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  • Study links pesticides to ADHD

    Stephanie Horrocks / Istock

    A new study from researchers at University of Montreal and Harvard found a link experts call “persuasive” between attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and exposure to common pesticides.

    The study examined more than 1,100 children, 150 of which were previously diagnosed as ADHD. The findings, published in Pediatrics, revealed that around 94% of children examined had detectable levels of organophosphate pesticides in their urine. Children with higher levels of residue had increased chances of ADHD.

    Said Maryse F. Bouchard of the University of Montreal Department of Environmental and Occupational Health and the Sainte-Justine Hospital Research Center and lead author of the study: “Previous studies have shown that exposure to some organophosphate compounds cause hyperactivity and cognitive deficits in animals. Our study found that exposure to organophosphates in developing children might have effects on neural systems and could contribute to ADHD behaviors, such as inattention, hyperactivity and impulsivity.”

    Previous studies have linked ADHD and attention deficit disorder to exposure to food additives, lead and phthalates. Which, or which combination, is the real culprit? Dr. Philip Landrigan, a 2010 Heart of Green Award winner, is trying to find the cause of autism, ADHD, obesity and other chronic childhood illnesses through the ambitious Children’s Health Study.

    The most common route of organophosphate pesticide exposure for most children is through eating foods that have a high pesticide residue. Organic produce is grown without the use of pesticides or chemical fertilizers. A 2008 study found that when children switched to organic produce, detectable pesticide levels dropped to undetectable levels.

    Important to note: Some produce has markedly higher levels of pesticide residue than others. The produce most likely contaminated with pesticides frozen blueberries, strawberries and celery topped the list.

    More from The Daily Green

    Reprinted with permission of Hearst Communications, Inc

  • Peugeot 407 Coupe 3.0 V6 HDi 240 CV aut., prueba (Parte III)

    Peugeot_407_coupe

    Llegamos a la última parte de la prueba del Peugeot 407 Coupe, del cual hemos probado el motor más potente disponible en la gama diesel, es decir, el 3.0 V6 HDi de 240 CV y cambio automático. Si quieres ver como se comporta este coupe o las prestaciones de su motor, puedes ver la primera parte de la prueba, y en la segunda parte nos hemos centrado en su diseño y habitabilidad.

    Ahora, como ya es costumbre, nos toca hablar del equipamiento del 407 Coupe, así como, nuestra valoración general del modelo y los precios. El 407 Coupe como está llegando al fin de su vida comercial cuenta con interesantes descuentos (que rondan los 7.500 euros), descuentos que no hemos tenido en cuenta en los precios, pero que es importante comentar, sobretodo por si estáis interesados en meter uno en vuestro garaje. Podemos acceder a un 407 Coupe desde los 35.420 euros que cuesta el motor HDi de 163 CV muy bien equipado (y actualmente con un descuento de 7.500 euros quedaría en 27.920 euros).

    Equipamiento y seguridad

    Peugeot_407_coupe

    Primero comenzamos con el equipamiento de seguridad que trae de serie este 407 Coupe, donde podemos destacar la completa dotación de airbags (airbags frontales, airbags laterales delanteros, airbag de rodilla y airbags de techo), así como detector de presión de ruedas o el ESP + ABS (con asistente a la frenada). En cuanto a las famosas estrellas EuroNCAP, el 407 Coupe tiene 5 estrellas, y en concreto en protección infantil ha logrado 4/5, obteniendo la mayor puntuación la prueba del choque frontal, en definitiva en seguridad viene muy bien servido y es un coche con una seguridad sobresaliente.

    Seguimos con el equipamiento base, entre el que podemos encontrar el climatizador bi-zona, sistema de navegación WIP-Nav con cartografía europea y kit manos libres Bluetooth, faros de xenon, las llantas de aleación de 18 pulgadas, sensor de aparcamiento trasero y los sensores de luz y limpia parabrisas, entre otros elementos.

    Peugeot_407_coupe

    Dentro de los extras que podemos encontrar tenemos: asientos de cuero microperforados con regulación eléctrica (1.468,38 €), techo solar (833,13 €), sistema de navegación RT5 con disco duro y toma USB (1.614,18 €), alarma (468,63 €), llantas de 19″ (624,84 €) y el recomendable PACK Lujo con faros direccionables, sistema de sonido HIFI JBL y sensor de parking delantero (1.145,54 €).

    De todos estos extras, quizás uno de los más recomendables sea el Pack Lujo por incluir los faros direccionables, el sensor delantero que se vuelve todo un aliado dadas las medidas del coche (además se muestra en la pantalla la proximidad a un obstáculo y no sólo es pitido, lo que lo hace tremendamente útil) y también incluye algo que no es fundamental pero que se agradece y es el sistema de sonido HIFI firmado por JBL que es una auténtica gozada.

    Peugeot_407_coupe

    En cuanto al sistema de navegación RT5 que viene como opción, es muy prescindible sobretodo ahora que ya equipa el RT4 de serie, puesto que lo único que perdemos es el disco duro y la toma USB, pero nos ahorramos bastante dinero.

    Por lo demás el manejo del equipamiento es muy sencillo, tan pronto como nos adaptamos a la ensalada de botones, y cuenta con los prácticos mandos de sonido detrás del volante (personalmente, una de las soluciones de mandos de audio que más me gustan por su situación).

