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  • With 75 Million Users, Shazam’s Well On Its Way To An IPO


    Shazam mobile iPhone app

    One by one, the mobile song identifier just keeps hitting its targets – now it ranks as one of the most successful mobile content companies out there, and is thought likely to attempt a public offering at the end of 2010 or early 2011.

    Shazam CEO Andrew Fisher last year told me his strategy was to hit 50 million users by 2009’s end (he did) and 100 million by the close of 2010. With this year not even half-way through, the company today announced it’s reached 75 million. (TechCrunch broke the embargo).

    Next up? In October, Fisher told me: “Before now, I’d have said it’s not appropriate for a company the size of Shazam (to float). But for us now, given the size we’re at and the opportunity we see in front of us, once you exceed 100 million users, you are significant.” Also: “As we look to the future we absolutely think we have the size and the scale to launch a public offering.”

    In its 2008/09 fiscal year, Shazam Entertainment Ltd made a £89,943 post-tax loss and a £133,462 operating loss on turnover of £7.3 million, thanks to £886,903 costs and £6.5 million expenses.

    Shazam took an initial £11.5 million investment from Acacia Capital and DN Capital and a later round of an undisclosed size from Kleiner Perkins Caulfield and Byers.

    It’s made a surprisingly good fist of limiting its free mobile app whilst introducing a paid-for app that has become the core product. It’s also adding more affiliate partnerships to the app and in January claimed to be referring a whopping 260,000 paying song customers every day to retail affiliates like iTunes Store.

    Those targets…
    —Shazam bobbled along for about eight years as a dial-up service.
    —But an iPhone app helped it double its user base to 35 million in just seven months between September 2008 and May 2009.
    —December 2009: Hit 50 million target.
    —May 2010: Hit 75 million target.
    —December 2010: Next stop: 100 million? IPO?


  • ACL 2010 Lineup Released! More of Austin City Limits 2010…

    ACL 2010 lineup is now released!  Austin City Limits 2010 seems quite different this year compared to the last few years. ACL 2010 lineup used a good majority of their funds to purchase very big name artists.

    Are you ready for the Austin City Limits 2010?

    See the ACL 2010 Lineup:

    Friday:

    Phish
    The Strokes
    Spoon
    Vampire Weekend
    Sonic Youth
    The Black Keys
    Broken Bells
    Slightly Stoopid
    Beach House
    The Sword
    Girls
    Ryan Bingham & The Dead Horses
    Blues Traveler
    The Soft Pack
    Amos Lee
    Robert Randolph & The Family Band
    Miike Snow
    Mountain Goats
    JJ Grey & Mofro
    Angus & Julia Stone
    Hockey
    Asleep at the Wheel
    Nortec Collective
    GIVERS
    Band of Heathens
    Charlie Mars
    Sarah Harmer
    Chief
    Those Darlins
    Carolyn Wonderland
    Kings Go Forth
    The Ettes
    Qbeta
    The Kicks
    Ponderosa
    Two Tons of Steel
    Gospel Stars
    Wesley Bray & The Disciples of Joy

    Saturday:
    Muse
    M.I.A
    LCD Soundsystem
    Monsters of Folk
    Deadmau5
    Gogol Bordello
    Pat Green
    Matt and Kim
    The xx
    The Temper Trap
    Local Natives
    Gaslight Anthem
    Lucero
    Pete Yorn
    Ozomatli
    Manchester Orchestra
    The Almighty Defenders
    Bear in Heaven
    Mayer Hawthorne
    Kinky
    David Bazan
    The Very Best
    Beats Antique
    Two Door Cinema Club
    Lissie
    The Dough Rollers
    Basia Bulat
    Balmorhea
    Dan Black
    The Jane Shermans
    Caitlin Rose
    Run With Bulls
    Heavenly Voices
    Jones Family Singers

    Sunday:
    The Eagles
    Flaming Lips
    Norah Jones
    Band of Horses
    The National
    Robert Earl Keen
    Yeasayer
    Rebelution
    Portugal. The Man
    Edward Sharpe and the Magnetic Zeros
    Devendra Banhart
    Gayngs
    Richard Thompson
    Martin Sexton
    Midlake
    Foals
    Switchfoot
    Cage the Elephant
    The Morning Benders
    Trombone Shorty & Orleans Avenue
    Henry Clay People
    Blind Pilot
    Dawes
    The Constellations
    T Bird and the Breaks
    Frank Turner
    The Relatives
    MyNameIsJohnMichael
    SPEAK
    Maxim Ludwig
    Ashley Cleveland & Kenny Greenberg
    Buddy & The Straight Way Travelers
    Ruby Jane SmithPhish

    See more of ACL 2010 Lineup and Austin City Limits 2010…

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  • Smartphone Security Provider Lookout Raises $11 Million


    Lookout Logo

    As the mobile web increasingly looks a lot more like the PC-based one, companies like Lookout are hoping to make a name for themselves in providing security from hacks on users’ smartphones. The San Francisco company has raised an $11 million second round.

    Aside from promising to block mobile viruses and malware, Lookout’s cloud-based app also covers data loss and theft of the phone itself. Lookout, previously known as consulting firm called Flexilis, is available is on across some 400 mobile networks in 170 countries.

    In conjunction with the funding, Lookout has also made a few executive additions. Joseph Ansanelli, former CEO and co-founder of Vontu, has been named as chairman of Lookout’s board. Also, Chris Jones was added as VP of product management. He was formerly senior director of portfolio product management at Symantec. Lastly, Julie Herendeen, previously vice president of network products and advertising solutions for Yahoo (NSDQ: YHOO), has been named VP of marketing.

