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  • Video: Rapper pays homage to Volvo 240 wagon

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    Grynch raps a tribute to “My Volvo” – Click above to watch video after the jump

    Rapper Grynch isn’t about Maybachs and Phantoms – he’s straight up all about a 1986 Volvo 240 DL… wagon. So much so, in fact, he’s penned a song and made a video for it. One never knows what to expect when told to check out a rap video about a Volvo, but we found it a lot cooler than we think we had a right to. Follow the jump for the rhymes, but be ready before you click – Grynch says “I’m gon’ need you to feel me on this…”

    [Source: YouTube]

    Continue reading Video: Rapper pays homage to Volvo 240 wagon

    Video: Rapper pays homage to Volvo 240 wagon originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 29 Apr 2010 18:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Dramatic video of NASA balloon accident that destroys payload | Bad Astronomy

    This is awful: during the launch of a high-altitude balloon, something went wrong. The balloon dragged the payload across the ground, destroying it, and in the meantime not doing any good to an SUV parked nearby:


    This happened yesterday, in Australia. No one was hurt, but the payload apparently was totaled. It looks to me that the balloon got caught by some wind before they were quite ready to launch, and it pulled the payload off the crane. Seeing what it did to that SUV… yikes.

    The balloon was carrying gamma-ray detectors as a testbed for a future NASA observatory. Gamma rays don’t penetrate the Earth’s atmosphere, so observatories have to be launched into space. The detectors on-board can be tested on the ground, but at some point need to get up above as much of the atmosphere as possible to see how they do in those conditions and observing actual astronomical sources. Balloons are the easiest and cheapest way to do that.

    I know some folks who have done balloon launches like this, and they’ve told me it can be a little hairy. I trusted them, but until I saw that payload smash into and flip over that truck, I didn’t fully realize what they meant. Wow.

    This is a setback for NASA and the team building the observatory. I don’t know how much, exactly, but I’m sure it will be months or even years to rebuild this. I can’t imagine much will be salvaged off this disaster.

    I saw this earlier today, but no video was available to embed. So thanks to Tom’s Astronomy blog where I saw this, and Discovery News where I first heard about it.


  • See the spill from space









    DigitalGlobe

    An airplane, visible at top left, flies above the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico after an
    explosion at the Transocean Deepwater Horizon drilling platform. This image was
    taken from space on April 26 by DigitalGlobe’s QuickBird satellte. Click on the
    image for a wider, high-resolution view of the scene.




    The massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico is being tracked from outer space, where the sea’s ugly slick takes on a strange kind of beauty.

    …(read more)

  • Electrofuel research project portfolio seeks biofuels from electricity

    Research will target innovation into new pathways to renewable energy.  DOE spreads the love with funding across a number of energy themes, such as this one: electrofuels.  …

    …  “Electrofuels – Biofuels from Electricity — Today’s technologies for making biofuels all rely on photosynthesis – either indirectly by converting plants to fuels or directly by harnessing photosynthetic organisms such as algae.  This process is less than 1% efficient at converting sunlight to stored chemical energy. Instead, Electrofuels approaches will use organisms able to extract energy from other sources, such as solar-derived electricity or hydrogen or earth-abundant metal ions.  Theoretically, such an approach could be more than 10 times more efficient than current biomass approaches. “   …

    Via Department of Energy: Transformational Energy Research Projects.

         

    Sampling of organizations and their electrofuel research topics:

    • University of Massachusetts Amherst: Electrofuels via Direct Electron Transfer from Electrodes to Microbes
    • Pennsylvania State University: Development of Rhodobacter as a Versatile Microbial Platform for Fuels Production
    • The Ohio State University: Bioconversion of Carbon Dioxide to Biofuels by Facultatively Autotrophic Hydrogen Bacteria
    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology: Engineering Ralstonia eutropha for Production of Isobutanol (IBT) Motor Fuel from Carbon Dioxide, Hydrogen & Oxygen
    • Ginkgo BioWorks: Engineering E. coli as an electrofuels chassis for isooctane production
    • Harvard Medical School-Wyss Institute: Engineering a Bacterial Reverse Fuel Cell
    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology: Bioprocess and Microbe Engineering for Total Carbon Utilization in Biofuel Production
  • Other worlds on the Web