    Valoración General

    Peugeot_407_coupe

    Este Peugeot 407 Coupe lo tenemos que ver desde dos perspectivas diferentes, para aquellos que buscan un buen coupe generalista y completo de equipamiento es un buen candidato, puesto que con el motor HDi de 163 CV es un modelo muy económico en consumos y por otra parte con el fin de la comercialización del modelo podemos conseguirlo a buen precio, además el comportamiento es intachable y sigue manteniendo el tipo incluso después de los años que lleva en el mercado y si lo comparamos con un Renault Laguna Coupe por ejemplo.

    Por otra parte, si nos vamos a por un vehículo potente con un buen comportamiento y a tope de equipamiento, pocos candidatos vamos a encontrar con 240 CV, diesel, y 42.049 euros (con el equipamiento de nuestra unidad de pruebas y descuento promocional de 7.500 euros incluido). Por tanto es una excelente alternativa a coupes alemanes más caros, sólo tenemos cerca a modelos como el Renault Laguna Coupe que ronda los 43.000 euros con el motor dCi de 235 CV, pero con algunos elementos menos de equipamiento.

    En definitiva me ha sorprendido, que pese a los años el 407 Coupe ha mantenido muy bien el tipo y más cuando ya hemos estado al volante de un Laguna Coupe (más agil con el sistema 4Control) y hemos podido contrastar las opiniones. Eso sí, estamos delante de un coupe con una vocación más bien burguesa, potente y deportivo, pero con lagunas como el cambio que lastran un comportamiento más deportivo o el peso del conjunto.

    Gama de precios

    (según información de la web de Peugeot):

    • Peugeot 407 Coupe 2.0 HDi 163 CV 27.920 euros *
    • Peugeot 407 Copue 3.0 V6 HDi de 240 CV 36.520 euros*

    * Nota: Estos precios incluyen un descuento promocional de 7.500 euros, según el configurador de la web de Peugeot España, para más exactitud en los precios recomendamos consultar un concesionario, puesto que pueden variar los precios.

    Peugeot_407_coupe

    Precio Unidad probada: 42.049 euros (con el equipamiento de nuestra unidad de pruebas y descuento promocional de 7.500 euros incluido), con el siguiente equipamiento: asientos de cuero microperforados con regulación eléctrica (1.468,38 €), techo solar (833,13 €), sistema de navegación RT5 con disco duro y toma USB (1.614,18 €), alarma (468,63 €), PACK Lujo con faros direccionables, sistema de sonido HIFI JBL y sensor de parking delantero (1.145,54 €).

    Fotos | David Taboada



  • The Playroom: Down the laundry chute

    steadman

    Today is Tuesday. My son isn’t wearing underwear.

    “So, why aren’t you wearing underwear?”

    “Mom, it’s Tuesday.”

    Right. Once again forcing me to recognize that there is no way any woman I can respect is ever going to marry my son.

    When I was a project manager in my prior life, our firm had us do this leadership thing where our managers and staff filled out something called an upwards evaluation. One day, sitting at my desk reading the results of this survey, I realized my managers thought I was micromanager. I was shocked.

    I immediately got on my high horse and rode over to my managers’ cubicles and asked them, “Do you think I micromanage?” At this point Zach started laughing so hard he spit Starbucks all over his work papers and Mike just about fell out of his chair.

    So with the knowledge of my control-freak management style, when I became a mother I made a conscious effort not to micromanage. I didn’t want to be an overbearing parent whose kids go bonkers with new-found freedom as soon as they go to college.

    I want to be a parent who exerts just the right amount of control to provide structure and discipline but allows for freedom of expression and respect for the individual. I quickly found it’s not that easy to do.

    My 3-year old routinely shows up to dinner without pants on. Now, before we say grace I ask, “Is everyone wearing pants?” If the answer is yes, then we ask for God’s blessings on these thy gifts. If not, then I do demand that she go upstairs and put underwear on, and there I am crushing her expressions of freedom. I’m not respecting the individual who prefers to eat dinner without wearing pants.

    But here’s the thing. I think my children should wear underwear at the dinner table and also on Tuesdays. That’s my rule. And all that stuff about exercising just the right amount of control is going right down the laundry chute with the rest of the dirty laundry.

    Except with underwear, our family seems to have a problem getting it to go down the laundry chute.

    “William, why are your dirty underwear in the middle of the stairs?”

    “Because you told me to take them off my head.”

    Now, when I tell my son to take his underwear off his head because it’s not safe to walk down the stairs when you can’t see, I find myself back on my high horse micromanaging as I tell him,

    “Take the underwear off your head, walk five steps up the stairs, turn left, open the bathroom closet door, open the laundry chute, put the dirty underwear in the laundry chute, close the chute gently, do not let it slam hard enough to set off the burglar alarm, turn around, exit the bathroom without singing any songs about the potty or your recently composed ‘I’ve Got Underwear on My Head’ song, because I don’t want to hear it.”

    Unless it’s Tuesday. On Tuesdays you take your underwear and put it on your body.


    Maraya Steadman, who lives in a Chicago suburb, is a stay-at-home mother of three children. She can be reached at [email protected].


  • Spy Shots: Alfa Romeo testing GTA versions of 8C, MiTo for centenary launch

    Filed under: , , , ,

    You didn’t think Alfa Romeo was done celebrating its centenary already, did you? The 100-year-old Italian automaker kicked off the festivities by launching the new Giulietta hatchback, then teamed up with three of Italy’s hottest coachbuilders – Bertone, Pininfarina and Zagato – for a trio of mouthwatering concepts. But the party’s just started, people.

