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  • Jon Stewart looks at mascots gone bad after firing of Geico guy

    Without Jon Stewart’s brand of in-depth investigation, I never would’ve known that the Pillsbury Doughboy engaged in some questionable behavior with a strudel or that the helping hand from Hamburger Helper had a Nazi past. On Stewart’s late-night Comedy Central series, The Daily Show, those and other secrets came out during a segment on the voice actor from Geico who lost his job recently after questioning the mental capacity of conservative FreedomWorks members. Stewart figured it was as good a time as any to look at spokescharacters (purportedly) going off the rails. There was that Tony the Tiger mauling incident, and the Michelin man’s sex trafficking charges. (Great mug shot!) Check out the clip, really, it’ll explain everything.

    —Posted by T.L. Stanley

  • Scout’s Honor: I’m Only Playing This Video Game to Earn My Merit Badge | Discoblog

    At first glance, it seems like every young Boy Scout’s dream come true: a merit badge for video games. The Boy Scouts of America have finally recognized the vital importance of the pastime that occupies so much of modern children’s attention with the creation of a “video games” belt loop and pin, writes Engadget. But before anyone goes scurrying off to embark on a marathon gaming session, here’s the rub. The awards aren’t earned by beating a high score or rescuing the princess. Instead Boy Scouts have to fulfill several dull requirements in order to get the belt loop, including: Explain why it is important to have a rating system for video games. Check your video games to be sure they are right for your age. With an adult, create a schedule for you to do things that includes your chores, homework, and video gaming. Do your best to follow this schedule. Learn to play a new video game that is approved by your parent, guardian, or teacher. To get the pin, the scout also needs to create a plan with his …


  • Google introduces Place Pages for mobile

    Google is making its mobile search even better by introducing Place Pages for Mobile. Place Pages for Mobile allows Android (and iPhone) users to find details of restaurants, businesses, etc. in one simple page. You can get basic info like store hours, pictures, and phone numbers along with the more in-depth details like user reviews, ratings, and tips from different online sources (citysearch, zagat, etc). We tried it out and it’s pretty darn nifty. Since it’s optimized for mobile phones, all information is displayed in an easy-to-read format.

    You can try out Place Pages by going to google.com on your Android browser and searching for a restaurant or business. If you click on the local listing results, it’ll take you to its Place Page. How do you guys like it? Think you’ll use it?

    Hit the jump to see a video of Place Pages in action!

    read more

  • T-Mobile Won’t Charge You for Using Too Much Data, But They Will Slow You the Hell Down [T-Mobile]

    Instead of charging you overage fees for using more than 5GB of data in a month with one of its webConnect 3G data plans, T-Mobile’s just going to slow your internet down instead. A novel trade-off, though I’d prefer to choose whether I get hit with fees or slowdowns. More »







  • China’s 21-Foot-Tall Baby Is Here to Creep Out the World [What]

    This 21-foot-tall baby was created by the special effects mavens behind Alien vs. Predator. It was built to represent the cities of future generations, or something. But really, it’s just unsettling. [io9] More »







  • Pentagon releases military commissions manual

    [JURIST] The US Department of Defense (DOD) on Tuesday released a manual for military commission procedures under the Military Commissions Act of 2009. The manual establishes the rules of evidence and procedure for the commissions, allowing for the admission of certain hearsay evidence and defining “material support” for terrorism. The manual’s release came one day before a hearing in the case of Canadian Guantanamo Bay detainee Omar Khadr on whether his alleged confessions may be used as evidence. The hearing was postponed briefly Wednesday morning to allow Khadr’s lawyers time to review the new manual and was set to resume Wednesday afternoon.
    Khadr’s military commission trial, set to begin in July, will be the first under the Obama administration, which suspended military commissions shortly after the January 2009 inauguration. In February, Khadr’s lawyers filed an emergency motion in the Federal Court of Canada challenging the decision of the Canadian government not to seek his repatriation from the US. The Supreme Court of Canada ruled in January that the government was not obligated to seek Khadr’s return to Canada despite having violated his rights under section 7 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Khadr has allegedly admitted to throwing a hand grenade that killed a US soldier in Afghanistan, and was charged in April 2007 with murder, attempted murder, conspiracy, providing material support for terrorism, and spying.