    Related


  • Ford Windstar investigado por la NHTSA

    La NHTSA de Estados Unidos acaba de abrir una investigación que en un principio afectaría a 900.000 unidades ni más ni menos. En concreto, 234 usuarios de un Ford Windstar (un monovolumen norteamericano) han presentado una queja de los modelos 1999 a 2003 por rotura del eje trasero tanto en marcha como estacionado o en medio de un atasco.

    Hasta el momento, Ford ha preferido no realizar ninguna declaración al respecto. Se expecula que en los estados de EEUU más cercanos al mar, el salitre ha podido ir corrompiendo los ejes hasta que se han roto.

    Ya que este problema tendría casi 10 años y el fabricante no ha llamado a revisión a ningún modelo ni ha sustituido los ejes en garantía, podría ser admitido como responsable y ser obligado por el estado a tener que reemplazar todos los ejes y deber pagar una elevada multa económica.

    Related posts:

    1. Ford confirma un nuevo coche policial para Estados Unidos
    2. Ford con nuevos descuentos, no cobrará el IVA
    3. Ford Focus RS no estará disponible en Estados Unidos
  • Mark Souder Resigning from Congress

    Mark Souder Resigning from Congress
    Indiana Rep. Mark Souder says he will will resign his seat in Congress due to an affair with a staff member.

    “It is with great regret I announce that I am resigning from the U.S. House of Representatives as well as resigning as the Republican nominee for Congress in this fall’s election,” said Souder.

    Souder said in a statement provided by his office that he has “sinned against God, my wife and my family to have a relationship with a part-time member of my team.”

    It scheduled a news conference to discuss his future. Souder won a rough Republican primary on May 4 to be nominated for his ninth term representing northeast Indiana.

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  • YouTube Launches in South Africa

    YouTube has just celebrated its fifth birthday, but there’s no time to stop enjoying it. The site is growing as fast as ever and is trying to expand into new areas and markets. YouTube has now made its first foray into Africa with the launch of YouTube South Africa. It’s more than just a localized version, the site says, YouTube has partnered with lo… (read more)

  • Did the Eradication of Smallpox Accidentally Help the Spread of HIV? | 80beats

    Smallpox_vaccineWith smallpox largely eradicated around the world, health organizations phased out the smallpox vaccine between the 1950s and 1970s (the last natural case of the disease was seen in 1977, in Somalia). During that span, Raymond Weinstein says, the AIDS crisis broke out in force. And in a study in BMC Immunology, he argues those two events could be connected.

    Supposing that smallpox vaccination could have some effect on a person’s susceptibility to HIV, researchers led by Weinstein tested the idea on cells in a lab. They took immune cells from 10 people recently vaccinated against smallpox and 10 people never vaccinated. HIV, they found, was five times less successful at replicating with the cells of vaccinated people.

    Why?

    The researchers believe vaccination may offer some protection against HIV by producing long-term alterations in the immune system, possibly including the expression of a receptor called CCR5 on the surface of white blood cells, which is exploited by the smallpox virus and HIV [BBC News].

    Any finding that expands knowledge of how HIV replicates could be an important one. And while this small study can’t prove Weinstein’s assertion is correct, the argument is, at the very least, plausible. Says Weinstein:

    “There have been several proposed explanations for the rapid spread of HIV in Africa, including wars, the reuse of unsterilised needles and the contamination of early batches of polio vaccine. However, all of these have been either disproved or do not sufficiently explain the behaviour of the HIV pandemic” [Press Association].

    Related Content:
    DISCOVER: Whatever Happened to… Smallpox?
    DISCOVER: 20 Things You Didn’t Know About… Lab Accidents
    DISCOVER: Killer Pox in the Congo
    80beats: Researchers Track the HIV Virus to a Hideout in the Bone Marrow
    80beats: S. African HIV Plan: Universal Testing & Treatment Could End the Epidemic

    Image: CDC


  • Opinion: What Should Become of Google’s Phone Site?

    Last week, Google openly admitted to the world that it had failed in its online phone store experiment. I won’t lie… It takes real guts to tell the entire world you were wrong. But admitting failure is worthless, unless you learn from your experience, and implement a change for the better.

    As part of their pushing the Nexus One into retail channels, the Google Phone website is said to become a place where people can come to learn about the latest and greatest in Android handset offerings. What, exactly, this site will do, and how, exactly, this site will do it, remains to be seen.

    With Google I/O just a day away, it’s possible that our dear chum, Mr. Rubin, will share his insights on the website’s future. So, before we are graced with dulcet tones of his voice, I thought I’d chime in and give my two-cents on the matter and convey what, I feel, should be done with the Google Phone website.

    1. Tackle fragmentation and give power users real control over their handsets:

    One of the biggest gripes among Android users is the insane amount of time it takes to get an OS update from their carriers and/or phone manufacturers. With so many custom builds of Android, such as HTC’s Sense UI, and Motorola’s MotoBlur, it has become increasingly difficult for users to keep their phones up-to-date. This results in fragmentation, leading many users pining for apps and features that their OS version just can’t handle. It’s sad to see that two thirds of Android handsets are still running Android 1.5 or 1.6. With today’s ever expanding app marketplace, consistency among handsets is crucial. If there’s any upside to the iPhone’s closed off, single handset approach, it’s the fact that nearly all users have the same OS, allowing them all use the same applications.

    As part of the new Google Phone site, I feel it imperative to give users a way to self-upgrade the OS on their devices. I realize the problem with Google just offering a stand-alone version of Android–not all devices run the same hardware. This would certainly cause problems with a one-size-fits-all approach. Yet, computers have the same issue, and despite this problem, people can still upgrade their PCs at will (assuming the hardware is powerful enough to handle it). What’s the secret? Drivers. Why not have handset manufacturers provide hardware specific drivers for each of their devices, just like PC manufacturers do with their computer hardware? Google’s Phone site would be the perfect place to house a catalog of drivers. After all, isn’t Android all about being open and giving users more control?