    Next up, if these spy shots and emerging reports are anything to go by, is the return of the GTA. Shorthand for Gran Turismo Allegerito (that’s lightweight GT to us yanks), the nameplate has adorned some of the fastest Alfas to date, and is about to return on two highly anticipated sports models.

    The most enticing is surely the 8C GTA: Based on the sumptuous 8C Competizione, the GTA version is tipped to gain a 50-horsepower boost from its 4.7-liter V8 to bring output up to 500, unburdened by 150 kilograms (330 pounds) of excess weight trimmed by the use of carbon fiber. Reported improvements to the six-speed sequential transmission and suspension upgrades surely won’t hurt, either, with an expected 100-example production run. The 8C GTA was rumored way back in 2008, but was recently spied undergoing testing in its native Italy.

    Joining its big brother, the baby MiTo GTA was previewed in concept form at the Geneva Motor Show in 2009, but was subsequently put on the back burner. Which was a real shame, considering its 240-horse turbo four and sport-tuned chassis. But if the latest spy shots are any indication, it looks like the program has been put into high gear. 2010 is quickly shaping up to be one of the most exciting years in Alfa’s history, and if its return to North American shores comes to fruition as planned, we just might have reason to celebrate, too.

    [Source: Unica-Strada]

    Spy Shots: Alfa Romeo testing GTA versions of 8C, MiTo for centenary launch originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 17 May 2010 14:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Iraq court overturns ban of nine new parliament members

    Photo source or description

    [JURIST] The appeals court for Iraq’s Justice and Accountability Commission on Monday overturned a ban on nine newly elected members of parliament accused of having ties to the banned Baath Party [BBC backgrounder].The ad hoc commission was created to eliminate Iraqi officials with potential connections to regime of Saddam Hussein [JURIST news archive], who led the Baath party during his presidency. Eight of the banned candidates were members of the Sunni-backed coalition Iraqiya, which received the plurality of votes in the March 2010 parliamentary elections [CEIP backgrounder; JURIST news archive] by a two-seat margin. The ban by the commission, which is made up predominantly of Shiites, was perceived as a tactic by the Shiite bloc to garner seats from Iraqiya in order to gain the plurality for incumbent Shiite Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki’s State of Law [official website] coalition. A spokesperson for Iraqiya praised the decision [Reuters report] of the appeals court and stated that this decision was a victory for the Iraqi judicial system. The court’s decision may mark the end of the election appeals, and the confirmed election results must now be certified by Iraq’s highest court, which will lead to negotiations for the next prime minister.

    Iraq’s Independent High Electoral Commission (IHEC) [official website] announced Sunday that the partial recount of the March parliamentary elections will not alter seat allocations [JURIST report] awarded in accordance with the provisional results. The commission held that the original count showed no signs of fraud or major irregularities [JURIST report], and confirmed the two-seat lead of the the Iraqiya coalition of Iyad Allawi [personal website, in Arabic; Al Jazeera profile] over al-Maliki’s bloc. Last month, an IHEC review panel nullified the votes of 52 candidates for alleged ties to the Baath Party, including two candidates that had won seats in the Iraqi Council of Representatives [official website], at least one of which coming from Iraqiya. In February, an Iraqi appeals panel ruled [JURIST report] that 28 of the 500 candidates previously banned due to allegations of ties to the Baath Party could stand in the election. The initial ban was characterized by the Iraqi government as illegal and was reversed [JURIST reports] when the panel acknowledged that it did not have to rule on all 500 candidates at once. This came as a reversal of a previous decision, where it held that the candidates could stand in the coming elections, but would have to be cleared of the allegations against them before taking office.

  • Sears And Kmart Want To Buy Your Gold

    The next time you want to sell some old gold jewelry, you can just take it to your nearest Kmart or Sears. The retailers have announced a partnership with something called Pro Gold Network, which basically amounts to, “You can pick up a mailer and instructions at our jewelry departments.” Remember, though, that mail-in services almost always pay less than what you can get locally from a jeweler or pawn shop, or by selling to a refinery directly. Here’s what Pro Gold Network will pay so you can compare rates.

    “Sears and Kmart to Offer Consumer Gold Buyback Program” [PR Newswire]

  • From Copenhagen To Cancun: Forests and REDD

    An update on the role of forests and REDD in the international climate negotiations.

    Background on REDD

    Deforestation and forest degradation threaten the global climate system by removing one of the planet’s essential absorbers and storehouses of carbon. Currently, forest loss is thought to contribute between 12-17 percent of annual global greenhouse gas emissions. The United Nations Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) negotiations offer an opportunity to better recognize and protect forests’ contribution to the global climate system. It can do this in part by providing positive incentives to developing countries who take actions to reduce emissions from forest loss and degradation (known as “REDD”).

    How this will be accomplished, however, is much more complicated. It requires figuring out what the rules would be, how efforts would be funded, and how success would be defined and measured. In Copenhagen, negotiators and heads of state made progress on the REDD+ issue, but ensuring this system goes forward will require further action throughout 2010.

    REDD + in Copenhagen

    The outcome of December’s climate meeting was a heads-of-state-negotiated “Copenhagen Accord,” a non-binding political statement outlining principles to keep global warming to 2 degrees Celsius. The Accord notes:

    “We recognize the crucial role of reducing emission from deforestation and forest degradation and the need to enhance removals of greenhouse gas emission by forests and agree on the need to provide positive incentives to such actions through the immediate establishment of a mechanism including REDD-plus, to enable the mobilization of financial resources from developed countries”

    This statement builds on the political support that has been stated in several different meetings since the Bali Conference of the Parties in 2007.

