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  • Update to HTC Legend Brings Missing Apps Back

    We reported earlier this week that HTC Desire customers were frustrated after finding many popular apps were not available to them in the Android Market.  Apparently, Legend owners have the same gripe.  For the Desire, it was quickly found that the reason behind this was that Google had yet to sign off on the ROM. What about the Legend?

    HTC’s support page is now indicating that a firmware update is available for the Desire, but it strangely refers to the camera.  Engadget Mobile believes this is the OTA firmware you are looking for.  Keep an eye on your phone for the notification of an OTA update.  Have you already received this download?  Did it help?

    Might We Suggest…

    • HTC Legend & Desire Promptly Rooted
      Two of the latest HTC handsets, the Desire and Legend have been promptly rooted. Paul of Modaco forums is at it again, doing his part to provide full access to Android phones. As evidenced in the ph…


  • Final Arguments May Finally End In Bysiewicz AG Lawsuit; Republicans Claim Her ‘Fear And Speculation’ Aren’t Enough

    Final arguments will continue — and probably will end — Thursday afternoon in the trial in Secretary of the State Susan Bysiewicz’s lawsuit to be declared eligible to run for state attorney general.

    The four hours of final arguments made Tuesday in the week-old trial are already among the longest in Connecticut history for a civil case, experts say.

    The final area of argument, scheduled Thursday at 2 p.m., is about whether Bysiewicz has established a need for Judge Michael Sheldon to even make a ruling about her eligibility. This question — about the question of what lawyers call the “ripeness” of the issue for a ruling — has been mentioned on and off for weeks. But Thursday will bring it to the forefront.

    In search of a ruling to validate her candidacy, Bysiewicz has sued her own office and the Democratic Party that she wants to nominate her for attorney general at its May 21-22 convention.  But now the state Republican Party, which has intervened in the case to challenge her legal qualifications, will argue that with the convention still a month off the whole question is speculative.

    They say that she has not been denied the right to get on the ballot, and thus she has not been aggrieved legally — and, by extention from that, they say that has no real issue to sue over.
     
    “Fear and speculation do not equate to jurisdiction,” lawyer Eliot Gersten said in a memorandum filed in advance of Thursday’s arguments.  He wrote that Bysiewiecz, the plaintiff, has “failed to present any evidence from any member of the Democratic Party that there was a question or uncertainty as to her legal right to be a candidate for Attorney General.”

    He added: “Indeed, the plaintiff offered no evidence, other than her baseless ‘fears,’ that someone, anyone, with the authority to do so, acted or even intended to act to stop her from having her name placed on the ballot in the state Democratic Convention.  Indeed, the plaintiff’s own trial testimony supports an opposite conclusion. If there is any doubt, it resides as a matter of her concern within her mind.”

    “Unfortunately, the plaintiff’s fear or speculation is not sufficient to invoke the legal remedy of a declaratory judgment,” Gersten wrote.

    Bysiewicz’s lawyers have made assertions to the contrary — that the threat to her ability to run is very real — and they are expected to that again in court Thursday.  

  • EverGreen Considers Funding Options For China Plant Expansion

    EverGreen Solar, the Marlboro, Mass.-based maker of silicon wafers for solar panels, raised $165 million in convertible secured senior notes this week. The company says it plans to use some of the cash to finance the expansion of its new manufacturing plant in Wuhan, China.

    Plans are to expand capacity over the next two years to 500 megawatts by 2012.  EverGreen is in talks with Chinese authorities to secure public funding to support the expansion, a company official tells us. It costs about $50 million to put the initial 100 megawatts online. Chinese provincial authorities funded about 2/3  (about $33 million) of the construction costs.  EverGreen says it expects the government support to continue. ”We have a very strong working relationship with our Chinese partner and are committed to growing our capacity in China,” the EverGreen official explains.

    The company official tells G.E.R. that EverGreen and partner Jiawei are on track to begin commercial operation with a 100-megawatt in production capacity in July.

    EverGreen is not alone in relocating to cheaper manufacturing locales. BP, just three years after expanding its PV plant in Maryland, opted to shut it down and relocate production to India and China. It said that given the falling price of PV, it didn’t make any sense to operate a manufacturing plant in the U.S.