  • Blackwater Will Be Allowed to Bid on Big State Department Contract

    GUANTANAMO BAY — A brief detour from my Guantanamo coverage, as a State Department official, speaking only on background, confirmed something else I’ve been working on. The private security company formerly known as Blackwater and now known as Xe Services, will be allowed to bid on the next generation of the State Department’s lucrative Worldwide Protective Services Contract. The company’s track record of killing Iraqi civilians, shooting at Afghan civilians, taking for personal use U.S. military-issued rifles from the Afghan police and setting up shell companies to win government contracts will not be an obstacle.

    Once again, the fact that no federal acquisition official has recommended Blackwater be barred from bidding on federal contracts means, the official said, that “any company, including Xe Services and its subsidiary companies, [may] submit a proposal in response to an acquisition process established on the basis of full and open competition.” While a Blackwater/Xe Services spokeswoman did not reply to repeated phone calls seeking comment before I left for Guantanamo, she told me last year that the company intends to bid on the contract — which is the successor contract to the one that allowed it to protect U.S. diplomats in Iraq and Afghanistan in the first place.

    Nor is the fact that the Iraqi government took away Blackwater’s license to operate in Iraq a dealbreaker. “The solicitation is for undefined worldwide requirements,” the State Department official said, meaning any specific country “license is not required for the award of the base contract.”

    The last Worldwide Protective Services contract, as it’s formally known, was awarded to a consortium of three firms: Blackwater/Xe, Triple Canopy and DynCorp. This time around, State intends to award it to six firms, who will then bid on the right to protect diplomats in specific dangerous countries. The year-long contract has an annual option for renewal for four years, making it essentially a four-year contract. Its cost has yet to be determined, but it’ll be announced — along with the winners — by September 30. A back-of-the-envelope calculation places the value of the previous WPS contract at $2.2 billion.

    Sen. Carl Levin (D-Mich.), whose Armed Services Committee uncovered the shell-company establishment and the Afghanistan weapons diversions, wrote to Attorney General Eric Holder in February to request the Justice Department investigate the company for fraud.

  • Jesse James Reacts To Sandra Bullock Divorce Filing

    Hot on the heels of Sandra Bullock’s early morning announcement that she’s filed for divorce and obtained single custody of what was to be their adopted son, Louis, womanizing biker enthusiast Jesse James has released a statement on the end of his six year marriage to the Oscar darling.

    He says in part: “The decision to let my wife end our marriage, and continue the adoption of Louis on her own, has been the hardest. The love I have for Louis cannot be put to words. Not having him around to love and to hold has left a huge hole in my heart…Sandy is the love of my life, but considering the pain and devastation I have caused her, it would be selfish to not let her go. Right now it is time for me to beat this addiction that has taken two of the things I love the most in life….”


  • MIXED: Portraits of Multicultural America by Kip Fulbeck, foreword by Dr. Maya Soetoro-Ng, afterword by Cher

    What a perfect companion text to Kip Fulbeck‘s part asian • 100% hapa, his previous title for Chronicle Books … both are visually gorgeous and further illuminated with just enough text (plus a few choice drawings in Mixed). Indeed, pictures do speak volumes … and in this case. from so many different backgrounds, too.

    Last March 2009, Fulbeck, who is hapa of Cantonese and white American descent, recently became a very proud father of Cantonese Caucasian Celtic son Jack: “And in this one moment, my life, and the meaning behind my entire work as an artist, shifted significantly … my stakes have suddenly been raised.”

    Mixed is the logical progression from Fulbeck’s hapa background to explore his son’s brave new world: ” … it is a world changing for the better,” he writes with hope. “My son will not face the same questions I did. He will not be forced to choose sides. And while there are still those who may attempt it, he will never have to accept another person telling him who he is.”

    Dr. Maya Soetoro-Ng, who sometimes  has been labeled too conveniently as “Obama’s younger sister,” was and is indeed an accomplished scholar in her own right long before she hit the public spotlight. Growing up hapa with a white mother and Indonesian father, together with her hapa African Caucasian brother, Soetoro-Ng writes in her foreword not only of her famous brother – “Today, multiracial people can take pride in the symbol and visage of my brother” – but of her own experiences of growing up mixed, and the hopes she has for her own children, of their “additional options beyond the either/or.”