    On that note (thought not directly related to the site)… Should this exact model not get adopted, it would still be beneficial for Google to convince phone manufacturers to give customers the option of which OS ships on their device. For example, when the EVO 4G hits the streets on June 4th, there could be two models–or better yet, two OS options for the end-user. One would be HTC’s custom Sense UI, along with all of their custom applications, and the other would be plain ol’ vanilla Android. This would likely result in minimal, if any, expenses for manufacturers, as all they’d have to do is refrain from slapping their custom UI and apps on top of the OS, yet still allow them to reach those customers who prefer stock Android. Not everyone wants a custom UI. Not everyone should have to use it. Such an option could also improve overall sales.

    Side-note: All these videos you see online about “turning off Sense” show nothing more than a way to disable the look of it on your homescreen. Even with this trick, all the Sense applications (phone, contacts, browser, etc.)  are still present and impossible to remove without using a custom ROM.

    2. Copy Microsoft and their totally awesome and logical phone backup solutions:

    Microsoft may not have the prettiest or best functioning smartphone OS on the market, but they sure do have the best phone backup solution. With My Phone, Microsoft constantly has your Windows Mobile phone wirelessly backing up its data to Redmond’s servers. True, Android stores your contacts and calendar events in your Gmail account, but that’s just a small fraction of what users really need. My Phone syncs contact, calendar appointments, text messages, browser favorites, photos, music, videos, and more.

    In addition to that, Microsoft recently released something called the Kin Studio. To accompany their new line of “tween” aimed smartphones, Microsoft created a website where all of the phones data is stored and backed up. From any browser in the world, a user can log into their account and see a timeline of all past and current changes made to their phone. With Kin Studio, users can view their photos, watch their videos, and even go back in time to see past backups of your phone’s data. It’s truly an amazing solution (see the video below to understand what I’m talking about).

    Click here to view the embedded video.

    A phone should always be backed up–apps, photos, and all. Why Android doesn’t have this built in is beyond me. If my Android phone is lost, or broken, I should be able to buy a new phone, log into my Google account, and automatically see have it pull down every, single, solitary bit of data that my last phone had. I should also be able to roll back any accidental deletions or changes that I made on my device. I’m not asking for a lot here. Microsoft does it. I just think  Google could, and should, do it better. The Google Phone website would be the perfect place to house such a system.

    Anyway… That’s what I think Google should do with their phone website. Simply having a site that only allows you to explore the available Android handset options is not enough. Google needs to crank up their game another notch. To offer a complete and unparalleled solution, Google’s Phone site needs to:

    1. Help users find which handset is best suited for them
    2. Allow power users the ability to upgrade and customize their software at will
    3. Store and give anywhere access to a complete phone backup solution

    The above is by no means a complete list of suggestions. I don’t know what Google has planned for I/O, but I hope we see some signs of Google brewing, or at least mulling over some of the ideas I’ve expressed above. I guess we’ll know soon enough. Google–if you’re reading this, please don’t let us AndroidGuys down.

    Might We Suggest…


  • ‘We Built Sioux City’ shows just how much Iowa towns can rock

    The ever-accurate Wikipedia says that Sioux City, Iowa, was originally settled by Native Americans and visited by its first European, a French or Spanish fur trader, sometime before 1804, when Louis and Clark passed through. Wikipedia does note that Sioux City’s rebirth was "built on a foundation of rock and roll," a claim bolstered by this video. "We Built Sioux City" appropriates Starship’s "We Built This City," which Blender magazine named the worst song ever in 2004 (and was used previously in a Starbucks video aimed at boosting employee morale). Produced as a promotional video for an Iowa biking event whose route includes Sioux City, the video does present Sioux City as a place where pasty white people can rock out without fear. And why not? There’s a lot going on. You can even ride a Zamboni around! If you have any doubts, stick around to the end, when Bret Michaels confirms that "Sioux City does rock" … to no less an interviewer than Joan Rivers.

    —Posted by Todd Wasserman

  • Wal-Mart 1st Quarter Soars, U.S. Same-Stores To Catch Up

    First quarter of 2010 has some of the most interesting fiscal books as it closes in the midst of concurrent issues in top players U.S. as well as in some members of Europe.

    Wal-Mart Inc. crosses over to the second lap of this year with a 10% leap in profits, world scale. However the steady climb is still not prevalent among its U.S. same-stores as retail products are not of the top concern amongst U.S. consumers while most of them are still restless whether the footprints of recession are not following them.

    Similar to other U.S. industries and businesses, Wal-Mart stays optimistic that 2010 will be the transition phase of returning to great sales. Economic revamp is rallied first by these company owners but they are aware that consumers will take much longer period to ease up and join.

    For the meantime, it has to give the lee way that U.S. retail consumers gravely need including some discounts or freebies from time to time.

    Wal-Mart might have to wait until unemployment is resolved which can be 1st to 2nd quarter of 2011 before U.S. same-stores shoot up.

    Its international performance with a $3.32 profit for Q1 for 88 cents per share may have been a steady climb for a long stretch now, but this is still vulnerable to a sudden drop.

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  • Energy and Global Warming News for May 19th 2010: Wheel hub motors for electric cars of the future?

    http://www.fraunhofer.de/en/Images/Radnabenmotor_klein_tcm63-50479.jpgElectric Drive Concepts for the Cars of the Future

    In order to make electric cars a part of everyday life, new vehicle designs and parts are needed. Take wheel hub motors, for instance.  [Click on image to enlarge.] One of the advantages of wheel hub motors is that manufacturers can dispense with the conventional engine bay — the space under the “hood” or “bonnet” — since the motors are attached directly to the wheels of the vehicle. This opens up a wealth of opportunities for car designers when drafting the layout of the vehicle.