    Prior to the development of the Accord, however, negotiators in Copenhagen worked on much more detailed REDD+ language (the REDD+ “decision text”) which they hoped the parties would adopt to further guide the REDD+ discussions. In this text, negotiators had fleshed out much more specific elements of a potential REDD+ decision.

    Social and environmental safeguards were one of the main components of a REDD+ decision text discussed at length in Copenhagen – how to ensure the reductions from reduced deforestation and degradation are undertaken in a socially responsible and environmentally sound way. For instance, for any mechanism to be effective, it is essential that the communities (particularly indigenous communities) that rely on the forests for their livelihoods are brought into the decision-making process, and that transparent and effective governance structures are in place to help achieve this. Negotiators in Copenhagen came close to agreeing on language that would encourage this participation, a positive development.

    Unanswered Questions on the Future of REDD

    Still, there are some questions regarding safeguards that have not yet been fully resolved.

    Accountability

    The question of whether and how countries receiving financing for REDD+ activities will be held accountable for the safeguards is still unknown. Making sure these safeguards are “measurable, reportable and verifiable” (“MRV” – UN negotiations language that encourages accountability) is essential moving forward.

    Deforestation in Madagascar. Photo credit: WRI

    Developing countries will be charged with carrying out most of the REDD+ activities. To do this, many will need to build capacity, e.g. identifying the drivers of deforestation, collecting better forest and emissions data, and building transparent systems to track REDD+ financing. This capacity-building cannot take place without support from developed countries, and they will need to assure developing countries that this support will materialize. Tracking this support to ensure its delivery is also important.

    Creating a REDD Goal

    Many countries and civil society groups argue that a goal for REDD+ should be written into the preamble of the decision text, such as reducing emissions from deforestation by 50% by 2020. Such a statement would push both developing and developed countries to think more seriously about the resources that will need to be made available to achieve this goal – and define in a more concrete manner what success would look like. However, negotiators did not reach an agreement on this point and have left the discussion for a later date.

    Scope: What Should REDD try to Achieve?

    The type of activities recognized as part of a REDD+ decision is still in flux –varying depending on which elements of the text coming out of Copenhagen are considered. The REDD+ decision text includes references to:

    • Reducing emissions from deforestation;
    • Reducing emissions from forest degradation;
    • Conservation of forest carbon stocks;
    • Sustainable management of forest;
    • Enhancement of forest carbon stocks;

    The Accord, however, only mentions the first three. In order to clarify which activities will receive compensation, the definition of what constitutes REDD+ will need to be made consistent in the UN process.

    Financing REDD

    Another open question concerns financing. The Copenhagen Accord, like the Bali Action Plan, states that there should be positive financial incentives for countries that take action to reduce deforestation and degradation. However, how countries would receive this money is still up in the air – this could be through a carbon market, a dedicated fund or something else. In the REDD+ decision text, this question is also left open.

    Geographic Scale: National or Local?

    A final unresolved issue is at what geographic scale REDD+ activities will be recognized. Most, if not all, negotiators seem to agree that ultimately REDD+ activities should occur at the national level to ensure that significant drivers of deforestation are being addressed and that efforts can be tracked in complete way.

    Some argue, however, that there may be cases in which sub-national activities should also be considered, either as a gradual scaling up strategy or in cases where the national government has a significant hardship in managing forests in a given area. For example, some countries have expressed the need to exclude areas of forests – that is, they would not be held accountable for any deforestation, degradation, etc. – where the national government cannot safely enter those areas to address the question of REDD+, such as where logging operations are operated criminally. There are various ways to consider these issues and depending on the type of positive incentives developed, these questions may be answered differently.

    Methodological Challenges

    In addition to these questions, there continue to be significant methodological uncertainties in accounting for deforestation and degradation that need to be resolved moving forward. Negotiators sent text to the Subsidiary Body for Scientific and Technological Advice (SBSTA) in Copenhagen, which was passed as a decision of the parties. The gives SBSTA the mandate to do more work on REDD+ methodologies, including identifying the drivers of deforestation; ensuring the effective engagement of indigenous peoples and local communities in monitoring and reporting; as well other methodological issues related to quantifying emissions and emission reductions for REDD+. This is a good step forward. In addition, the REDD+ decision text also mentions further work for SBSTA that – if parties agreed to it – could be passed on for SBSTA to consider.

    Moving ahead: Venues and Key Decisions in 2010

    UNFCCC

    Most countries hope that the high-level decisions on REDD+ will be made within the UNFCCC negotiations in order to guide the various pilot initiatives throughout the world.

    Both negotiators’ and political leaders’ overall commitment to REDD+ issues in Copenhagen shows a willingness to continue the REDD+ discussions between now and Mexico. This is important considering that other issues will compete for negotiating space.

    In general, most countries hope that the high-level decisions on REDD+ – e.g., on questions of safeguards and MRV– will be made within the UNFCCC negotiations, preferably in Cancun, in order to guide the various pilot initiatives throughout the world. Methodological issues also would be best resolved at this level, to ensure standardization and consistency. However, some have questioned how far the REDD+ discussions can go in Cancun absent progress on other contentious issues, such as finance, that determine how REDD+ will be implemented.

    Non-UN Processes

    Countries continue to discuss REDD+ and are working on REDD readiness on the assumption that parties will eventually agree to a REDD+ decision text in the UNFCCC. Many of these discussions and activities on REDD+, however, are happening in parallel to the UN process in programs like the World Bank’s Forest Carbon Partnership Facility and Forest Investment Program, as well as other bilateral activities around the world. In addition, discussions about creating an interim political partnership among countries to formalize areas of agreement on REDD+ started in Paris in March and will continue in Oslo at the end of May. The partnership’s goals include sharing information and transparency about REDD+ activities and scaling up financing, in addition to reaffirming a commitment to a REDD+ mechanism.