    At a recent investor conference EverGreen said relocating to China would cut production costs by more than half to about $1 / watt by 2012, from about $2 / watt currently.

    EverGreen is releasing its first quarter earnings in a couple of weeks. The company says it expects to post $78.5 million in Q1 revenues. Last Quarter the company posted a $21.1 million loss on revenues of $74.5 million.

    Image: EverGreen Solar

  • There’s Only One Headline That Will Slam This Market, And We Didn’t Get It Today

    Christie's Earth Day Auction

    The market’s early swoon is quickly disappearing.

    For one thing, Europe is nearing supper time, which means that all of the Greek and Spanish and Portugal worries can be put off for another day. And when they’re not worrying about Greece, there’s no reason we need to be.

    (Actually, the US market has never worried much about Greece.)

    Meanwhile, headline risk for regulatory reform seems to be gone. Obama’s speech was a real softball, and didn’t suggest that anything violent would be done in terms of reforming the banking sector. This is a relief.

    In the end, we think there might only be one headline that would seriously spook the market. It has the word “tightening” in it.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Help Steve Jobs Strike Back [PhotoshopContest]

    Jobs is probably not psyched about what went down this week. It’s time for payback, sweet, vengeful payback. More »







  • Dell’s product roadmap hits the internet – Pt. 3

    You’ve now seen all the phones (that we know of) that Dell plans to bring your way in the coming year, but that’s not all that Dell has to offer.  Below, we’ll give you a glimpse into Dell’s approach to tablets.  Both devices will be running Android OS, but will be different sizes, and the features could be different as well.  You’ll have to read on to find out more.

    Dell Streak

    Streak

    Also part of Dell’s line up is the Streak, an Android-bearing tablet which we have seen referred to as the Dell Mini 5 in recent weeks.  You’ll remember that while this device is slated as a tablet that it also bears the necessary equipment to make and receive calls on the mobile network (putting a 5-inch phone up to your ear though, that’s your choice).

    The spec sheet for the Streak claims Android Donut (1.6), though we hope it will come to market with a more appropriate variant or at least receive an update shortly after its release.  Some of the other specs include a 5-inch WVGA capacitive touchscreen, both rear (5MP) and front-facing (VGA) cameras, 512MB ROM, 256MB SDRAM, 2GB microSD (non-user accessible) memory for system and app use, along with a user accessible microSD slot which looks to be capable of up to 32GB or memory.  Additionally, though the spec sheet suggests Android 1.6, Engadget believes that it will be updated to 2.1 by September, with a vague launch date of “this summer.”

    For more information about the Streak, go here.

    Dell Looking Glass

    Looking Glass

    And finally, the last piece of the puzzle.  If you’re name is Alice, there’s a good chance this device was made specifically for you.  Just 2-inches bigger than the Streak, the Looking Glass weighs in at 7 inches of tablet love.  Unlike its brother though, it should have Android 2.1 from the get-go.  The device comes with a Tegra 2 processor, 7-inch (presumably capacitive touch) WVGA touchscreen with 800×480 resolution, 4GB DDR2 SDRAM and 4GB of NAND flash memory.  There is also room for an SD card with capacity to 32GB.

    The Looking Glass is slated for “PC Quality Web, Movies, & Gaming, Rich graphics with Flash and multitasking, Powerful performance with low power consumption [and its] Affordable.”  According to Engadget, if you really like big phones, you’re welcome to hold up this 7 inch “bad boy” to your ear as well (though we can’t guarantee people won’t point and laugh – us included).  

    For more information about the Looking Glass, go here.

    Thanks for joining us along for the ride.  If you’re a fan of Dell and a fan of wireless gadgetry, it looks like there’s much in store for you over the coming year.  Personally, I’m a fan of the Thunder and wouldn’t mind giving the Lightning a run for its money as well.  This officially ends the three-part series, and since I haven’t asked it before, who the heck has any comments about all this??!!  Sound off below!

    Via Engadget

    For more on Dell’s 2010 product roadmap:


  • Quinn backs off iTunes tax

    Posted by Monique Garcia at 12:25 p.m.