    Additional advantages: By dispensing with the transmission and differential, the mechanical transmission elements suffer no losses or wear and tear. Moreover, the direct drive on each individual wheel may improve the drive dynamic and drive safety.

    Researchers are developing not only individual components, but the total system as well. They assemble the components on their concept car, known as the “Frecc0″ or the “Fraunhofer E-Concept Car Type 0″ — a scientific test platform. Starting next year, automobile manufacturers and suppliers will also be able to use the “Frecc0″ for testing new components. The basis of this demo model is an existing car: The new Artega GT manufactured by Artega Automobil GmbH. The establishment of this platform and the engineering of the wheel hub motor are just two projects among the panoply run by “Fraunhofer System Research for Electromobility.” The research cooperative is focusing on subjects that include vehicle design, energy production, distribution and implementation, energy storage techniques, technical system integration and sociopolitical matters. The federal ministry for education and research BMBF is funding this Fraunhofer initiative with 44 million euro. The goal is to develop prototypes for hybrid and electric vehicles, in order to support the German automotive industry as it makes the crossover to electromobility.

    Wheel hub motors were invented back in the 19th century. Ferdinand Porsche used these motors to equip his “Lohner Porsche” at the 1900 World Fair in Paris. Much has been done since then: “We are developing a wheel hub motor that integrates all essential electric and electronic components, especially the power electronics and electronic control systems, into the installation space of the motor. Thus, no external electronics are necessary and the number and scope of the feed lines can be minimized. There is a marked increase in power compared to the wheel hub motors currently available on the market. Moreover, there is an innovative security and redundancy concept, which guarantees drive safety — even if the system breaks down,” explains Professor Matthias Busse, head of the Fraunhofer Institute for Manufacturing Engineering and Applied Materials Research IFAM. Beside IFAM, researchers from the Fraunhofer Institute for Integrated Systems and Device Technology IISB, for Mechanics of Materials IWM and for Structural Durability and System Reliability LBF are tackling these issues.

    Scientists weigh use of bacteria for cleaner fossil fuel production

    Much of the world’s oil reserves lies in giant tar sand stretches in places like Alberta and Venezuela. While the oil industry uses an energy-intensive and fairly dirty process to make steam to cook the oil out of the tar sands, underground bacteria simply eat the crude oil and break it down into methane, or natural gas.

    In nature, that process takes millions of years. A small group of cross-disciplinary microbiologists with their feet both in the oil industry and academic geochemistry wants to speed up the work. They are trying to get these bugs to break down carbon much faster to produce a steady supply of commercial natural gas, and to enhance the recovery of crude.

    Interest in using microbes that grow naturally in oil fields, coal beds and shale deposits is growing, according to a group of industry insiders at the Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO) 2010 convention last week in Chicago.

    “We’ve garnered the attention of large oil and gas producers around the world,” said Mark Finkelstein, vice-president of science at Colorado-based Luca Technologies. “The recent emphasis on climate change and natural gas bodes well for our technology.”

    And with the oil spill from the Deepwater Horizon rig in the Gulf of Mexico, and subsidies for carbon capture and storage, or CCS, in the recently released “American Power Act,” the focus has turned to increasing production from traditional oil wells, according to John Steelman, program manager at the Natural Resources Defense Council’s Climate Center.

    In a typical oil extracting operation, only about 20 to 50 percent of the petroleum is removed from the ground. When the pressure of oil falls, the oil companies pump in some water to increase pressure. Then, with more than half the oil left underground, the wells get plugged and the company moves off to newer opportunities. Recently, that has meant offshore drilling.

    Software prospects fuel manufacturer of high-end electric motorcycles

    Entrepreneurs trying to capitalize on growing consumer interest in clean, green transportation typically build cheaper and lighter vehicles to serve as entry points to the new carbon-constrained marketplace.

    Not Mission Motors.

    The Bay area startup, formed in 2007 by mechanical engineers in a Mission District garage, is placing a big bet on high-end performance. The company’s first-edition prototype electric motorcycle is selling for $68,995, with the first 50 bikes set to be delivered this year.

    Bucking a global movement toward cheap, electric Chinese two wheelers, the Mission One is no scooter. The single-speed bike has been clocked at more than 160 miles an hour and tops out at a relatively stable 6,500 rpm. And it is powered by a lithium-ion battery that recharges in a 220-volt outlet in less than two hours.

    Mission’s business model is a virtual photocopy of Tesla Motors, the Silicon Valley-based carmaker looking to sell high-end electric sports cars to wealthy auto enthusiasts worried about their carbon footprints. Like Tesla, Mission intends to roll out at top speed, at the upper end of the market.

    The goal, Mission executives say, is to reinvent the modern sports bike without alienating riders used to tailpipe rumbling and speed. The Mission One is less eco-toy than a new way to appeal to adrenaline junkies who demand acceleration to 100 mph in less than five seconds.

    So says Mission CEO Jit Bhattacharya, whose top-line Google search result is still his profile on the Stanford University Ultimate Frisbee team. Yet Bhattacharya, 31, who recently took the company’s handlebars from Mission founder Forrest North, said the company is not in business for fun and games.

    “We wanted to build a vehicle that is going to sell, that is going to get riders excited, and not just because it’s green,” Bhattacharya said. “You get a riding experience that is unlike anything you can possibly get on a gasoline motorcycle.”

    US Commerce Secretary leads trade mission to China

    U.S. Commerce Secretary Gary Locke is leading an American trade mission to China, aiming to boost clean energy technology sales as one industry leader announced a fresh contract to supply components for Chinese wind turbines.