    These pilot programs and interim arrangements will not set the rules for REDD+, but they provide lessons learned and precedents that feed into the negotiations. Many stakeholders – generally civil society and governments – engage in these processes to ensure that good precedents are set on issues such as transparency, local community engagement, and indigenous rights, and to ensure that REDD+ progress is tracked.

    These multilateral programs will meet throughout 2010 and will continue to inform the UNFCCC discussions.

    Read More From This Series

    From Copenhagen to Cancun: Technology Transfer

    From Copenhagen to Cancun: Adaptation

  • The PSP 2 will be ‘[expletive] powerful’


    EXCLUSIVE PHOTO~!

    There will be a PSP 2. No, not some sort of halfway sequel, à la the PSP Go, but an actual, holy smokes PSP 2. That’s the rumor, and you’d have to assume that’s the case. But the specifics of the rumor, today’s incarnation of the rumor, that is, is that the device will be “[expletive] powerful.” That’s pretty powerful!

    How powerful is “[expletive] powerful”? We’re talking a four-core Cell processor (the PS3 has an eight-core CPU).

    Other juicy bits of Internet gossip:

    • It will have two cameras

    • It will have a touchsreen, if not touchscreens

    • There won’t be any physical media, but a 3G wireless connection instead

    Those are the big bullet points.

    One word of warning: it probably won’t be at E3 next month. Apparently certain developers have started receiving demo units, but they’ve been sworn to secrecy in the form of a non-disclosure agreement. A lot of good those did, what with all these leaks…


  • Visa officially announces their case that turns your iPhone into a credit card (and we’ve got pics!)

    Around two weeks ago, Visa announced that they’d partnered with a company called DeviceFidelity to build the iPhone case of our dreams: one that would allow us to use our iPhone as a credit card at any of the thousands of retailers who support no-swipe payments. As quickly as it was announced, however, it was gone; around an hour after the press release went up, it got pulled.

    It has returned! This time around, it’s got a name — and better yet, we’ve got pictures.

    Back in 2009, DeviceFidelity managed to stuff a near-field communications chip into a microSD card. Stuff said microSD card into a compatible phone, and bam – your phone can now act as a contactless credit card, with on-device software unlocking the card for use whenever the user punches in their password. The problem: none of the iPhones released thus far have a microSD slot.

    Enter the new case, now dubbed the “In2Pay” (They should have called it the “payPhone”. Get it? Like a pay phone. Hah. Update: Crap. Someone already trademarked it.) Like a handful of third-party external battery cases, this new case plugs into the bottom of the iPhone via the dock connector. This connection provides power and an interface for the SD card. Pop on the case, plug in the microSD card, download the payment app from the App Store — and bam, you’re buying stuff at PetCo like someone from the future and/or Japan.

    Check out the full release below:

    DeviceFidelity Announces Mobile Contactless Payment Solution for iPhone

    Protective case designed to host microSD based contactless apps turning iPhone into a Visa mobile payment device

    Richardson, TX – May 17, 2010 – DeviceFidelity, Inc. today announced the availability of its In2Pay™ solution for iPhone, designed to enable iPhone users to make contactless transactions, such as Visa mobile payments, by simply waving the iPhone in front of a contactless payment terminal. The solution combines DeviceFidelity’s In2Pay microSD technology with a specially designed, patent-pending protective case that adds mobile contactless capability and works with iPhone 3GS and iPhone 3G.

    By placing a removable In2Pay microSD into the protective case, iPhone users can take advantage of In2Pay’s secure contactless capabilities where contactless transactions are offered. They range from buying goods in retail stores and at unattended kiosks, to transit ticketing, and even securely accessing buildings and computers networks. Trials are scheduled to start during the second quarter of 2010.

    “The more than 200,000 apps on the App Store are an integral part of iPhone users’ lives.” said Amitaabh Malhotra, COO, DeviceFidelity. “With our In2Pay solution, we want to give both iPhone users and app developers the power to do even more, by putting the convenience of interactive secure mobile transactions, right at their fingertips, anywhere they are.”

    DeviceFidelity and Visa collaborated to combine Visa’s contactless payment technology, Visa payWave, and In2Pay technology to transform a mobile phone with a microSD memory slot into a mobile contactless payment device. Today’s announcement extends this functionality to iPhone and has the potential to accelerate the adoption of mobile contactless payments globally, especially in geographies where merchants have already upgraded payment terminals to accept contactless transactions.

    “Visa is working to bring the security and convenience of digital currency to mobile users around the world,” said Dave Wentker, Head of Mobile Contactless Payments at Visa Inc. “Our collaboration with DeviceFidelity can extend the reach of Visa mobile payments to millions of iPhone users.”

    The In2Pay solution gives iPhone users the ability to add greater convenience, flexibility and functionality. The In2Pay solution is designed to stay attached to iPhone and provides a micro USB slot for users to sync and charge their devices. DeviceFidelity’s In2Pay microSD provides secure, convenient one-click access to contactless transactions. Compatible with smart card industry standards, the microSD can be issued and personalized like traditional smart cards or in the future through a secure download of the account information via a mobile network.