    I’m talking about “The Case for Pluto” and the search for planets again this week in the Second Life virtual world. You can catch me during a return appearance on “Virtually Speaking” with host Jay Ackroyd at 6 p.m. SLT/PT tonight. Then I’ll be giving a talk at the Meta Institute for Computational Astrophysics at 10 a.m. SLT/PT Saturday. Don’t worry: I’ll go easy on the computational astrophysics. And even if you miss seeing my spruced-up avatar in real time, both talks will be…(read more)

  • Adobe’s reaction to Jobs letter

    After Steve Jobs published his Adobe Flash rant (an open letter called “Thoughts on Flash,” which is now live on Apple.com, as well as every tech site on the webs), now we have Adobe CEO Shantanu Narayen on record with the Wall Street Journal, reacting to the Apple CEO’s letter.

    So what does Narayen have to say about that? Well, it’s nearly the same stuff he’s been quoted as saying before. But what he says may not be as important as how he says it. The man’s just seen a very high-profile exec trash his company (or at least one of the tech tools it’s responsible for). How would you react?

    Outraged? Defensive? Even combative? Narayen hit all three (and I can’t say I blame him):

    According to the Adobe chief, Flash really is an “open specification.” And, firing back at Jobs, he called the letter’s points just a “smokescreen” and accused Apple of being the one that impedes developers. Furthermore, he said Cupertino’s restrictions are “cumbersome” to devs, that the idea of Flash draining batteries was “patently false,” and implied that if Adobe ever crashed an Apple system, it has to do with the Apple OS. 

    So no big reveals or surprises there. Of course he defends Adobe. To him, Flash is all about the puppies, rainbows and children’s giggles it evokes in developer-land, as it makes easier work of writing for multiple platforms.

    In all seriousness, though, that was actually his real point through all this: “[Apple and Adobe] have different views of the world,” he says. “Our view of the world is multi-platform.” He hit the nail on the head. This is exactly counter to Jobs’ opinion that multi-platform tools make for bad user experiences. And when core operating principles diverge like this, it’s not likely to get resolved quickly.

    My favorite part of the interview was when Alan Murray, the interviewer, likened “the Apple-Adobe fight to that between reality TV stars Jon and Kate Gosselin…” So true. These two honchos have a “Jon and Kate” knack for taking potshots at each other through the media.

    It does feel like being privy to sentiments that should be between just the two of them, no? Suddenly, I’m reminded of the time I was having dinner at a friend’s house when she and her boyfriend got into a fight. They wouldn’t talk to each other, but they couldn’t stop venting to me.

    Via: Wall Street Journal


  • 2010 “Create the Future” Design Contest

    You are invited to enter the 2010 "Create the Future" Design Contest, sponsored by COMSOL, PTC, and Tech Briefs Media Group. The eighth annual contest will recognize outstanding innovations in product design, awarding a Grand Prize of $20,000 USD. Visit www.createthefuture2010.com for the exciting details. There is no cost to enter. In addition to individual entries, design teams are invited to submit their collaborative work, in any of six categories: * Consumer Products * Machinery and Equipment * Medical * Safety and Security * Sustainable Technologies * Transportation Prizes will be awarded for the top entry in each category. You can choose to display your entry on the contest Web site and compete for Most Popular Entry prizes, based on the votes of site registrants. All qualified entrants will be included in a drawing for NASA Tech Briefs T-shirts, and the winning entries will be featured in a special supplement to NASA Tech Briefs magazine. The Top 100 entries overall, as determined by an industry panel of judges, will receive a certificate of achievement suitable for framing. Best of all, your winning entry will receive worldwide recognition and publicity to business and industry leaders who can help bring your idea to market. All entries must be received by June 30, 2010. For complete information and the official entry form, go to: www.createthefuture2010.com. Good luck!