    The visit, one of several by U.S. Cabinet officials, preceeds annual talks called the Strategic Economic Dialogue, a top-level venue for thrashing out grievances on trade, currency and other policy issues.

    Locke, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk will attend those talks, which begin Monday in Beijing. They come as the two countries are mending ties after a bout of friction over various issues, including U.S. arms sales to Taiwan.

    The Commerce Department’s trade mission intends to help deliver on President Barack Obama’s pledge to double U.S. exports over the next five years and create 2 million jobs.

    “Promoting American exports, particularly here in Asia, will create more jobs in America while improving the lives of people around the world and introducing new products and services to local communities,” Locke said before leaving Hong Kong for Shanghai.

    In Hong Kong, the U.S. and local governments signed an agreement on promoting American wines. In the Chinese mainland, Locke’s delegation will be promoting technologies related to clean energy, energy efficiency, and electric energy storage, transmission and distribution in Asia.

    On Tuesday, American Superconductor Corp. announced a new electrical components order from Sinovel Wind, China’s largest wind turbine maker. Beijing-based Sinovel, ranked the world’s third-largest wind turbine maker worldwide, has so far ordered US$1 billion from AMSC.

    China’s potential market for renewable energy is huge: Total investment by the government and private sector last year was $34.6 billion, nearly double U.S. spending of $18.6 billion, according to the Pew Charitable Trusts.

    Turning to Water Conservation to Save Energy

    In the run-up to the Copenhagen climate summit conference last year, water researchers and advocates held a special meeting to address the fact that water issues were absent from the draft negotiating text. This was a major oversight, given the amount of energy that is used to collect, treat, distribute and use water and wastewater.

    Just how much energy is consumed has not been measured in most places, but a 2005 energy policy report published by the state of California found that annual water-related energy consumption in the state accounted for 19 percent of electricity consumption, 32 percent natural gas consumption, and 88 million gallons, or 333 million liters, of diesel fuel. River Network, an organization that advocates water conservation, has extrapolated that data nationally. In a report last year it calculated that Americans use 520 megawatt-hours, or 13 percent of U.S. electricity consumption, on water.

    This level of consumption offers an opportunity, said Bevan Griffiths-Sattenspiel, a project coordinator with the network. “Reducing your water use not only saves energy and greenhouse gas emissions, but it’s also a key way to adapt to climate change because most effects of global warming will be manifest through our water resources,” he said.

    The relationship between power and water utilities is lopsided. While electric utilities pay little or nothing for their water, the largest operating cost for water utilities is often their electricity bill.

    Santa Clara Valley Water District has drawn a lesson from that. Serving 1.8 million residents in the southern part of the San Francisco Bay Area, including Silicon Valley, it has had a water conservation program since the early 1990s. In 2007, it released a report analyzing its success in terms of energy conservation, emissions mitigation and cost. From 1993 to 2006, the report said, the district saved approximately 1.42 billion kilowatt-hours of energy, equivalent to the annual power used by 207,000 households, through financial incentives, advisory programs and infrastructure investments that cut water consumption.

    That translated into a financial saving of about $183 million and an avoidance of 335,000 tons of carbon dioxide emissions.

    California is not the only U.S. state with water supply issues. By 2013, at least 36 states expect shortages, according to a 2003 study by the U.S. Government Accountability Office.

    Last year, driven by climate change concerns, the U.S. government drafted several policy proposals, mostly focused on water conservation — with indirect energy efficiency benefits — but a few directly addressing the connection between water and energy.

  • Indrani, Lindsay Lohan’s New Lesbian Lover

    It’s back to labia for Lindsay Lohan!

    The scandal-bitten starlet, 23, has reportedly been secretly bumping pelvis all over Los Angeles with lndrani, a 36-year-old photographer the actress met during a photoshoot last fall.

    It was Indrani (also known as Julia I. Pal-Chaudhuri) herself who dropped dime on Lohan’s latest lezzie love affair in a scoop to The New York Post on Tuesday.

    “We have been spending a lot of time together. I have never had a relationship with a woman before, but Lindsay is just somebody who I find fascinating, gorgeous and extremely smart, as well as super-hot,” the snapper squealed. “Lindsay gets a lot of bad press, but she’s a really strong, creative woman and is trying really hard to get her life in a good, positive place.”

    Markus Klinko, Indrani’s business partner, has been dutifully keeping mum on the romance for months. He thinks Lindsay — an accused pill-popper on her last leg professionally — is the ideal mate for his friend.

    “Lindsay and Indrani have been seeing each other since we shot her last fall. I’ve seen them on dates, I have seen them making out . . . Indrani is a good influence on Lindsay,” Klinko admits. “She is the opposite of a party girl — a Princeton graduate, she’s into art and is a philanthropist — not what you’d expect the typical girl for Lindsay to go out with. When they are together, they talk about art and the deeper meaning in life.”

    Lohan previously dated famed lesbian spinner DJ Samantha Ronson for two years before the two split last year.


  • Blumenthal in the Nixon White House

    As the New York Times has reported, Connecticut Attorney General and Senate candidate Richard Blumenthal remained stateside during the Vietnam War thanks to five deferments he obtained, the last of which enabled him to take a job in the Nixon White House.

    During research for my book The Strong Man: John Mitchell and the Secrets of Watergate (Doubleday 2008), I uncovered some documents that showed Blumenthal, then a staff lawyer for Daniel Patrick Moynihan, a key domestic policy adviser to the president, had aroused the suspicions of Attorney General Mitchell.

    The year was 1969, and the country was wracked by divisions over the war.  A massive march on Washington was held over the long weekend of November 13-16.  The organizing group, the New Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam, or “New Mobe,” rallied upwards of 250,000 people to descend on the nation’s capital — then a record-shattering turnout for the first major antiwar protest against the Nixon administration.

