedes-Benz E-Class2010 Mercedes-Benz E-Class2010 Mercedes-Benz E-Class2010 Mercedes-Benz E-Class2010 Mercedes-Benz E-Class2010 Mercedes-Benz E-Class2010 Mercedes-Benz E-Class2010 Mercedes-Benz E-Class2010 Mercedes-Benz E-Class2010 Mercedes-Benz E-Class2010 Mercedes-Benz E-Class2010 Mercedes-Benz E-Class2010 Mercedes-Benz E-Class2010 Mercedes-Benz E-Class

    [via autonews – sub. required]

    Source: Car news, Car reviews, Spy shots

  • Offshore oil vs. offshore wind … who wins?

    MNN has a look at how much offshore wind power could have been built for the amount of money spent on the BP Deepwater Horizon disaster – Offshore oil vs. offshore wind … who wins?.

    In my fact-digging on the now sunken Deepwater Horizon oil rig, I came across a stat about the construction and operational costs of BP’s failed rig which was to tap an estimated 7 billion barrels of oil from two recent oil discoveries (the Kaskida and the Tiber) over a 25-year period. According to Morningstar analysts (who published a study back in March), the projected investment for both wells was between $8 billion and $12 billion U.S.

    So that got me thinking, just how much offshore wind could be bought for the equivalent $12 billion investment? My back of the envelope calculations were enlightening. Here we go …

    1. What is the cost of offshore wind power?

    We have a good comp in the form of Alpha Ventus, a 12-turbine project off the shores of Germany which was recently completed. The project was the first of its kind and as might be expected, it ran over budget. According to Spiegel, the total project cost $282 million (it was estimated at just under $200 million) which includes upkeep costs over 25 years. Alpha Ventus is a 60 megawatt array, enough to power about 50,000 U.S. homes or 550 million kilowatts of electricity per year (a typical U.S. home uses 11,000 kilowatts).

    2. How many turbines can $10 billion buy?

    Projecting that the next few big offshore projects will drop in price as manufacturing and grid infrastructure improves, let’s say a 60 megawatt project will go for $200 million. Divide that by $12 billion and you get sixty 60-megawatt wind projects, or about 33 billion kilowatts of power capacity per year.

    3. How many electric cars does that power?

    A typical American drives 12,000 miles per year. The latest plug-in electric vehicles (like the much-anticipated Tesla Sedan) use about 370 wH’s per mile. The typical U.S. driver would need 12,000 x .37 = 4,440 kilowatts per year. Divide 33 billion by 4,440 kilowatts and you get about 7.4 million electric vehicles that could be powered each year by a $10 billion wind investment.

    4. How many cars could Deepwater Horizon have fueled?

    44 gallons of gasoline are made from each barrel of crude. Deepwater Horizon was to produce 7 billion barrels of crude over its 25 year life span. 7 billion x 44 = 308 billion gallons of gas divided by 25 years = 12. 3 billions gallons of gas per year. Let’s say as cars become more efficient the average U.S. car goes up to a 26 mpg average. 26 mpg x 12.3 billion = 320 billion miles. Divide that by our 12,000 mile national average and you get 26.7 million gas cars per year from the $10 billion offshore drilling investment.

    5. What’s the end cost for the consumer?

    You can see why as a nation we like oil so much … it yields about 3-4 times more transportation power per dollar invested. But it’s important to note that the cost of gasoline for the end-user is considerably higher than electricity. In the end the consumer pays dearly for all that convenient fossil fuel. Right now gasoline is about $3 per gallon and the typical car gets 22 mpg. So the typical gasoline mile costs us about 13.6 cents or $1,632 per year (oil). Grid electricity is about 10 cents per kilowatt, so one mile on electricity costs only 3.7 cents, or $444 per year (wind). If you figure that 7.4 million Americans would be saving $1,188 per year, that is about $8.8 billion going back into the U.S. economy rather than into the grubby hands of foreign oil companies like BP.