  • GeoQuiz: Learn about the world, brag about your score

    GeoQuiz by Brain Cafe is a multiple-choice quiz game that purports to ‘test your knowledge of the planet Earth and all its wonders’. Sleek and well-presented, GeoQuiz is part game, part visual tour of Wikipedia.

    Open up the app and you’re greeted with a bright, simplistic menu screen more reminiscent of an iPhone app than your typical Android game. Pick a category (choose from topics like ‘People’, ‘Capital Cities of the World’ or ‘The Great Explorers’) and you’re taken to a simple game screen with a question on the left and a set of four possible answers on the right. Whether you pick right or wrong, an information screen will pop up explaining the facts behind the question. Thoughtfully, there’s a Wikipedia link to the relevant topic included with every answer.

    Complete a quiz and your score is saved in the app’s records. Feeling the need to brag about your intellect? You can even tweet your score and time from within the game.

    The Good:

    • It’s pretty. From high-res menu photos to bright buttons and crisp transitions, GeoQuiz comes across as clean and attractive.
    • You might learn something. Most answers include detailed information about the facts behind the question, and if you want to know more, there’s a built-in Wikipedia link for every answer.
    • No 3D or flashy effects. This means GeoQuiz runs great on older phones such as the T-Mobile G1 and HTC Magic.

    The Not-So-Good:

    • Some answers are missing explanations. Most of the quiz answers include detailed information explaining the facts behind the question, but around 10% of questions lack this detail.
    • Questions often repeat themselves, occasionally in the same quiz.

    The Final Verdict:
    GeoQuiz is easy to pick up and play for a few minutes at a time. The perfect casual time-waster for when you need a quieter, more cerebral game experience.

    Note: This review was submitted by Xander Bennett as part of our app review contest.




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  • Android 2.1 + Sense UI On Touch Pro2

    With the growing popularity of Android OS in the mobile smartphone world, Window Mobile developers imagehave kicked it into over drive, and have been working ever so hard to getting the latest software on our device. In the latest release by XDAndroid, they managed to get the latest Android software(Android 2.2 has yet to be released) running on the Touch Pro2, with the software we all love to see and use… Sense UI.

    Now they did not only add new software, but they put some new fixes into it. This release comes with a host of new fixes that can be easily seen from their well documented change log:

    • NEW Apr 23 New 2 new builds added to the download section. First we have a 2.1 Android Open Source Project build. This is built by phh using stinedb’s new kitchen. Second we have 2.1 with SENSE UI! Thanks to Klinux for his work on this sqsh!
    • NEW Apr 23 New zimage adds 17MB RAM for Android OS use.
    • NEW Apr 23 New Startup Utility updates: WinMo auto backlight off/on thanks to bedoig Thread Here
    • 3/31 Startup Utility Updates: Force CDMA checkbox enables the use of MrPippys combined CDMA & GSM Rootfs! (For .rar CDMA users add "htc_hw.force_cdma=1" to your startup.txt!)
    • 3/31 Thanks to MrPippy’s work the CDMA and GSM rootfs have now been combined!!
    • 3/31 System.sqsh from babijoee! Adds Gallery, Calculator, and Desktop Clock. Updates to some apps as well!
    • 3/25 Zimage/modules: This re-enables the so called "turbo mode". Some benchmarking figures indicate better memory performance. (topa/rhod: Drive AXI bus @160Mhz when A11 is @528Mhz)
    • 3/25 Additions to the Startup Utility! Progress bar & Rootfs.img Auto-Update should also have fixed some compatibility issues, and crashes during the update!
    • 3/17 Additions to the Startup Utility! Auto Update & App Manager! (Pieteckhart is going crazy with this one!)
    • 3/17 zImage/Modules: Re-enable speakerphone by adding "external.rhod_speaker=1" to startup.txt (ONLY SPEAKERPHONE, no external audio, Mic also will not work.)
    • 3/08 3D Finally working(ish) Will not show Nexus boot screen, or some other 3D apps that require LOTS of RAM. (Remove cmdline "hw3d.force=1" from your startup.txt to go back to the old settings and get your splash screen back)
    • 3/08 System.sqsh from babijoee, includes Home++ (you can still select standard Android Home as default)
    • 3/08 Startup Utility! (Thanks pieteckhart and DaveShaw, woulda never gotten done otherwise) No more multiple downloads, keyboard selection tool will load before Android Haret.
    • 3/01 WiFi WORKING! (Except WEP)

     

    You can download this port from XDA.