    Despite pledges of nonviolence by New Mobe leaders, an ad hoc committee of Justice Department, Pentagon, and D.C. police officials reckoned otherwise.  “The potential for violence, with resulting injuries and possible deaths, as well as damage to real and personal property…is extremely high,” concluded the group’s internal report.

    Against this backdrop of political tension and the prospect of violence by radical groups — indeed, the Justice Department was attacked over the weekend, with windows smashed and the building defaced, amid plumes of tear gas unleashed by police — Attorney General Mitchell came to believe that the youthful Blumenthal, who was deputized to serve as a liaison to the New Mobe, was actually “taking orders” from Mobe leaders, “and in turn directing the District Police to do [the group’s bidding].”

    That was how Moynihan summarized Mitchell’s views to top Nixon aide John Ehrlichman, the declassified documents show.  Upon orders from the attorney general, Ehrlichman staffer Egil Krogh — later infamous as the head of the Plumbers, the covert group that conceived and executed the break-ins at the offices of Daniel Ellsberg’s psychiatrist and the Democratic National Committee headquarters at the Watergate complex — called Blumenthal on the telephone with stern orders.  Krogh instructed him to withdraw from all contact with the demonstrators; Blumenthal complied.

    The incident upset Moynihan, who complained to Ehrlichman that Attorney General Mitchell was “mistaken” about the young attorney.  “Dick was not taking orders from anyone, nor giving them to anyone,” Moynihan told Ehrlichman in a November 25, 1969 memorandum, previously unpublished.  “He was merely passing on to the mayor and deputy mayor information they requested he obtain.  This is at least Dick’s story, and I believe it….The trouble is that now, as last February, when the Washington Post began reporting a great (and non-existent) rift between me and Mitchell…the attorney general just seems to assume Blumenthal is the cause of trouble.”

    Moynihan finished the memo with a swipe at the attorney general, who before government service in the Nixon administration had been a leading municipal bond counsel on Wall Street: “It is time he acted a bit more lawyer-like, if you want my opinion.”

    Mitchell dropped the issue, and Blumenthal continued on Moynihan’s staff.  However the documents show that Blumenthal later hesitated to accept a job working for Donald Rumsfeld, then head of the Office of Economic Opportunity, because Blumenthal was “worried about the A.G.’s [attorney general’s] reaction (as yet unknown).”  That assessment was recorded in a January 1970 memo exchanged between two White House aides, Chester Finn and Kenneth Cole, on Ehrlichman’s staff.

  • Palm’s Directors of Development “Really Thrilled” about HP deal

    Palm’s Ben Galbraith and Dion Almaer, directors of developer relations at Palm, took some time near the end of the third episode of their Palm Developer Podcast Series to talk not only about the Palm Developer Day event, but also the announced HP acquisition.

    After a bit of silliness (hawking HP printers, ink and even paper), they both spoke extremely positively about what the HP deal might mean for the company and its developer community.

    Ben: “We couldn’t be more excited about the possibilities that this merger opens up for developers. We are…really thrilled about what’s possible here….“If the deal goes through, we will be with the largest technology company in the planet.”

    Dion: “webOS is this amazing but very young operating system, and now, with a parent like HP, if all of this goes through, we’ll have the runway to do amazing things. You guys have kind of gotten in in the ground floor, and I think where we take things from here, is going to be an amazing fantastic way.”

    While they also pointed out that, “thanks to the legal system being what it is,” they couldn’t say much more, they seemed genuinely enthusiastic about HP and its plans for Palm. (Dion’s offer at the end of the video, “Use webOS, get a free HP printer,” should probably not be taken seriously, though.)

    The discussion starts at about 44 minutes into the video, after the break!

    read more

  • Catching Up With TTXGP’s Founder, Azhar Hussain


    It’s been an exciting weekend at the Infineon Raceway watching the 2010 eGrandPrix, TTXGP. And, after all the bikes were on course, I had some time sit down and talk with Azhar Hussain about the TTXGP series and its importance.

    In the following conversation, Hussain talks about how combustion engines are moving towards electric and what kind of system we need to make EVs a lasting part of the equation.
    (more…)

  • Verizon Droid Incredible commercial finally shows the phone

    Verizon just released a new Droid Incredible commercial that actually shows off the phone. *gasp* Don’t worry, it’s only for a few seconds, the rest of the time it’s red lasers firing off in every direction and the ominous voice saying "you’ve never seen fast" before. This ad spot definitely builds off the previous commercial (and all the Droid commercials really) but does it hurt to show off the phone a little more? Not hurting sales one bit it seems.

    Thanks to everyone who sent this in!

  • Souder: ‘Committed to Preserving Traditional Marriage’

    From the department of irony…

    It turns out that Rep. Mark Souder (R-Ind.), who announced today that he’ll be resigning over news of an affair with a part-time staffer, is also one of the loudest proponents of family values on Capitol Hill. Here, for example, is the page on his (soon to be extinct) website where he vows his “fight to uphold the traditional values that undergird the strength of our nation.”

    The family plays a fundamental role in our society. Studies consistently demonstrate that it is best for a child to have a mother and father, and I am committed to preserving traditional marriage, the union of one man and one woman.

    The importance of Judeo-Christian values in America cannot be underestimated. Yet, in the public square, religion has been maligned by the courts to a point where children cannot pray in school and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit struck down the Pledge of Allegiance. I am committed to fighting the assault on American values.

    Along those lines, Souder spearheaded a 2006 report — “Abstinence and Its Critics” — designed to counter arguments from liberal Democrats that abstinence education is an unrealistic approach to reducing teen pregnancy and sexually transmitted disease.