    In 2000, the U.S. Census finally recognized its multiracial citizens, an explosively growing American demographic. What happens with the 2010 Census results will surely be something to watch  … and celebrate.

    Readers: All

    Published: 2010

    Filed under: ..Adult Readers, ..Children/Picture Books, ..Middle Grade Readers, ..Young Adult Readers, .Nonfiction, Hapa Tagged: Anthology, Family, Identity, Mixed-race issues

  • The 20 Forgotten Lessons Of 2008

    avsdcasdas(This is a guest post from The View From Blue Ridge.)

    The four most dangerous words in investing are, “This time is different.”

    Hands down, our favorite quote on investor’s lack of historical memory comes from Jeremy Grantham who, when asked “Do you think we will learn anything from this turmoil?” responded, “We will learn an enormous amount in the very short term, quite a bit in the medium term and absolutely nothing in the long term. That would be the historical precedent.”

    In this spirit, we highlight the lessons that should have been learned from the turmoil of 2008, complements of Seth Klarman.  The excerpt below is from his annual letter.  While most market participants have immediately forgotten these lessons, more prudent investors (who may still suffer from short term memory loss) should consider dusting this list off on an annual basis!

    Twenty Investment Lessons of 2008

    1. Things that have never happened before are bound to occur with some regularity. You must always be prepared for the unexpected, including sudden, sharp downward swings in markets and the economy. Whatever adverse scenario you can contemplate, reality can be far worse.

    2. When excesses such as lax lending standards become widespread and persist for some time, people are lulled into a false sense of security, creating an even more dangerous situation. In some cases, excesses migrate beyond regional or national borders, raising the ante for investors and governments. These excesses will eventually end, triggering a crisis at least in proportion to the degree of the excesses. Correlations between asset classes may be surprisingly high when leverage rapidly unwinds.

    3. Nowhere does it say that investors should strive to make every last dollar of potential profit; consideration of risk must never take a backseat to return. Conservative positioning entering a crisis is crucial: it enables one to maintain long-term oriented, clear thinking, and to focus on new opportunities while others are distracted or even forced to sell. Portfolio hedges must be in place before a crisis hits. One cannot reliably or affordably increase or replace hedges that are rolling off during a financial crisis.

    4. Risk is not inherent in an investment; it is always relative to the price paid. Uncertainty is not the same as risk. Indeed, when great uncertainty – such as in the fall of 2008 – drives securities prices to especially low levels, they often become less risky investments.

    5. Do not trust financial market risk models. Reality is always too complex to be accurately modeled. Attention to risk must be a 24/7/365 obsession, with people – not computers – assessing and reassessing the risk environment in real time. Despite the predilection of some analysts to model the financial markets using sophisticated mathematics, the markets are governed by behavioral science, not physical science.

    6. Do not accept principal risk while investing short-term cash: the greedy effort to earn a few extra basis points of yield inevitably leads to the incurrence of greater risk, which increases the likelihood of losses and severe illiquidity at precisely the moment when cash is needed to cover expenses, to meet commitments, or to make compelling long-term investments.

    7. The latest trade of a security creates a dangerous illusion that its market price approximates its true value. This mirage is especially dangerous during periods of market exuberance. The concept of “private market value” as an anchor to the proper valuation of a business can also be greatly skewed during ebullient times and should always be considered with a healthy degree of skepticism.

    8. A broad and flexible investment approach is essential during a crisis. Opportunities can be vast, ephemeral, and dispersed through various sectors and markets. Rigid silos can be an enormous disadvantage at such times.

    9. You must buy on the way down. There is far more volume on the way down than on the way back up, and far less competition among buyers. It is almost always better to be too early than too late, but you must be prepared for price markdowns on what you buy.

    10. Financial innovation can be highly dangerous, though almost no one will tell you this. New financial products are typically created for sunny days and are almost never stress-tested for stormy weather. Securitization is an area that almost perfectly fits this description; markets for securitized assets such as subprime mortgages completely collapsed in 2008 and have not fully recovered. Ironically, the government is eager to restore the securitization markets back to their pre-collapse stature.