    DeviceFidelity has multiple patents pending in the USA and several international countries for microSD and handset case based plug-and-play technology. DeviceFidelity has recently launched a partnership program allowing application and Trusted Service Manager system developers to upgrade their NFC solutions by adding support for the In2Pay microSD. The In2Pay microSD can be inserted securely and easily into the In2Pay Case for iPhone.

    About DeviceFidelity, Inc.
    DeviceFidelity, Inc. develops plug-and-play technologies that empower a variety of institutions to deploy their services and applications on millions of mobile phones worldwide. Its patent-pending In2Pay microSD solution, transforms any mobile phone with a memory card slot into an interactive contactless transaction device. Committed to bringing contactless innovation to the mobile phone, the company has numerous patents pending in both U.S. and international patent offices. DeviceFidelity is a private corporation with headquarters in Richardson, Texas and offices in Foster City, California. For more information, go to www.devicefidelity.com.

    About Visa
    Visa is a global payments technology company that connects consumers, businesses, financial institutions and governments in more than 200 countries and territories to fast, secure and reliable digital currency. Underpinning digital currency is one of the world’s most advanced processing networks–VisaNet–that is capable of handling more than 10,000 transactions a second, with fraud protection for consumers and guaranteed payment for merchants. Visa is not a bank, and does not issue cards, extend credit or set rates and fees for consumers. Visa’s innovations, however, enable its financial institution customers to offer consumers more choices: Pay now with debit, ahead of time with prepaid or later with credit products. For more information, visit www.corporate.visa.com.


  • Dedication of the Kummler Commons

    College of Engineering - Wayne State University

    Dean KummlerJoin us for the dedication
    of the Kummler Commons
    at the College of Engineering

    Monday, June 7, 1-3 p.m.

    Wayne State University and the College of Engineering are honoring the late Dean Ralph H. Kummler by dedicating the courtyard between the main college building and the Marvin I. Danto Engineering Development Center to his memory.

    A dedication ceremony outside the Danto building begins at 1 p.m. on Monday, June 7, followed by an ice cream social.

    Dean Kummler touched many lives during his nearly 40 years at Wayne State. He began his WSU career in 1970 as a Chemical Engineering and Materials Science faculty member, going on to chair the department from 1975 until 1993. He was the college’s associate dean of research from 1997 until 2001, when he was named interim dean. In 2004, WSU President Irvin D. Reid appointed him the seventh dean of the College of Engineering, a position he held until his retirement last August.

    The popular dean was a major proponent of the alternative energy certificate and master’s programs, the college’s collaboration with NextEnergy and the establishment of the Center for Academic Excellence in National Security Studies. He enthusiastically promoted programs in sustainable and systems engineering.

    Dean Kummler also was instrumental in raising funds for the Marvin I. Danto Engineering Development Center, and oversaw its design, construction and opening in April 2009. He played a vital role in helping bring about WSU’s selection as a member of Partners for the Advancement of Collaborative Engineering Education, resulting in $408 million in in-kind contributions to the College of Engineering.

    We welcome Wayne State University faculty, staff, students and friends to join us on June 7 as we remember Dean Kummler.

    RSVP at specialevents.wayne.edu/kummlerdedication

    Wayne State University Aim Higher
  • Big Changes Planned for Anthony Wayne Drive

    A pedestrian fails to use the crosswalk on Anthony Wayne Drive. This scene will change when safety improvements are made to the stretch of road this summer.
    By the end of summer 2010, Anthony Wayne Drive will have a whole new look. Plans are underway to make the busy stretch of road between Warren Avenue and Kirby Street more pedestrian-friendly. Tapan Datta, professor of civil engineering and head of the WSU Transportation Research Group (WSU-TRG), explains how the project came about.

    “Wayne State University needed more short-term parking on Anthony Wayne Drive and came to me for a traffic study. I knew that we could do this study and also could acquire funds from MDOT, through the City of Detroit, to create more parking as well as a pedestrian-friendly street.” MDOT approved 80% of the construction costs and the other 20% of the costs will be provided by WSU.

    While the added parking will surely be a benefit to campus, Datta says the main impetus for the WSU-TRG to work on this project was pedestrian safety. ‘In the past few years there have been 10 or 11 pedestrian involved crashes around campus, which is very significant,” says Datta. “We hope we can bring that number down.”

    The improvements to promote pedestrian safety will include: narrowing the street from four lanes to two in each direction and creating an additional lane of parking on either side of the median, which will boost the number of additional short-term parking spaces up to 150. A bike lane will be installed in each direction and the entrance to Parking Structure Two will be closed off so that drivers will have to enter from the Lodge Freeway service drive. A HAWk (High-intensity Activated crossWalk) signal will be installed at the crosswalk between the General Lectures Building and the Engineering Building.

    HAWk signals — which can already be found at a pedestrian crossing on Cass Avenue near the Business School and Detroit Public Library– allow drivers to proceed as usual when there are no pedestrians present, as well as make pedestrians more aware when crossing the street. In addition, wrought iron railing will be placed in the median, to deter pedestrians from crossing anywhere but at designated crosswalks.

    Additionally, the project calls for streetscape: flower pots and benches as well as lantern-type street lighting to make the environment along Anthony Wayne Drive more enjoyable and aesthetically-pleasing. “The objective of this project is to create a pedestrian-friendly environment,” says Datta. “Not only will pedestrians be safer, but it will enhance the environment for commercial development on the east and maybe west side of Anthony Wayne Drive.”