    Gov. Pat Quinn is backing off a proposal to tax music and video downloads in an effort to plug the state’s massive budget hole, saying he still believes raising the income tax is the best way to generate money for the state.



    Quinn floated the idea of taxing downloads from online services such as iTunes in a meeting with legislative leaders earlier this week, but the proposal received a cold reception in Springfield. Today, Quinn said that he was simply offering suggestions on ways to solve the state’s budget crisis and does not support the plan, which would have generated $5 million to $10 million a year.



    “We had a meeting with the legislative leaders the other day, we made a list of all the possible things that could happen,” Quinn said. “I didn’t advocate that. I’m not interested in doing that, frankly.”



    Instead, Quinn is pushing to raise the state income tax from 3 percent to 4 percent — a 33 percent increase in the tax rate — though lawmakers have been skeptical of that idea as they prepare to face voters in the November election. Quinn has attempted to paint the tax increase as necessary to prevent massive cuts to education, and thousands rallied for his cause at the state Capitol on Wednesday.



    “I’ve proposed a 1 percent surcharge for education off the income tax,” Quinn said. “That’s what I’m for. I think it should be very clear that we should focus on that because that’s where you can get significant resources to save our schools from radical cuts.”

  • Have a T-Mobile Nexus One? You’re on your own for further 3G fixes

    Google Nexus One

    Good news, for those of you with the T-Mobile version of the Google Nexus One: Google’s found the problem with spotty 3G coverage. And the problem is … you. In an update this week in the Google help forums, Googler Ry Guy drops a bit of a bombshell (and dispels a recent rumor about an over-the-air update that might or might not be on the way):

    Hey guys,

    I’ve seen some recent speculation on this thread about an OTA to improve 3G connectivity and I want to give you an update on the situation.

    While we are continuing to monitor user feedback regarding the 3G performance on the Nexus One, we are no longer investigating further engineering improvements at this time.

    If you are still experiencing 3G issues, we recommend that you try changing your location or even the orientation of your phone, as this may help in areas with weaker coverage.

    -Ry Guy

    So, it looks like it’s not something that could be fixed by another software update. If anybody has some creative tinfoil-antenna fixes, be sure to let us know. [Google] Thanks, everybody, for sending this in.

  • SEC-Goldman CDO Would Have Performed Poorly Without Paulson

    Investors who bought the security the SEC is suing Goldman Sachs over might not have been much better off even if hedge fund manager John Paulson hadn’t influenced the collateral pool he hoped to short. This statement sounds insane, but it’s supported by a new report from CNBC. According to experts that contacted CNBC, collateral manager ACA independently chose mortgage securities to make up the deal’s pool of assets that performed horribly. This doesn’t help the SEC’s case.

    CNBC reports:

    ACA actually threw out 68 of the 123 securities suggested by Paulson. Those 68 securities had higher delinquency rates than the remaining ones, according to documents reviewed by CNBC. However, those documents show that ACA added 14 securities with lower credit ratings than the overall portfolio.

    Documents also show that ACA added other securities with a higher percentage of mortgages from California and interest-only loans–two favorites of the shorts because they were perceived as having a higher chance of failure.

    The apparent reason for adding these securities was that they had lower delinquency percentages overall. But they also has the very characteristics that Paulson and other shorts at the time believed would lead to higher delinquencies in the future.

    This is a striking point. It implies that, even if ACA had chosen the entire pool with no input whatsoever from Paulson, the deal wouldn’t necessarily have performed better. The SEC’s case assumes that Paulson’s involvement had an adverse effect on the performance of the deal. After all, if the deal had made investors a lot of money, no one would be angry about his influence.

    But this report suggests that ACA may have quite effectively created an equally awful deal all by itself, even without any “help” from Paulson. The reality is that, in early 2007, nearly all subprime mortgage-backed securities were trading at prices higher than they would be a few years later. ACA suffered from holding the prevailing view that the housing market would be just fine. Paulson and some others bears were in a small minority, even then. Given that fact, the hedge fund manager’s involvement seems less significant. This realization could cast further doubt on whether his involvement in selecting collateral was material after all.