    11. Ratings agencies are highly conflicted, unimaginative dupes. They are blissfully unaware of adverse selection and moral hazard. Investors should never trust them.

    12. Be sure that you are well compensated for illiquidity – especially illiquidity without control – because it can create particularly high opportunity costs.

    13. At equal returns, public investments are generally superior to private investments not only because they are more liquid but also because amidst distress, public markets are more likely than private ones to offer attractive opportunities to average down.

    14. Beware leverage in all its forms. Borrowers – individual, corporate, or government – should always match fund their liabilities against the duration of their assets. Borrowers must always remember that capital markets can be extremely fickle, and that it is never safe to assume a maturing loan can be rolled over. Even if you are unleveraged, the leverage employed by others can drive dramatic price and valuation swings; sudden unavailability of leverage in the economy may trigger an economic downturn.

    15. Many LBOs are man-made disasters. When the price paid is excessive, the equity portion of an LBO is really an out-of-the-money call option. Many fiduciaries placed large amounts of the capital under their stewardship into such options in 2006 and 2007.

    16. Financial stocks are particularly risky. Banking, in particular, is a highly leveraged, extremely competitive, and challenging business. A major European bank recently announced the goal of achieving a 20% return on equity (ROE) within several years. Unfortunately, ROE is highly dependent on absolute yields, yield spreads, maintaining adequate loan loss reserves, and the amount of leverage used. What is the bank’s management to do if it cannot readily get to 20%? Leverage up? Hold riskier assets? Ignore the risk of loss? In some ways, for a major financial institution even to have a ROE goal is to court disaster.

    17. Having clients with a long-term orientation is crucial. Nothing else is as important to the success of an investment firm.

    18. When a government official says a problem has been “contained,” pay no attention.

    19. The government – the ultimate short-term-oriented player – cannot withstand much pain in the economy or the financial markets. Bailouts and rescues are likely to occur, though not with sufficient predictability for investors to comfortably take advantage. The government will take enormous risks in such interventions, especially if the expenses can be conveniently deferred to the future. Some of the price-tag is in the form of backstops and guarantees, whose cost is almost impossible to determine.

    20. Almost no one will accept responsibility for his or her role in precipitating a crisis: not leveraged speculators, not willfully blind leaders of financial institutions, and certainly not regulators, government officials, ratings agencies or politicians.

    Below, we itemize some of the quite different lessons investors seem to have learned as of late 2009 – false lessons, we believe. To not only learn but also effectively implement investment lessons requires a disciplined, often contrary, and long-term-oriented investment approach. It requires a resolute focus on risk aversion rather than maximizing immediate returns, as well as an understanding of history, a sense of financial market cycles, and, at times, extraordinary patience.

    False Lessons

    1. There are no long-term lessons – ever.

    2. Bad things happen, but really bad things do not. Do buy the dips, especially the lowest quality securities when they come under pressure, because declines will quickly be reversed.

    3. There is no amount of bad news that the markets cannot see past.

    4. If you’ve just stared into the abyss, quickly forget it: the lessons of history can only hold you back.

    5. Excess capacity in people, machines, or property will be quickly absorbed.

    6. Markets need not be in sync with one another. Simultaneously, the bond market can be priced for sustained tough times, the equity market for a strong recovery, and gold for high inflation. Such an apparent disconnect is indefinitely sustainable.

    7. In a crisis, stocks of financial companies are great investments, because the tide is bound to turn. Massive losses on bad loans and soured investments are irrelevant to value; improving trends and future prospects are what matter, regardless of whether profits will have to be used to cover loan losses and equity shortfalls for years to come.

    8. The government can reasonably rely on debt ratings when it forms programs to lend money to buyers of otherwise unattractive debt instruments.

    9. The government can indefinitely control both short-term and long-term interest rates.

    10. The government can always rescue the markets or interfere with contract law whenever it deems convenient with little or no apparent cost. (Investors believe this now and, worse still, the government believes it as well. We are probably doomed to a lasting legacy of government tampering with financial markets and the economy, which is likely to create the mother of all moral hazards. The government is blissfully unaware of the wisdom of Friedrich Hayek: “The curious task of economics is to demonstrate to men how little they really know about what they imagine they can design.”)