    Datta and the members of the WSU-TRG have spent countless hours since March 2009 on the project and hope it will pay off for the WSU community. Construction will begin in July and Datta says the goal is to have the opening ceremony for Anthony Wayne Drive coincide with the TRG’s annual Drive Safely to Wayne State campaign in the fall. A combined event would draw a great deal of positive attention, says Datta.

    Regardless of whether or not the project is recognized outside of the university, “It’s worth to Wayne State is invaluable” says Datta. "The difficult thing now will be changing pedestrian behavior.”

  • Why The ‘Second Housing Boom’ Is Nothing But Huckster Hype

    new homes Arizona

    Homebuilder confidence is up again, but the headline does not tell the real story. Please consider Homebuilder confidence at 2-1/2 year high in May:

    The NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market index increased three points to 22, the highest since August 2007, the group said in a statement. It was the second straight month of gains in the index. In addition to the tax credit, builders were also cheered by growing evidence that economy’s recovery from the longest and deepest recession since the 1930s was gaining momentum.

    All three subindexes of the Housing Market Index, including a measure of future homebuilding activity, saw decent gains this month.

    “This means builders are more comfortable that the market is truly beginning to recover, and that positive factors for buying a new home are taking the place of tax incentives to generate buyer demand,” said NAHB chief economist David Crowe.

    The current sales conditions gauge rose three points to 23, the highest since July 2007. The sales expectations measure for the next six months also gained three points to 28, the highest in six months. The traffic of prospective buyers index increased three points to 16, the highest since September.

    Traffic is up to 16 and David Crowe is excited? The only thing that remotely looks like it is headed up is “sales expectations” sitting at 28.

    Even still, on the diffusion index, 50 is the break even point.

    Huckster Hype in Las Vegas

    The New York Times reports Building Is Booming in a City of Empty Houses:

    In a plastic tent under a glorious desert sky, Richard Lee preached the gospel of the second chance.

    The chance to make money on the next housing boom “is like it’s never been,” Mr. Lee, a real estate promoter, assured a crowd of agents, investors and bankers. “We’re going to come back like you’ve never seen us before.”

    Home prices in Las Vegas are down by 60 percent from 2006 in one of the steepest descents in modern times. There are 9,517 spanking new houses sitting empty. An additional 5,600 homes were repossessed by lenders in the first three months of this year and could soon be for sale.

    Yet builders here are putting up 1,100 homes, and they are frantically buying lots for even more.

    Brent Anderson, a marketing executive with another Southwest builder, Meritage Homes, said it bought 713 lots in stricken Arizona last year, and was on the verge of starting construction in a new Phoenix community called Lyon’s Gate.

    “We’re building them because we’re selling them,” Mr. Anderson said. “Our customers wouldn’t care if there were 50 homes in an established neighborhood of 1980 or 1990 vintage, all foreclosed, empty and for sale at $10,000 less. They want new. And what are we going to do, let someone else build it?”

    Gospel of Second Chance

    Richard Lee hypes the opportunity to get in on the next real estate boom. An opportunity for who?

    Supposedly everyone wants a new home. Well, today’s new home is tomorrow’s resale. In a sea of empty houses, one year from now, who would be able to sell them and at what price if they needed to move?

    Even if prices have bottomed (in some areas that is likely true), the supply of existing homes will keep a lid on resale prices for a long time to come, possibly a decade.

    There is no second housing boom coming, just local huckster hype scattered in an ocean of empty houses with more foreclosures coming every month.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Fake Pilot Flew Passenger Jets For 13 Years

    Thomas Salme was working in maintenance at Scandinavian airline SAS, when he decided he wanted to move up into the cockpit. So, he did what any clever and ruthless crackpot would: He practiced on a flight simulator until he thought he was ready to fly, and then printed a fake pilot’s license at home. He got a job at European airline Air One, and spent 13 years flying passengers around Europe until being caught in March. The heavy hand of justice: a $2,500 fine and a one-year grounding.

    The Sun rises over the story:

    Salme said: “I’d train there [on the SAS flight simulator] for two or three hours at a time at least 15 to 20 times over one and a half years.

    “The moral point of view is that I feel ashamed that I did lie but I didn’t ever feel, not once feel, that I put passengers in an unsafe position.”

    Air One had invited him to take a test flight in their simulator and he passed with flying colours after faking vital documents.

    “I got the crackpot idea to apply as a co-pilot at a real airline so I made myself a Swedish flying permit with a logo out of regular white paper.

    “It was a fantasy creation. It wasn’t laminated and looked like something I’d made ay home.

    “It was surprisingly easy.”

    Salme did apparently have a commercial pilot’s license at some point, but had never qualified to fly passenger planes. Judges praised his safety record at his sentencing, and blocked requests for tougher penalties.

    Cockpit con was easy, says pilot [The Sun]

  • BP: Inserted Tube Siphoning Oil Leak

    VENICE, LA- Almost a month into one of history’s worst oil spills, BP executives announced  a successful development in containing the leak by using the “Insertion Tube Method”, a mile-long metal pipe that has been  inserted into the the largest opening of the busted well.  The oil is then partially directed to a drill ship on the ocean’s surface. However, BP officials say that this system, has not been fully applied, and is only collecting about 20 %–or about 1,000 barrels– of the total amount flowing into the Gulf of Mexico.

     BP officials say they are moving slowly in order to avoid the same pitfalls that hampered, and ultimately stopped their last major attempt of  containing the  gushing oil flow. A 100-ton dome failed to work as engineers hoped when it collected slush-like crystals, called hydrates, that clogged the 4-story structure, and left it abandoned on the sea bed.