  • NCBI ROFL: How to turn your scrapbooking obsession into a dissertation. | Discoblog

    Friends for better or for worse: interracial friendship in the United States as seen through wedding party photos. “Friendship patterns are instrumental for testing important hypotheses about assimilation processes and group boundaries. Wedding photos provide an opportunity to directly observe a realistic representation of close interracial friendships and race relations. An analysis of 1,135 wedding party photos and related information shows that whites are especially unlikely to have black friends who are close enough to be in their wedding party. Adjusting for group size, whites and East and Southeast Asians (hereafter E/SE Asians) are equally likely to be in each other’s weddings, but whites invite blacks to be in their wedding parties only half as much as blacks invite whites, and E/SE Asians invite blacks only one-fifth as much as blacks invite E/SE Asians. In interracial marriages, both E/SE Asian and black spouses in marriages to whites are significantly less likely than their white spouses to have close friendships with members of their spouse’s race.” Image: flickr/Bludgeoner86 Related content:
    Discoblog: NCBI ROFL: And September’s “No shit, Sherlock” award goes to…
    Discoblog: NCBI ROFL: I’d like a number 2 value meal, a frosty, and a peer-reviewed publication, please.
    Discoblog: NCBI ROFL: The teddy-bear effect: does having a …


  • Audi announces ‘Tony Stark Innovation Challenge’ video contest

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    Click above to view the video after the jump

    Audi’s major push for Iron Man 2 tie-ins begins now, with the Tony Stark Innovation Challenge. A real way for life to imitate art, Challenge entrants will create videos to showcase their ideas that will make the world better through technology – just like Tony Stark does in Iron Man, but without the guns. The winner gets all kinds of swag, including $15,000 to make it all come true. Sadly, there’s no mention of Audi making you a billionaire or having your contracts notarized by Scarlett Johansson. Follow the jump for all the details and Audi’s first video.

    [Source: Audi]

    Continue reading Audi announces ‘Tony Stark Innovation Challenge’ video contest

    Audi announces ‘Tony Stark Innovation Challenge’ video contest originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 29 Apr 2010 17:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Fondle a Suma mouse for intuitive 3D interaction

    The Suma mouse prototype captures input from wherever the user's hand touches the 'skin' a...

    Cambridge Consultants has unveiled the next phase in the development of its Suma sensor technology, which transforms user touch on its surface into an individual action on a computer or gaming device. The wireless Suma mouse prototype opens up a multitude of three dimensional navigation possibilities by taking every squeeze, stroke or swipe of a user’s touch and translating it into an onscreen reaction such as a pan, tilt or zoom…
    Continue Reading Fondle a Suma mouse for intuitive 3D interaction

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  • Microsoft Courier – we barely knew ya

    Microsoft has been unusually forthright with Gizmodo when they enquired about Microsoft’s elusive dual tablet.

    According to Frank Shaw, Microsoft’s VP of corporate communications:

    At any given time, across any of our business groups, there are new ideas being investigated, tested, and incubated. It’s in Microsoft’s DNA to continually develop and incubate new technologies to foster productivity and creativity. The "Courier" project is an example of this type of effort and its technologies will be evaluated for use in future Microsoft offerings, but we have no plans to build such a device at this time.

    Engadget speculates that the idea was at one time in development, but never really panned out internally and was eventually abandoned.  We have however seen some of the ideas implemented in other products, such as the sharing feature in the KIN so in the end all is not lost, and who knows, maybe many of the features will make a re-appearance when cut and paste come to Windows Phone 7.

    Read the full story at Gizmodo here.