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  • Docs.com: The surest sign yet of Microsoft’s defeat

    By Joe Wilcox, Betanews

    Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg made some amazing announcements yesterday, during the f8 conference. Docs.com wasn’t one of them.

    “You can discover, create, and share Microsoft Office documents with your Facebook friends,” according to the service’s Website. What Docs.com really does more is provide Microsoft a lifeline, as the company seeks to maintain the relevance of its Office-Windows-Windows Server applications stack before the rising mobile device-to-cloud applications/services stack. Docs.com is a futile, short-sighted enterprise that acknowledges Microsoft has already lost the new century’s platform wars.

    Facebook: Windows in the Clouds

    For years, I’ve likened Facebook to Windows, blogging in July 2007 that: “Facebook has the potential to become a kind of operating system in the clouds that developers extend and plug into.” At the time, Facebook had 30 million users; the number is closer to 500 million today. In September 2007, I explained further: “Facebook is like Microsoft, only the social networking company’s platform is built on the Internet.”

    More from the September 2007 post:

    Windows is widely regarded as a platform, but that’s a misnomer. The PC is the platform. Windows is nothing without the PC. Windows is a platform, but secondary to the PC platform. Similarly, the Web is a platform (and, yes, arguably secondary to hundreds of thousands of servers). Web 2.0 platform companies like Google operate on the Internet platform.

    But Facebook is different from Google. Facebook is not a Web 2.0 operation; rather it’s more like Desktop 1.0 than Web 2.0. Since May [2007], when Facebook opened up to outside developers, the service increasingly has morphed into an Internet operating system. Like Windows, Facebook is an enclosed platform, and one where people can install applications, post and share digital content and communicate with friends, families or others in ways they might do with Windows on PCs.

    Facebook is also a lot more like Microsoft than it resembles Google, because it’s so-called openness is more of a one-way street. Information goes in, but it doesn’t easily come out. Developers write applications for the one platform, which is different from, say, tapping into Google APIs (application programming interfaces) for use elsewhere. Facebook and Google both take platform approaches, but Facebook’s way is more like Windows than Web 2.0.

    I blogged in December 2009:

    Facebook’s cloud OS, with zillions of applications and more than 350 million subscribers, is now a vortex sucking in seemingly all Internet traffic. Many people who posted to blogs and photo sharing sites are moving their personal information and content to Facebook — like they did Windows a computing generation ago. Facebook has huge customer lock-in potential, because the data is so much more personal than that put into Office and Windows a decade ago.

    Facebook ushers in Web 4.0

    Yesterday, everything changed. Zuckerburg paraded like a young Bill Gates (only with better oration and presence). Facebook’s founder is cocky, arrogant, ruthless and visionary. He outlined a development strategy that would intertwine Facebook into the World Wide Web. It’s brilliant and frightening. Zuckerburg is making the leap from Desktop 1.0 to Web 4.0 — perhaps Platform 3.0 (Mainframe and PC being Nos 1 and 2). Nothing will be the same, if Facebook succeeds — and the company has momentum that’s shock waves should leave Google quaking in their wake.

    According to IDC, there were 1.6 billion Internet users in 2009, with the number expected to reach 2.2 billion by 2013. Facebook will soon have 500 million active subscribers, or — assuming there are no duplicates (unlikely) — nearly one-third the whole population of Internet users. Facebook’s growth far exceeds that of Internet users. In less than three years, the number of Facebook users climbed from 30 million to nearly 500 million. By the way, that 500 million is about half the entire PC install base; many of those Facebook users access the service by mobile device, a market where Microsoft dropped the ball in the end zone.

    Facebook has enormous momentum. Microsoft is aligning its old applications stack with the new one, trying to keep its aging platform on life support just a little longer. Death is inevitable. Deal with it. Yesterday I tweeted: “Docs.com: Old content stack (Office) meets the new one (Facebook). Dunno. There are reasons nature abhors interbreeding of species.” That Microsoft’s FUSE Labs developed Docs.com at all is admission there is a new platform in town.