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • The new poverty

    By Claudia Rowe, Equal Voice>

    Tinsa Hall.jpgFor much of her adult life, Tinsa Hall felt like she had it made, at least relative to where she’d been. She lived in a six-bedroom home on a wide, tree-lined street in a solidly middle-class neighborhood. Her husband fixed computers for a living. They had three healthy children, and Hall, who’d had some difficulty with her own academic career, attended every school board meeting she could, vowing that her kids would get a better start in life than she. Until last year, that appeared to be the case.

    But things have changed. Hall, 36, now lives in a squat, dark rental on the other side of town, where the sidewalk is jagged and the streets are pocked with holes. Her grand old home was gutted by fire last spring, and her marriage was in tatters months before that. She supports her family on $19,080 a year – poverty-level wages, according to the federal government – earned training local youth in alternatives to violence. Often, the job keeps her late into the evening, meaning that her teenage son and two daughters are on their own for dinner.

    Hall, however, is glad to have the work. Unemployment in her home state, Mississippi, is over 14 percent for African Americans, and with no college degree, she sees little opportunity to earn more. Rent eats up a third of her monthly income, and after utility bills, food, her car payment and gas, there is nothing left to save. “I feel like I’m starting all over again,” she said.

    Though the split with her husband touched off Hall’s economic plunge, the broad outlines of her financial crisis are now shared by millions – more each month as figures tracking home foreclosures, food stamp use and unemployment continue to hover at rates not seen since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

    Since 2008, about 44 percent of American families have experienced a job loss, reduction in hours or pay cut. Nearly 15 million adults are currently unemployed, and even without the most recent data from 2009, 14 million children, like Hall’s, were growing up in poverty. Rather than being publicly labeled as “reduced-lunch kids” in front of their friends, many prefer to leave school hungry.

    “Simply put, poverty is not good for the economy,” said John S. Irons, research and policy director at the Economic Policy Institute. When children grow up poor, they have higher drop-out rates, less education overall and vastly diminished job prospects. Some economists estimate that childhood poverty costs Americans about $500 billion per year in lost productivity and increased spending on health care and criminal justice.

    Hall may not have those numbers at her fingertips, but she is well aware of the overall trend. As president of the Greenville High School Parent Teacher Association and a member of the statewide PTA board, she routinely lobbies for children in the all-black Greenville public schools when officials might prefer to treat them as percentiles. Proudly, she displays her son’s and daughters’ academic trophies.

    Now she wonders whether any of it will matter. “You got kids who are coming out of college with degrees and can’t find a job, so college – for what?” she said, nervously rubbing her hands up and down her legs.

    Indeed, in March 2010, there were 2.3 million unemployed college graduates, almost triple the number looking for work three years ago.

    Although it is no secret that family wealth shapes opportunity – financing an education, say, or startup costs for a new business – less known is the fact that 13 percent of white households had zero net worth in 2004. More than 29 percent of black households were in that category.

    Despite projections about a slow but steady economic turnaround, economists say this recession will leave deep scars beneath the surface – especially for those who were already struggling. Irons, of the Economic Policy Institute, believes crushed education and employment opportunities will affect “the future prospects of all family members – including children – and will have consequences for years to come.”

    Yet the American Dream is built on the concept of upward mobility, the notion that families can leave poverty behind if they simply work hard enough. The corresponding belief – that the poor are poor due to their own bad choices – resounds through our society. Yet research showing that 45 percent of children who grow up in poverty remain poor as adults suggests this may be myth more than reality.

    “When you have high inequality combined with low mobility then you have a country that is not the America that we think of, a country of opportunity,” said Heidi Shierholz, an economist who specializes in policy affecting low-wage workers. “That’s not the American promise.”

    Even in good times, the ability to transcend class depends on a complex constellation of factors – the right education, job opportunities, role models and, not least, a child’s aspirations – all of them potentially stunted by economic tremors like those of the past two years. As of last fall, one in seven mortgages was delinquent, and by Christmas foreclosure notices had gone out to nearly 3 million people. Some economists predict that another 5 million families could lose their homes this year.