  • As If On Cue, Sony Sued For Making PS3 Less Useful

    We recently noted how Sony decided to make their Playstation 3 game console less useful by removing the ability to run alternative operating systems. Sony wanted to retain stricter control of the hardware to battle piracy, but it’s something that annoyed some hobbyists — who’d found a number of creative uses for the feature. The decision made it clear that in the broadband age, the product you thought you purchased isn’t always the product you now own — and it raised the question whether products made less useful post purchase demand a refund. One UK customer thought so, using a UK consumer protection law to force Amazon to give him a 20% rebate. At the time, we noted how a class action lawsuit seemed likely in the U.S., and right on cue — Sony’s now facing a lawsuit:

    "The suit claims that the "Install Other OS" function was "extremely valuable." According to the suit, the plaintiff he has not yet installed the latest firmware update so that he can continue to use the Other OS feature. The suit also notes that PS3 owners who choose not to update their firmware cannot access the PlayStation Network, play PS3 games online, nor can they play new games or Blu-ray videos that require firmware 3.21."

    So with the recent Avatar DRM flap in mind, users not only lose useful functionality, but if they refuse to update their system with the latest firmware — they also lose the ability to go online, or watch/play the latest Blu-Ray titles or games. In other words, if you refuse a hardware downgrade designed to battle piracy (which punishes paying customers), your PS3 console becomes progressively less useful. So what exactly is a Playstation 3 worth if it can’t be used to do anything?

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Climate Change Legislation Is Just A Deal Away

    First, the good news,  Senator Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) is not completely turning his back on the energy and climate change bill he co-authored and then walked away from just hours before it was set to be officially rolled out.

    Now for the bad news,  Democrats were set to release  later today, a very preliminary draft of an immigration reform bill,  says this tweet from Mother Jones’s Kate Sheppard. That’s not good for the climate change bill, which if left aside in favor of immigration reform, would likely not be debated until closer to the mid-term elections, when support for the bill would be all but dead.

    The energy and climate change bill crafted by Senator John Kerry (D-Mass.),  Joe Lieberman (I-Conn.) and Graham, would cut greenhouse gas emissions by 17 percent by 2020 and 80 percent by 2050. It includes a cap and trade system for utilities. It also includes funding for nuclear power, offshore oil and gas drilling, and carbon capture and sequestration. The is widely supported by environmental groups and industry groups. Despite all that good will, earlier today Graham told Ezra Klein of the Washington Post that he was ready to vote against his bill if immigration was scheduled ahead of it. “I care equally about immigration and climate change,” Graham tells Klein. “But if you stack them together this year you’ll compromise climate and energy. You’ll compromise my ability to get votes on climate change,” he warns.

    Until Friday its seemed like an “all systems go” for the climate change and energy bill, which has been almost a year in the making. Signals from the White House were that after Wall Street reform, energy and climate change bill was next up. That’s why in the months leading to what would have been its official roll out, Graham, Kerry and Lieberman were actively negotiating with environmentalists, other Senators and industry groups in an effort to build a coalition that could get the legislation passed.

    Now it’s true that the legislation never had the 60 votes to get passed, however it was closer to getting these votes (from both side of the isle) than a hurried immigration reform law.

    However, given what happened last week in Arizona, immigration reform has become a top priority for Democrats. Graham says he’s not opposed to immigration reform — he recently op-ed with Senator Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) calling for such reform — but he argues that now is not the time to do it.

    He tells Klein:

    My advice is that securing the border now gives a guy like me who wants to get to comprehensive [immigration] reform the credibility to get there. But if you bring up immigration in this climate, you’ll divide the country further. You’ll get a huge vote for border security and interior enforcement, but when it comes to pathway to citizenship, you’ll break down big-time.

    Without Graham Kerry and Lieberman can’t get Republicans to vote for their bill. Besides Kerry and Lieberman (since Monday the three senators have not met) the other person that could bring Graham back into the fold is President Obama, writes Jim Tankersley, in the Los Angeles Times.

    Graham is probably ready to do a deal. He has said that he would  support the legislation again if immigration reform is delayed until 2012 and if the White House comes out and support a controversial provision in the transportation section of the bill, which the White House has dubbed a “gas tax” and opposed but which Graham argues is not a straight gasoline tax.