    Docs.com represents the old content model. Microsoft has good ideas about collaboration, but wrongly binds them to Office. As I asserted in January: “Office is obsolete, or soon will be.” Same can be said about Google Docs. The productivity suite model focuses on how people create content, when along the mobile device-to-cloud applications/services stack the priority is what and where. By aligning Docs.com with Facebook, Microsoft is at least partly dealing with the what and where. But the what still puts too much emphasis on how — meaning productivity suite. Are hundreds of millions of Facebook subscribers creating Word documents or Excel spreadsheets? Do they need to? No and no. They’re sharing photos, videos and messages — none of which requires Office or Docs.com to create. By contrast, Facebook’s Social plugins put the emphasize on the what people create, where they create it and with whom they share it.

    The Facebook in the Mirror

    Things could have been different. Facebook is doing with platforms what Microsoft should have been able to with its applications stack — become part of the very fabric of the Web platform. More startling, chunks of Facebook’s Open Graph vision come from Microsoft’s own HailStorm playbook, such as the single-sign-on concept. Microsoft pitched single-sign-on with Passport a decade ago.

    Facebook also is looking to tie quantifiable information to real user identities, something neither Google nor Microsoft dared to do but were accused of trying. Advertising potential is simply staggering should Facebook successfully leap all the privacy hurdles. Zuckerburg is just arrogant and aggressive enough to try and succeed.

    Docs.com demonstrates much about what is wrong with Microsoft today. The company focuses too much on preserving existing revenue streams when creating newer ones should be the priority. Microsoft’s self-preservation approach compels its developers to bind new technologies to Office or Windows, when they should be set free to embrace standards and help establish others. Microsoft is a follower in a market it once lead.

    Three companies are now positioning for computing dominance — Apple, Facebook and Google. All have a stake in the mobile-to-device applications/services stack. Adobe, IBM, Microsoft, Oracle and Sun were the major players during the desktop-to-server stack’s heyday. Sun declined and Oracle acquired it. Adobe is in early stages of what I predict will later be a suddenly rapid decline. IBM, Microsoft and Oracle are locked in the enterprise, where their computing and informational relevance will slowly decline over the coming decade.

    That Facebook’s Open Graph and other f8 announcements come ahead of Windows Live Wave 4 is foreshadowing. You tell me what Microsoft can launch that will trump what Facebook announced yesterday. Microsoft claims on order of 400 million Live users, a number that seemingly rivals Facebook. But Microsoft subscribers are scattered among disparate Web services. Facebook users are consolidated within a single platform framework, like Windows.

    A few years back, I stood in the pharmacy line behind an old geezer; he complained about buying medicines for his wife. The clerk joked: “Well, you married her for better or worse.” He snarked: “I’ve had the better, now I’ve got the worse!” Microsoft has the worse now, too. Perhaps it’s time for the company to divorce Office and Windows. Sure Microsoft depends on their income, but that won’t last forever.

    Copyright Betanews, Inc. 2010



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  • Ford Start Concept busts out of Beijing

    Filed under: , , , ,

    Ford Start Concept – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Ford has jumped into the burgeoning urban car segment with both feet at the Beijing Motor Show with the Start concept. The design study was developed to look at ways of building a smaller, more affordable car using fewer raw materials. The structure is a combination of aluminum and high strength steels to keep weight down without sacrificing safety, while the body panels are made from recyclable composites that already have the color molded in, eliminating the need to paint.

    The Start’s styling is clean and simple, but not as interesting as the “Kinetic” design of cars like the all-new 2011 Focus. The simpler shape is surely less expensive to manufacture than Ford’s current crop of vehicles and that simplification strategy extends to the interior where the Start introduces MyFord Mobile. This MyFord iteration relies on smartphones to provide much of the functionality provided by MyFord Touch without having to install all the extra hardware.

    Ford emphasizes that, with one exception, the Start is purely a design study with no production plans for the time being. However, the Start’s powertrain – Ford’s newest EcoBoost engine – is sure to see production. In the past, Ford officials have hinted at a smaller three-cylinder Ecoboost, and this 1.0-liter turbocharged and direct-injected engine in the Start is what will be power future small Fords. The automaker isn’t giving specific numbers yet but says that the 1.0-liter will have output similar to a normally aspirated 1.6-liter inline-four. That should put it at approximately 105-110 horsepower. A small car with this engine should be able to get CO2 emissions under 100 grams per kilometer something reserved for diesel and hybrid vehicles up to now. All the details, including a thorough breakdown of the styling and new drivetrain, is available in the press release after the jump.