    Those are not only homeowners who have hit rock bottom. One out of every three families with children are getting by on less than $44,000 a year, which the federal government considers “low income.” Some 29 million kids fall into that category.

    One of them is Alexis Walker, 17, who lives in Long Beach, Calif., with her mother, older sister and 5-year-old nephew. Each day at 2 a.m., Ursula Walker leaves for her $20-an-hour job as a mail sorter. She never knows how much the postal service will have her work in a day – three hours, four, eight? – which means Ursula is never sure how much she’ll earn. All she knows is that overtime has vanished during the last year and her regular hours keep dwindling. To help, Alexis buys school clothes with a community center stipend.

    “I don’t know what’s in between barely surviving and middle-income, but we’re there,” Alexis said. “People like us, we get overlooked a lot.”


    Claudia Rowe is long time social issues journalist and now works for the Marguerite Casey Foundation. She is a former reporter at the Seattle Post-Intelligencer and frequent contributor to The New York Times. This piece is part of a series on Equal Voices that will examine poverty and economic policy in our country.

    PHOTO: Tinsa Hall of Greenville, Mississippi: Getting by on $19,080 a year, “There’s nothing left to save.”(By Mike Kane)

  • Vejam as gatas do Salão de Pequim 2010

    Imagens das modelos do evento

    Demorou, mas chegaram! Após as exibições dos supercarros, modelos copiados semelhantes às marcas famosas e outras curiosidades para o mercado automotivo, chegou a hora de mostrar o outro lado do Salão do Automóvel de Pequim 2010, que são as moças, claro!

    O que seria de um evento de automóveis sem as belas garotas para nos “ajudar” a visualizar os veículos e deixar as fotos dos carros mais “carismáticas” com seus sorrisos.

    Confiram então a galeria de imagens logo após o link, as moças desse ano ficaram bem legais, e sofreram um pouco nesse evento por ter que aguentar tantas horas se exibindo junto com os modelos copiados baseados em outros carros, confiram.

    Imagens das modelos do evento
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    Via | Carscoop


  • Apparently NFL Pre-Draft Questions Include: Is Your Mother a Whore?

    "No, my mom's not a prostitute.  Thanks for asking though."

    Wow. The Dolphins sure know how to charm a prospect.

    Hey NFL GM’s – Please learn from the Miami Dolphins’ mistake. Keep the pre-draft questions tasteful. Apparently during a pre-draft interview, Dolphins’ GM Jeff Ireland asked Oklahoma State blue-chip receiver Dez Bryant if his mom (who accompanied Bryant on the visit) was a prostitute.

    This prompted the hilarious out-of-context quote by Bryant to Yahoo! Sports, “No, my mom is not a prostitute.”

    I think they probably followed up this question by keying Bryant’s car and banging his sister. Hard to believe they didn’t make the playoffs last year with front-office tactics like this.

    See the hilarious story here at ESPN DFW.

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    3. 100 Modern Classics to See before You Die

  • WaveSecure Mobile Security

    Not just anti-theft, WaveSecure Mobile Security is a security app that protects your phone, data & privacy in the event of loss. Track SIM changes, lock, backup, wipe & restore data. Find your lost phone via a secure site. Change log: http://bit.ly/3NQ1TQ

    Price: Free, $19.90/annual

    AndroidTapp.com Android App Review:

    Pros & Cons

    Pros

    • Remote functions such as Lock, Locate, and Wipe
    • Backup for Contacts, SMS, and call logs
    • Media uploads
    • Uninstall protection

    Cons

    • $19.90 a year

    Features:

    This app has already saved my butt several times. I am the person who puts their phone somewhere and forgets. Now I can hop online and see exactly where it is. I’ve also needed to reset my phone and now I can restore my phone from the computer. To think that all of this comes with one app, that’s awesome!