    6. What if you factor in environmental costs?

    Now if we start factoring in the massive cleanup costs, it changes the game significantly. Current estimates are putting the BP cleanup bill at $22.6 billion. This figure will be matched (at least) by U.S. taxpayers in the form of government assistance programs. So that puts the total estimated Deepwater Horizon pricetag at $55 billion ($10B + $22.5B + $22.5B), assuming it’s even possible to clean up the spill at all.

    7. Comparing apples and lemons …

    As a comparison exercise, let’s say that instead of sinking on Day 1, the Deepwater Horizon sunk halfway though its lifespan. It would have powered 13.4 million cars at a cost of $55 billion … about $4,100 per car (oil). Our wind turbines would have powered 3.7 million cars at $10 billion or about $2,700 per car (wind). Since “windspills” have never been known to cause any impact whatsoever and oil spills are quite frequent (according to NOAA in one sample year alone there were 257 oil spills) this seems more than a fair comparison and puts wind in the lead, both from the perspective of investment and consumer spending.

    Of course, this sad little number game will never make up for the incalculable losses to the fishing industry, the tourist industry, the health of wetlands, the survival of wildlife, the carcinogens that are now leaking into the water systems of Gulf residents — all things for which BP will never pay. We, the American people however, will pay those prices for a very, very long time to come.

    You get my drift … it is time to change the way we think about offshore energy resources and start switching to safe, clean wind power.


  • 4 Examples of Content Marketing You Should Get to Know

    If you’re reading this post you most likely know a thing or two about content marketing. Content marketing is basically the process of not only creating great content but sharing that content to attract traffic, engage audiences, and maybe even get some natural backlinks to your domain. The process is twofold: writing or producing that great content, and then sharing it. If it’s good enough, the links back to your site will follow. But what content types can you use to best utilize this form of marketing? Let’s examine a few:
    posting content marketing
    Authority Posts

    Writing great content is an acquired skill. The hardest part is coming up with a unique idea and then executing it. Thankfully, there are many people in our industry who have done the tough thinking for you; it’s just up to you to figure out how to apply that to your brand. Top 10 lists, tip posts, research oriented posts, guidelines, and how-to’s are a few examples of authority type posts that are great for content marketing. Placing them on your site and then promoting via social media, social bookmarking, through friends and family, and with other techniques is just one example of content marketing.

    Videos

    Using videos is yet another example of this form of marketing. Developing a blog post or page on your site with embedded videos alongside your content is a great idea. Posting a top 10 list of the best videos of all time in your industry or giving a compilation of how-to instructional videos all in one place can provide you with traffic and links back to your site. That is, if the content and accompanying video are worthy of a look see.

    Q&A

    Have you ever had a client or prospective customer ask you a question? Of course you have. Yet one other way to use content marketing to help promote your site is to answer these questions on your website. Sometimes those questions are asked by searchers hundreds or even thousands of times per month. Doing a bit of keyword research can yield results that may just surprise you, all lost opportunities if you currently don’t have a piece of content on your site that could get ranked for that phrase.

    Infographics

    People go crazy about infographics these days. Have a knack for Photo Shop? Try your hand at a handy infographic. There are so many different kinds of infographics: statistical based, timeline based, process based, or geo based. Using some creativity and a bit of skill you’re sure to produce an infographic that will spurn tweets, comments, and links.

    The four types of content marketing listed above are just a few of the ways you can market your website. Have some tips or suggestions with regards to content marketing? Leave your feedback in the comments below!

    About the Author:

    Steve Lazuka is the President of content marketing company, Interactive Media, based in Ohio. His company helps clients with their website content writing needs, including content marketing and promotion. Follow him on Twitter @SteveLazuka.

    Gravatar: [email protected].

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  • The Tesla and Toyota Tie Up

    The CSM has an article on a deal between Toyota and Tesla Motors, “in which Tesla will buy a defunct Toyota plant in California, and Toyota will purchase $50 million of Tesla stock” – Will Tesla-Toyota deal help repair Toyota’s public image?.