    TPM has the money clip of Souder discussing the importance of abstinence with his mistress last year.

  • The 13 Most WTF Prescription Drug Side Effects

    Every drug has side effects, and we usually just ignore them. Hell, even your toothpaste has warnings and cautions about unintended effects — a laundry list of possible things that could go wrong. Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea. It seems like anything that comes in pill form could give you that. But some drugs…some drugs are scary. They can permanently change you. They can fuck up your life. They can give you man boobs. These are the worst of the worst.

    13. Antidepressants and Depression

    Coming at you straight from the halls of irony comes one of the most common side effects of antidepressants: depression. That’s right, they caused the very thing they were meant to cure you of. Like the rest of the internet, I don’t actually know what irony is, but I’m pretty sure this qualifies. Prozac was especially renowned for this, and young adults seem to be hit pretty hard. Lets face it, life’s shitty when you’re in High School. So your parents decide to make your already crappy existence even worse by sticking you on antidepressants, which just make you feel even worse. Plus, they make you fat. Yeah, that’s more or less the worst thing you can do to a 15 year old.

    12. Sex and Gambling

    ReQuip is a drug designed to help Alzheimer’s and Restless Leg Syndrome. More scientifically known as Ropinirole, it’s a non-ergoline dopamine agonist, and one of only two drugs that the FDA has okayed for dealing with RLS. However, one of the long, long list of side effects associated with the drug — including liver, kidney, eye and skin problems — is compulsive behavior. While on the drug, there’s a chance you’ll completely lose your ability to control your impulses. Not just any impulses, but specifically you’ll be hit with a major need to have crazy-ass sex, and go gambling. Which could lead one of two paths: dapper, baccarat playing, seducer — like James Bond. Or, skeezy pervert who lost all his money at the dog races. Guess which you’d be more likely to be stuck with? You don’t even have to have had issues with that in the past, and all of a sudden you’re blowing your mortgage on underage hookers and back-alley craps games. Thanks, GlaxoSmithKline!

    11. Hormonal Contraceptive

    Another of life’s horrible fucking ironies, which seems only to exist in order to make fun of us. The pill, the patch, the ring, the implant: they’re all effective ways of not getting up the duff while having sex. So, yay for you, you’re getting some! You’re in a happy, monogamous relationship, so you’re not worried about STIs! You both get checked out, are clean of all bugs, and you go on the pill! Time for some hot, hot bareback action! Not so fast, girly! Common side effects of hormonal contraceptives are: loss of sex drive, vaginal dryness, and weight gain. You don’t want to have sex; you can’t have sex; and you don’t feel sexy. Oh you pharmaceutical sons of bitches! That’s a bastard of a catch 22!

    10. Oily, Leaky Stool

    Alli and Olestra are the two evils here, for similar but separate reasons. Alli was billed as a miracle weight loss cure — you don’t absorb fat anymore! No fat absorbed, eat as many pizzas as you want, you overweight git! Olestra was marketed just as a fat replacement, it goes in food, and you get all that delicious oily goodness, but none gets absorbed by your body. Now kids, what happens to things we ingest that don’t get digested? That’s right, they come out the ass. Now, the anus is usually pretty good at stopping solids coming out, but when it’s pure oil? It’s not designed for that abuse. And so, you get uncontrollable anal leakage of oil that looks like grease off a cheap slice of pizza. When you lest expect it, oily shit will come leaking out your ass and into your underwear. Frankly, I’ll rather just absorb fat normally, thanks.

    9. Gray Skin Syndrome

    There are at least two drugs in existence that can make you look like a movie-star from the ’40s. Amiodarone is an antiarrhythmic agent, so it’s used to help regulate your heartbeat. In some cases, it has the bewildering side effect of making your skin turn grey/blue. How freaking weird would that be? To have your skin gradually change color, to a hue no human should encounter? You know what’s worse? Chloramphenicol, and antibiotic sometimes given to newborns. How bad are its effects? The term for what happens is “Gray Baby Syndrome”. That’s right, your kid has had the saturation slider pulled all the way down, thanks to an antibiotic.

    8. Delayed Orgasm

    Another absolute horror associated with antidepressants — this time SSRIs. Of those on the drugs, somewhere between 35%-70% of them get hit with major issues with their sexual health. Officially listed as “decreased libido, delayed orgasm, anorgasmia, erectile dysfunction, and difficulties with arousal”, these problems can be major. Calling it “delayed orgasm” is putting a rather nice spin on it, because what actually happens? You can’t come. You can tug that thing till you wear the skin off. You can rub your coffee bean until you’ve chafed through an entire bottle of lube. You can fuck for 24 hours straight, while watching porn on 14 screens at once. Nothing. Nada. Zip. You just can’t come. Jeez, at least if you’re on cocaine and can’t get off, you’re still a stinking rich stock trader from the 80s; if you’re on SSRIs, there’s a pretty good change your life already sucks. And now you can’t orgasm.

    7. Permanent Eye Color Change

    Bimatoprost is a drug used to control glaucoma, with the side-effect of making your eyelashes grow longer. So Allergan had an idea. They took the glaucoma drug, and created the fake disease “inadequate eyelashes”, and market it as Latisse. Slap everywoman Brooke Shields on the ads, and you’ll have women flocking to buy a product to make their thin, anemic eyelashes grow into mighty branches. So as long as you keep pouring this gunk into your eyes, your lashes are long, but if you stop, they evaporate. But you know what effect is has that’s permanent? It’ll turn your iris brown. Say what? That’s right, if you have blue or green eyes, you might never see them again. Using Latisse causes irreversible pigment change in the eyes of some people, leaving them with brown eyes, regardless of their original color.