    With WaveSecure, there is a yearly charge of $19.90. But you get so many things that it’s more than worth it. You can set it for daily scheduled backups of your SMS, contacts, and call logs. It does it in a smart way since it will only do this while it’s charging so it won’t kill your battery while you’re driving home. With the newest version, you can now backup your media as well, so those pictures from St. Patty’s Day or your favorite ringtones won’t be lost forever. When a new system update comes up, it might format your phone. No worries… just reinstall WaveSecure and in 3 clicks you can restore all of your lost info. Did you leave your phone at the bar and you know it’s gone? Now it might not be! You can log on to www.wavesecure.com, lock down your phone, wipe all of your personal information from the phone, and then find exactly where it is! And if someone tries to change the SIM card it tells you the number and locks the phone automatically.

    Video: WaveSecure Mobile Security

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8aoAL3jBKtc

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jeHt59qEJiw

    WaveSecure Boot
    WaveSecure Login
    WaveSecure Home Screen

    Usefulness:

    Everyone brings their phone with them as though it was their first born. Everyone is bound to leave their phone somewhere at one point or another. Everyone should have a program that backs all of their information up and lets you find where you left your poor child… I mean phone. That’s exactly what WaveSecure is. Corporate and IT Managers don’t have an excuse not to go Android with and app like this capable of protecting company data.

    Ease of Use:

    The interface for WaveSecure really couldn’t be easier. The hardest part about this app is remembering your PIN. Even the web interface is easy.

    Frequently Used:

    After your initial setup and configuration, one of the most beautiful aspects of WaveSecure is that you don’t have to use it again… until your phone is missing.

    Interface:

    There are two different interfaces that need to be spoken about for WaveSecure; the app itself and the web interface. The app consists of 5 buttons; Backup, Upload Media, Restore, Lock Down Phone, and Wipe Now! They do exactly what they say. You really can’t get easier then that.

    The web interface isn’t that much more complicated consisting of 10 buttons; Lock, Track, Location, Backup, Wipeout, Restore, Contacts, SMS, Call Logs, and Media. The only one that seems to be confusing is Track. It doesn’t track the phones location (that’s what Location does) but it tracks what’s going on with the phone (turned off, switched SIM, etc.).

    AndroidTapp.com Rating

    AndroidTapp.com Rating!AndroidTapp.com Rating!AndroidTapp.com Rating!AndroidTapp.com Rating!AndroidTapp.com Rating! (4.8 out of 5)

    Should you Download WaveSecure Mobile Security? Yes! The only reason I don’t give WaveSecure a 5/5 is because of the $19.90 a year charge.  But when you think about it, for what it does, is a $1.66 a month that much?

    Algadon Free Online RPG. Fully Mobile Friendly.

  • The Center of Apple’s Universe [Apple]

    Worldwide Developers Conference 2010 makes it more clear than ever what Apple’s real priorities are: iPhone and iPad. Mac OS X is an also ran. More »







  • Powerful LED flash for cell phones

    OSLUX now with UX:3 chip technology

    The new OSLUX from OSRAM Opto Semiconductors is brighter and smaller than ever before and provides extremely uniform light thanks to a chip fabricated in state-of-the-art UX:3 technology. Together with an optimized lens it not only ensures that the LED is 50 percent brighter than the predecessor model but also that the light is much more evenly distributed and can therefore illuminate a wide area.

    The new OSLUX has an area of 3.9 mm² and a height of only 2.5 mm (previously 3 mm) but is 50 lx brighter. This takes its output to an impressive 150 lx. The light is uniformly distributed in the flash; the usual round spot in the center is completely absent. “Our OSLUX is therefore perfect for the fast-growing design-based smartphone and cell phone segment”, said Gunnar Klick, Marketing Manager Consumer at OSRAM Opto Semiconductors. “Even extremely thin phones can now be equipped with a powerful LED flash so they can deliver pictures of superb quality”.

    The LED is available in two versions with different lenses. These are already integrated in the LED and are matched to the beam characteristics of the top-emitting UX:3 chips. The subject of the picture is illuminated in a uniform rectangular pattern. The distribution of the light depends on the lens used: 40% or 20% of the center brightness is possible in the corners. At a distance of one meter the LED flash uniformly illuminates a diagonal of 90 cm, which is sufficient to produce razor-sharp pictures even in low light conditions.