  • Woman Sues Mobile Phone Provider, Because Consolidated Bill ‘Revealed’ Her Affair

    Ah, modern technology. Michael Geist points us to the story of a woman in Canada who is suing her mobile phone provider, Rogers, for supposedly “revealing” the fact that she was having an affair. Basically, she had a mobile phone account with Rogers under her maiden name, which she used to have long chats with someone she was having an affair with. Her husband had set up the family’s cable TV service, also from Rogers. At one point, he called Rogers to add internet and home phone service to the account, and Rogers then mailed a “global” bill that included all accounts. In looking over the bill, the husband noticed the long phone calls all to one number, and called it, and got the guy to admit to the affair. Following that, he left the wife.


    Now the woman, whose husband walked out, is suing the communications giant for $600,000 for alleged invasion of privacy and breach of contract, the results of which she says have ruined her life.

    I don’t know, but I’d have to say that, perhaps, having the affair was the key problem here, rather than the bill. Hell, the husband could have just as easily opened the original mobile phone bill which was sent to the same house. It doesn’t say so, but it seems likely that when the guy called to add services, Rogers asked if he wanted the bills consolidated and the guy just said yes.

    Furthermore, the whole thing gets more bizarre later, when the story also claims that the “jilted third-party” later got access to the woman’s voicemail and “harassed” her and “taunted” her (ex-)husband. And, on top of that, the article later notes “the wrongdoing that occurred in 2007 reoccurred” because the phone was still being billed to her husband’s account in 2009. This part is left vague, but, it makes you wonder why two years after her husband had left her, she hadn’t set up separate phone service for herself.

    I’m sure it sucks to have all that happen, but it seems like a pretty big stretch to blame your mobile phone provider for the affair you had that caused your spouse to leave you…

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Betty White Fondles Tracy Morgan On Cover Of New York Magazine!

    Hilarity ensues as Tracy Morgan goes topless and receives a thorough rub-down from sexy eightysomething Betty White during a photoshoot for the June issue of New York Magazine!


  • Gemballa cierras sus puertas

    mirage-gemballa.jpg

    Increíble final tuvo el preparador de tuning Gemballa, del cual os hemos mostrado muchos modelos preparados de Porsche exóticos a través de los años. A raíz de la desaparición de Uwe Gemballa desde el día 9 de febrero pasado, algunos dicen que en algún lugar de Sudáfrica, la empresa había suspendido las actividades, al punto de que ahora las autoridades alemanas han echado el cierre para pagar a los proveedores y acreedores de la empresa.

    La verdad es que el cierre ya se finalizó a fines del mes de abril, pero todo esto no ha trascendido hasta ayer. Su esposa tuvo que contratar los servicios de un abogado para efectuar la liquidación de los bienes y declarar bancarrota.

    Lo último que se supo de Uwe Gemballa, fue que probablemente había sido secuestrado en Sudáfrica o que se había refugiado allí por algún problema con la justicia alemana. El último día en el que se tuvo contacto con él, su hijo reveló que le había encargado una transferencia de una cantidad muy importante de dinero. A partir de ese día, nada más se supo del preparador.

    Vía | Autobild



  • iPhone Pro to get 960×640 IPS display, 512MB RAM, 1GHz processor

    iPhone Pro specs

    The folks over at DigiTimes are reporting a bunch of specs for the yet-to-be-announced iPhone Pro (iPhone HD?), which should be available sometime next month. Current word on the street is that the phone will boast a 960×640 high-resolution IPS display with fringe field switching. If this turns out to be the case, then the 3.4-inch display will pretty much be one of the most impressive screens seen on a phone, and things like direct sunlight will be less of an issue—definitely one advantage over OLED. The actual display is said to be about 33% thinner than what you’d find in previous generation iPhones, including the current iPhone 3GS, which leaves more room internally for a larger battery. The phone should also rock a 512MB memory module from Samsung, which is double what you’d find in the 3GS right now. Lastly, DigiTimes is saying that the processor will bea 1GHz Hummingbird model, and not the Apple A4 chip. We’ve heard so many conflicting reports on that one, and really, the whole thing has yet to be confirmed by Apple—so just take the whole thing with a grain of salt.

    Apple is expected to reveal the next iPhone at WWDC 2010 on June 7th.

    Gallery: iPhone HD Vietnam Leak


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    iPhone Pro to get 960×640 IPS display, 512MB RAM, 1GHz processor originally appeared on Gear Live on Mon, May 17, 2010 – 11:21:30


  • Photo Renderings: 2012 Volkswagen Beetle will look sportier, more manly

    Photo Renderings: 2012 Volkswagen Beetle by David Cordoso

    We’ve been eagerly awaiting the arrival of the next-generation Volkswagen Beetle. While we wait, independent designer David Cordoso has drawn up these photo-renderings showing us his interpretation of what the Beetle successor could look like.

    Cordoso says that he sees the next Beetle to be an emissions-free, fully electric vehicle.

    It was recently reported that the successor to the current Beetle will get an upgraded chassis with wider tracks and longer wheelbase. There haven’t been any talks of a fully electric version of the Beetle but insiders have said that a hybrid version is under consideration.

    Photo Renderings: 2012 Volkswagen Beetle by David Cordoso:

    – By: Kap Shah

    Source: CarScoop


  • Giz Explains: Why Using Your Phone In Another Country Costs So Damn Much [Giz Explains]

    The worst part of any vacation is coming home. Not just because your fleeting glimpse of freedom is finished, but because you’ve got to pay the absurd phone bill you racked up while you were gone. Ugh. Why? More »