    In a move that may provide a spark for the electric automobile industry, Toyota, the world’s largest automaker, is teaming up Tesla Motors Inc, the makers of the only highway-legal all-electric car in the United States.

    The companies announced a deal yesterday in which Tesla will buy a defunct Toyota plant in California where it will produce the model S, an electric sedan slated for 2012.

    Toyota, meanwhile, will buy $50 million worth of Tesla stock, and the two companies announced Thursday that they will work together to develop new electric vehicle technologies and refine manufacturing methods.

    In this symbiotic business deal, Tesla will likely benefit from direct knowledge of Toyota’s economy of scale and links to a vast supplier base.

    Toyota, for its part, might get a boost in its competition with other carmakers over the growing environmentally friendly vehicle marketplace. Tesla’s advanced lithium-ion batteries, for example, might steer the way for Toyota as the Japanese automaker looks to replace the older nickel-metal hydride units found in its hybrid Prius.


  • Supreme Court Justices Discuss Twitter

    It does’t look like we’ll be seeing much Tweeting-from-the-bench on the Supreme Court any time soon, but the Hillicon Valley blog highlights an amusing moment at a recent House Judiciary subcommittee meeting, attended by two Supreme Court Justices — Antonin Scalia and Stephen Breyer in which they’re asked if they plan on using Twitter any time soon. Scalia says he doesn’t even know anything about it — and notes that his wife refers to him as “Mr. Clueless.” Reassuring to know that of a Supreme Court Justice. Breyer, however, seems to indicate a realization that Twitter, as a communication platform, really could be quite powerful.


    Subcommittee Chair Steve Cohen: Have either of y’all ever consider tweeting or twitting?

    Justice Scalia: I don’t even know what it is. To tell you the truth, I have heard it talked about. But, you know, my wife calls me Mr. Clueless — I don’t know about tweeting.

    Justice Breyer: Well, I have no personal experience with that. I don’t even know how it works. But, remember when we had that disturbance in Iran? My son said, ‘Go look at this.’ And oh, my goodness. I mean, there were some Twitters, I called them, there were people there with photographs as it went on. And I sat there for two hours absolutely hypnotized. And I thought, ‘My goodness, this is now, for better or for worse, I think maybe for many respects for better, in that instance certainly, it’s not the same world. It’s instant and people react instantly… and there we are. It’s quite a difference there and it’s not something that’s going to go away.

    You can watch the exchange below:



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  • A Deeply Unpersuasive Argument Against Elena Kagan

    by Julian Ku

    The Washington Times has an editorial that seems to argue that because Elena Kagan supports the teaching of international and comparative law, she actually believes that “foreign law trumps the Constitution.”

    It was under Ms. Kagan’s leadership while dean of Harvard Law School, for instance, that Harvard dropped constitutional law as a required course for graduation, while adding a requirement for a course in “International/Comparative Law.” The de-emphasis on the Constitution itself is part of a horribly misguided trend in liberal academia. To replace con-law with international law is symbolic of a mindset that runs far afield from the basics of American legal tradition.

    As someone who teaches both constitutional law and “international/comparative law,” I would say that both should be required for law school graduation. At the same time, given the politics of the constitutional law faculty at Harvard, I think the Washington Times would actually be happier that Laurence Tribe and Mark Tushnet have fewer students in their conlaw classes.  And given that there is pretty much nothing in Kagan’s written work that reflects the”transnationalist” perspective, this is pretty thin stuff that will make her critics look silly.

  • Google Reader Revamps Comments, Drops Support for IE6, Gears

    Google Reader is already the world’s most popular feed reader, but it’s still getting better, or at least evolving, all the time. In a latest round of updates, Reader gets a revamped and simplified comment system. However, it also dumps support for legacy browsers and, unfortunately for some, for Google Gears as well.
    … (read more)

  • Time compression and the causal connection

    Photo by Flickr user evoo73. Click for sourceWhen we think two events are causally related we perceive the time between them to be shorter. Although this is news to me, it turns out the ‘time compression’ effect has been well researched.

    Several of the studies have found that when we view two events but believe the first causes the second, time between them seems have gone quicker than when we perceive exactly the same scenario but think the two events are not connected.