    6. Coffee Grounds Vomit

    Plavix is a drug to prevent your blood from clotting after a heart attack or stroke, so you’re already in a pretty serious position if you’re taking it. Naturally, as it stops your body from clotting bleeds properly, there are all sorts of horrific side effects, the most terrifying of which is “coughing up blood or vomit that looks like coffee grounds”. What happens, is that any minor bleeding in the stomach doesn’t heal properly, and that blood has to come out somewhere. So you either get “black, bloody, or tarry stools” or it comes out your mouth. Looking like coffee grounds. I’m sorry, if I’m coughing up coffee ground looking blood, I’m stopping whatever the hell you have me on. That’s freaking terrifying!

    5. Manboobs

    Oh man, you’re going bald? That sucks, why not go on Propecia? Then the ladies will love your flowing, sexy, full head of hair! Of course, using something that fucks with your hormones on such a fundamental level is bound to have some issues: testicular pain, abnormal sexual function, irreversible impotence and erectile dysfunction, gynecomastia…wait, what was that last one? Bitch tits. Moobs. Man boobs. Great big sweaty tits on your chest. Not sexy, not for anyone. Girls don’t like it, guys don’t like it. So, while you might have some more hair on your head, you have horrible sexual dysfunctions, and tits. Somehow, I don’t think that was worth the trade-off. But hey, that’s just me.

    4. Fucking Everything About Ambien

    Ambien is meant to help you get to sleep. But, if you hold out on going to bed, something interesting happens. There’s a scientific term for it, which is called “going fucking crazy”. Seriously, it will make you balls-to-the-wall insane. It’s so fucked up, that people have started doing it as a recreational drug. You hallucinate, call people you haven’t talked to for years, eat huge amounts of food, have crazy sex, sleep-walk, sleep-drive, and generally become a completely different person. It’s essentially a Jekyll and Hyde drug, leaving you with the cleanup, but none of the awesome memories. The internet is littered with stories about people taking Ambien, and calling all their ex-girlfriends, and holding complete conversations while under the drug. That’s scary, yo!

    3. Suicide

    Chantix is a drug designed to help you with a very specific problem — quitting smoking. Giving up the lung darts can require an iron will at the best of times, and a bit of pharmaceutical help is always appreciated. Except Chantix makes you want to kill yourself. Not just depression, because God knows there’s enough of that when you try and quit smoking. Chantix actually makes you want to off yourself. It puts suicidal ideas in your brain. According to the Institute for Safe Medication Practices, in Q4 2007, this drug was more responsible for reports of serious side effects than any other on the market. Woohoo, you’re number 1! Now, if only the people taking you didn’t want to get all up close and personal with the Grim Reaper.

    2. Brain Zaps

    So, after seeing the horrible side effects of anti-depressants on this list, you decide to quit the pills. After all, is life really that bad, that it’s worth the utter horrors that SSRIs reap on your body? Welcome to the worst fucking comedown ever. You think trying to quite heroin is bad? Dead babies and the shits have nothing on what SSRIs will put you through. It takes at least 10 days to push through the pain, and believe me, you will feel pain. Because you get the brain zaps. Imagine someone shoving a taser in your brain. Every 5 minutes. For two weeks. Now combine that with dizziness, sweating, nausea, insomnia, tremor, confusion, and vertigo, and you get an idea of what people go through coming off these drugs. You will crawl into a ball and want to die. You won’t be able to talk to anyone. You won’t be able to leave the house. Even the most basic task will be nigh on insurmountable. Fun, huh?

    1. Death

    The big one. The be all and end all of side effects. Once this one hits, there’s no going back. That’s right: death. The funny thing is, it’s a surprisingly common side effect. Not that you’ll ever get it, but I’m pretty sure if you go rifling through your medicine cabinet, you’ll find at least one drug that has that tucked away in the “side effects” section, in tiny, tiny print. Adderall, Tamiflu, Celebrex, Gardasil, Accutane, and Botox. They’re all out to get you. Thankfully, this worst possible side effect is rare enough, that if there was ever a major risk from it, a product would never reach the market. We hope. FDA, don’t fuck it up.


  • ZetaKey, a new webkit browser for Windows Mobile now available

    Zetakey_Browser_Screenshot1-20100518 You you are still mourning RIM’s purchase of Torch Mobile, cry no more, as a new webkit-based browser for Windows Mobile has just become available.

    See a video of the software in action and the download links after the break:

    Zetakey’s free browser promises:

    • Fast, High performance Webkit-based Full HTML Browser
    • Compliance with latest Internet standards, such as HTML, CSS
    • Support stylus touch or finger touch screen
    • Configurable and customisable for specific purpose browser
    • FLASH-LITE support

    Read more at Zetakey here.


  • What Do a Newfoundland Dog and Tiger Woods Have in Common? | Discoblog

    To answer that question, don’t go comparing their personality traits (the Newfie: famously loyal and sweet, Tiger Woods: um, no comment). Instead, look to the knees. Newfoundland dogs are prone to cruciate ligament disease, the same knee disorder that has troubled Woods and many other professional athletes–the disease makes dogs and humans more prone to ligament ruptures. Now, researchers at Liverpool University are asking Newfie owners to send in DNA samples from their pets so they can search for genetic factors that predispose dogs to the condition. According to lead researcher Arabella Baird, the study could have two benefits. If researchers determine which genes put dogs at risk of the condition, they can help breeders create healthier lines of dogs by preventing matings between dogs with the key genes. But the study may also help medical researchers find the comparable genes in humans, The Guardian reports:
    Baird added: “The disease in humans tends to occur when stress is put on the ligament, but there have been some preliminary findings that suggest there is a genetic component that could predispose humans to the condition…. Our project will be looking at many genes and the results of our study in dogs will be comparative to …