  • MobileTechRoundup 207 – Podcasting LIVE!


    An MP3 file of the show will soon be available for download.

    HOSTS: James Kendrick (Houston), Matthew Miller (Seattle) and Kevin C. Tofel (Philadelphia)

    TOPICS:

    • HP buys Palm
    • webOS 1.4.1.1 update comes to Verizon Pre Plus, solves GPS and keyboard issues
    • Nokia N8 revealed, world’s first 5 band 3G device (hd video sample impresses, Symbian just opened up development for HTML, CSS, JavaScript – how will that work out?)
    • T-Mobile to allow you to go over 5GB, just throttles speed a bit
    • B&N Nook updated to version 1.3 with web browser and games
    • Skyfire for Android hands on – Flash if you want it, although it’s really transcoding on the fly.
    • Note to self: Courier isn’t happening

    CONTACT US: Email us or leave us a voicemail on our SkypeLine!

    SUBSCRIBE: Use this RSS feed with your favorite podcatcher or click this link to add us to iTunes

  • Japanese Scientists Invent ‘Elastic Water’ [Science]

    This is “elastic water,” a substance researchers have created in Japan that’s 95% water yet retains a jelly-like texture that’s perfect for sticking tissues together. More »







  • Dendreon CEO Mitch Gold: Seattle Biotech Has An Anchor Tenant Again

    pic_gold
    Luke Timmerman wrote:

    The impact of today’s FDA approval of Dendreon’s prostate cancer drug is being covered exhaustively from every angle on the Web. There’s the company saga, the benefit for prostate cancer patients, the boost to the field of cancer immunotherapy research, and the stock market surge.

    But one thing that’s not lost on Dendreon CEO Mitch Gold is what this means to Seattle, the community where he lives, where the company is based, and which has lacked a powerhouse independent biotech company since Immunex got acquired by Amgen in 2002. Gold, 43, has made it plain since the day he took the Dendreon leadership job in 2002 that his aspiration is to make Dendreon the next great biotech company from Seattle.

    When he took the job, I quoted him in The Seattle Times saying: “We’re not talking about building a $500 million or a $1 billion company. That’s too low,” Gold said. “We’re building something here much more durable, and much bigger.”

    Eight years later, the company is now worth $6.7 billion, and Provenge is finally approved. “This is great for Seattle biotech,” Gold said this afternoon. “Now we have an anchor tenant again.”

    Dendreon currently has about 650 employees, Gold says, and it is continuing to grow fast to keep up with the demand for sipuleucel-T (Provenge). The company still has more than 150 job openings on its website, with more than 60 of them at the Seattle headquarters, and most of the rest at factories in New Jersey, Georgia, and southern California.

    It’s a dramatically different group of people than were at Dendreon just 12 months ago, when the company had only 200 employees, and wasn’t even sure if its drug would pass its pivotal clinical trial. But Dendreon has been transformed in this past year, raising more than $630 million from investors for the Provenge commercial push. Its stock has rocketed to more than $50 at today’s close, giving the company a market valuation of more than $6.7 billion. “Dendreon is probably now one of the top five biotech companies in the world,” Gold says, based on market value.

    That sounded pretty shocking to me for a company that still hasn’t booked its first sale. By my count, Dendreon isn’t in the top 5, but it is in the top 10 now. Here’s a list of the top biopharmaceutical companies by market cap that I follow (please let me know if I’m forgetting anybody, and I’ll update below).

    Company Market cap, Apr. 29
    Amgen $56.6 billion
    Gilead Sciences $36.4 billion
    Celgene $28.3 billion
    Genzyme $14.3 billion
    Biogen Idec $14.2 billion
    Vertex Pharmaceuticals $7.9 billion
    Dendreon $6.7 billion

    So how did Gold first hear the news today? Turns out he was on his way to the office in Seattle when he got a phone call from his vice president of regulatory affairs, Liz Smith, one of the mainstays at the company for years. “It was one happy moment,” Gold said.