    This is a summary of the effect from a recent study that investigated whether your beliefs about how one thing is causing another affected the amount of time compression:

    How much time might have elapsed between the launch of an economic program and the emergence of an economy from recession, between joining a dating service and finding someone you want to marry, or between giving your child a tough lecture about trying harder in school and seeing an effect on his or her performance? Recent research has shown that people subjectively bind such cause–effect events in time and “compress” the time elapsed between them. Hence, for instance, if a parent believes that the tough lecture was the reason for an improvement in the child’s performance, the parent would estimate the interval [between the two] to be shorter. Several behavioral studies have established that people judge the time elapsed between pairs of historical events to be shorter when they perceive the events to be causally linked than when people do not perceive them to be so (Faro, Leclerc, & Hastie, 2005).

    Similar effects occur on a shorter time scale. For example, in another study, when participants intentionally made a movement that appeared to cause a sound, they thought the events were closer together than when the two events occurred with no apparent causal connection

    The new study helped explain the effect and showed that our beliefs about how we think one thing caused another are crucial to our experience of time.

    It found that if people believe that cause and effect happened by a mechanical or physical process that was time limited the ‘time compression’ effect increased, whereas if it was an accumulative or ‘building up to a tipping point’ process, time didn’t seem so short.

    Link to PubMed entry for time compression study.

  • This Chart Shows How Markets Are Losing Faith In Europe’s Financial System

    Chart

    The London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR), which is a benchmark rate at which banks borrow money from each other, has been rising.

    WSJ:

    While the current Libor, at just above 0.5%, is far below the sky-high levels of 4.81875% reached at the height of the financial crisis in 2008, it is still a significant jump from 0.25% as recently as March.

    Yet as shown in the Wall Street Journal graphic to the right, 3-month LIBOR, which is a measure of trust in banks, is higher for European banks vs. U.S. ones, thus showing less trust.

    On Monday, German state-controlled lender WestLB AG said it cost 0.565% to borrow dollars for three months, up from 0.38% a month earlier. U.S. banks are reporting lower costs: Bank of America Corp., said its three-month dollar Libor stood at 0.48%. J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. reported a 0.47% rate.

    Higher borrowing costs cut into profits, and could add further strain to troubled European banks, pushing more over the edge.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Elgato EyeTV HD PVR lets users watch and edit cable and sat TV on a Mac

    The Elgato EyeTV HD is a PVR for your Mac that also lets your stream content to your iPad ...

    Want to turn your Mac into a DVR with full access to premium cable or satellite TV content? Elgato says its customers can do just with its EyeTV HD, that lets users watch, record, edit and enjoy cable and satellite TV in high-definition, including all their premium channels, on a Mac. What’s more, the EyeTV HD includes a unique dual-format capture mode that records in iPad and iPhone formats at the same time, allowing users to stream live and recorded TV to an iPhone or iPad using the optional EyeTV app…
    Continue Reading Elgato EyeTV HD PVR lets users watch and edit cable and sat TV on a Mac

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  • One Slice Of Commercial Real Estate Signals The Upcoming Slaughter

    building imploding implode collapse

    Apartment building loans are experiencing soaring default rates, in what could be a signal of things to come for the broader commercial real estate sector.

    The default rate for apartment building mortgages held by banks soared to 4.6% in Q1, which is nearly twice what it was in Q1 of 2009.

    Bloomberg:

    Defaults on so-called multifamily mortgages rose from 4.4 percent in the fourth quarter and from 2.4 percent during the same period in 2009, the New York-based real estate research firm said today. Commercial-mortgage defaults also rose in the first quarter for loans against office, retail, hotel and industrial properties, Real Capital said.

    “Apartment defaults are leading other commercial real estate,” Sam Chandan, global chief economist at Real Capital, said in an interview. “Banks tended to make more aggressively underwritten apartment loans earlier during this last cycle. Credit and pricing reached their peaks for office properties and other commercial assets later.”

    Here it comes.

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