    The impressive brightness is the result of new UX:3 chip technology that makes the LED capable of handling high currents and gets even more light from the chip. What’s more, the light is more evenly distributed over the surface compared to previous chip technologies. The new OSLUX is therefore considerably more efficient at high currents than previous LEDs and offers impressive luminous efficacy in a small area.

    With the new OSLUX OSRAM’s LED portfolio for flash applications is even better tailored to the latest trends in which mobile slimline terminals require small powerful light sources. For users who want to supply their own lens packages there is the CERAMOS which has no lens.

    Press contact:
    Marion Reichl
    Headquarter, Europe

    Tel: +49 (0) 941 – 850 – 16 93
    Fax: +49 (0) 941 – 850 – 33 05
    Email: [email protected]

  • Deburring with brushes

    A common application is deburring cutting edges, because often after sawing sharp edges and burrs remain which have to be removed.

    When deburring manually, usually table countersinks or grinder benches with rotating wheel brushes are in use. Those brushes remove burrs reliable and easy or round them defined.

    When manufacturing tubes with fixed lengths in serial production, deburring machines are used for the treatment of the cutting edges. The tube is transported through a double sited deburring machine and touches with both ends the rotating roller brushes in the machine. Thereby the tube is turning on its own axis and enables the roller brushes to reach all burrs both at the inner and outer side of the tube.

    The type of the brush depends on the material of the work piece and the burr size which has to be removed. The size of the burr varies according to the thickness of the material and the sawing blade.
    Depending on the application crimped, knotted wires or wires in special constructions are used. The available qualities and sizes of the wires are manifold. Next to the common deburring brushes with steel wire, Lessmann produces brushes with special filaments like nylon or abrasive nylon.

    Since this deburring application is very intensive in material a high durability of the brush is necessary. Therefore Lessmann produces brushes in a high quality which ensure an excellent brushing result. A static and dynamic balancing guarantee a balanced run of the brush and a long lifetime.

  • Add New Products: Couples, Power Dividers, 3dB Hybrids

    Kete designs, manufactures 3 kinds of new products: couplers, power dividers, 3dB hybrids. They have good quality, stable performance with low price. The main features: low insertion loss, high power handling and high isolation etc.They are used to PHAS, PCS, CDMA, GSM, WCDMA Commnucations systems.

    For more information, welcome to visit our website www.ketemicro.com

  • The AirCapt® MP8 Multipoint Biological Monitoring System

    AirCapt® MP8 Multipoint Microbial Monitoring System
    enables remote-controlled simultaneous microbial air sampling of up to eight independent locations. Control of the system is achieved through BioManager or by any configured SCADA system. The slits in the BioCapt® Impactor Head are precision cut to ensure laminar flow, thus maximizing collection efficiencies for microbial particles of interest in accordance with ISO 14698-1. Biological efficiency is guaranteed by ensuring optimal impaction velocity also giving statistical control over false positive results. Each BioCapt Impactor Head is fully autoclavable and all sample air is exhausted outside of the cleanroom to prevent contamination of the cleanroom environment. The system can also be expanded from eight to sixteen sample locations by adding the optional MP8 to MP16 module

  • Lasiris™ Green PowerLine Laser

    Thermoelectrically cooled green powerline laser

    High power, high visibility, high contrast laser
    External focusing
    Uniform, non-Gaussian intensity distribution along the line
    ESD, over-temperature, and reverse-polarity protection

    StockerYale’s Lasiris™ Green PowerLine structured light laser offers a thermoelectric system and fan that maintains a constant laser diode temperature, resulting in better wavelength, power, and pointing stabilities. The Green PowerLine design makes focusing even easier with the focus adjusting screw located directly on the body of the laser.

    High Visibility, High Contrast Green Beam

    A green beam can provide better contrast on red hot metal or wood. Another advantage is that a green beam is more visible to the human eye than red, there by making the relative eye response to the green much higher. For the same power, a green beam (532nm) will be better perceived by the human eye than a red beam (635 nm).

    Vision 2009
    New Trade Fair Centre Stuttgart
    November 3 – 5
    Stuttgart, Germany
    Booth #4C13