    By the time Gold had parked and made his way into the office, employees were already buzzing around the hallways and congratulating each other. The company issued its press release at 11 am, held a conference call with analysts at 11:30 am local time, and had a quick all-employee meeting in its auditorium. Gold specifically singled out Smith, and chief scientist David Urdal, for their dedication through the years of some serious ups and downs before today’s approval.

    “I knew it was going to be great when this came, but I didn’t really know how great it would feel,” Gold says.

    By the time I filed the first two stories today and made it to the company’s offices at 2 pm, it was quiet, except for one lonely security guard, and a single TV crew on the sidewalk. Clearly, the party had moved somewhere else. Rick Hamm, the company’s senior vice president of corporate development, told me that the sales and marketing guys were into the champagne before noon and weren’t around the office much longer.

    They are certainly entitled to enjoy the moment, but everybody there knows there will be tons of work piling up on the Dendreon team almost immediately. There’s handling patients who might be unhappy they won’t be able to get Provenge. There’s the effort to keep manufacturing on track, and build out its extra capacity as fast as possible. There will be delicate negotiations with insurers to get them to pay for a $93,000 drug. Almost immediately, Wall Street will start wondering what’s next, and Dendreon will have to show investors that it’s not a one-hit wonder, and that it can plug and play other cancer drugs into its proprietary immune-boosting platform.

    How long will Gold and the team actually get to celebrate? He laughed at that question, but said he’ll savor the moment tonight for sure with friends and colleagues. Then next week, he said he’ll be flying to New Jersey to see the first patient’s white blood cells roll off the factory floor in a commercial setting.

    “The best moment will be when I get to see that happen,” Gold says.

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  • Yelp: Businesses, restaurants, reviews.

    As a college student, I frequently find myself scrambling for the nearest food option, bank, or gas station. When the frenzy that is my life slows down and I have a spare moment, I enjoy exploring the city and finding new restaurants.

    Yelp, an application based on the popular website, allows me to accomplish these goals with its easy to navigate menus and great search functionality. I have the option of choosing to browse through a variety of categories (ex: Restaurants, Coffee, Banks, Gas, etc), to search for a specific type of item (ex: tacos, Mexican food, etc), or simply to search for a certain restaurant (ex: McDonald’s … although I wouldn’t recommend it). Yelp offers the ability to search locations close to you using the phone’s GPS, or to input an address or city, in case you want to search for places elsewhere. Furthermore, once in the list of items, Yelp allows you to filter by price, or if it’s late at night, to display only those locations that are currently open.

    But the best part is Yelp’s extensive library of reviews. Nearly every restaurant I browse through has tons of reviews as well as user-submitted pictures, allowing me to discover new food that I know I will like. Once I have found what I am looking for, Yelp smoothly integrates with Google Maps and Navigation with a “Directions to Here” option below the address. If you’re not running Android 2.0+ yet, it gives you the option to view the directions through the browser. The hours and phone number (you can call right from the app!) of the business are also listed, along with the website and much more. Even if you’re not interested in finding new restaurants, Yelp is a great tool for finding those you already frequent when you are in an unfamiliar area, or for finding bars, banks, and gas stations. Yelp also offers many exclusive sales and specials through the application (for example, one of my favorite local restaurants offers a discount if I simply mention the word “Yelp”).

    Finally, Yelp offers the ability to login to your already existing Yelp account (or create one) in order to save history, submit reviews, and add photos straight from the app. You can also add bookmarks for quick access to your favorite locations.

    Pros:

    • Simple, easy to navigate menus and search
    • Integration with Google Maps and Navigation
    • Sync with your Yelp Account
    • Ability to submit photos from app

    Cons:

    • There is no way to sort by distance
    • As of now, you can only save a draft of a review from the app, and then must submit it through the website
    • no check-in feature like the iPhone version

    Final Verdict:
    Whether you’re looking to find new food options, or simply looking for the closest Starbucks, Yelp is the app for you. With the ability to both browse and search for nearly any business, find phone numbers, and navigate through Google Maps, Yelp is your one stop app to access your community.

    Note: This review was submitted by Michael Ewart as part of our app review contest.



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