    [Source: Ford]

    Continue reading Ford Start Concept busts out of Beijing

    Ford Start Concept busts out of Beijing originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 22 Apr 2010 12:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Gabourey Sidibe “SNL” Promo With Andy Samberg!

    It’s here: Gabourey Sidibe’s making her Saturday Night Live hosting debut this weekend, and fans can’t wait for the sure-to-be side-splitting sketches we’re in store for as the Oscar-nominated Precious star brings her vivacious zest for life to the small screen.

    Check Gabby’s SNL Promo with series regular Andy Samberg. Who’s watching?


  • Market Update: Stocks Down On Regulation And Greece Default Worries (SBUX, SNDK, XHB, NOK, BAX, XBI)

    starbucks coffee

    President Barack Obama just gave a speech on financial regulation, and the markets continue to adjust to what they heard. The tyranny of Greece still reigns on markets, as the country’s debt yields continue to spiral out of control after the Moody’s downgrade.

    • DOW: Down 75 points, or 0.68%
    • S&P 500: Down 8.84 points, or 0.74%
    • NASDAQ: Down 13.08 points, or 0.52%

    Update: Markets already coming back.

    Today’s Big Movers

    • Sandisk up 10.56%, on upgraded ratings
    • Starbucks up 5.91%, on positive earnings results
    • Home builders ETF up 1.93%, on a positive turn for the mortgage market
    • Nokia down 12.98%, on fears it is losing its competitive edge in the mobile market
    • Baxter down 14.33%, on health care reform fears
    • Biotech ETF down 1.65%, on industry reform fears

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Sony’s Qriocity Video On Demand Service Now Available


    Qriocity is a streaming video on demand service (e.g. no download) partially introduced by Sony earlier this year during CES, and was set to debut on 2010 Sony BRAVIA TV’s, Blu-ray players, and several home theater systems in February. The service wasn’t activated until yesterday for the aforementioned devices and the related website is now live. It’s significance is so strong that it is a main icon on the XMB and as a button on many 2010 Sony remote controls that belong to networked TV’s and Blu-ray players.

    Qriocity has hundreds of HD ($5.99) and SD ($3.99) movies initially available, with titles from 20th Century 20th Century Fox, Disney, Paramount Pictures, Walt Disney Pictures, The Weinstein Company, Lionsgate, Warner Brothers, Universal, MGM, and of course Sony Pictures. You can view on the Qriocity website which movie titles are available.

    According to several of my sources, the catalog will receive consistent, healthy updates to make it attractive to consumers. The interface was very quick, and is aesthetically pleasing – miles beyond what the traditional consumer is probably using with cable or satellite on-demand services. Every movie has a trailer.

    I’ve already watched a HD movie trailer on Qriocity, and with the wireless connection the TV was using (an EX series BRAVIA with the included UWA-BR100 Wi-Fi adapter on a 802.11g connection) the results were pretty good – somewhere around 720p-1080i. Qriocity judges your Internet connection and plays a bandwidth optimized version. With higher bandwidth connections (very easy in many markets), it could be that kind of solid 720p/1080i that leaves you satisfied. I would definitely love to see what the picture quality looks like in a 802.11n environment, or hardwired through ethernet.

    What’s also interesting is that the PlayStation Network Terms of Service was altered yesterday with specific mention of Qriocity, which basically reveals that Qriocity is also coming to the PS3 (and possibly PSP):

    To access Sony Online Services, you must create an appropriate Sony Online Service account (either a PSN account or Qriocity account). Through Qriocity’s Video on Demand service (“VOD”), you may purchase and view content using selected BRAVIA televisions or Sony Blu-ray Disc players (“VOD Devices”). Through PSN, you may purchase content and services offered on either PSN or Qriocity, such as new levels for your favorite games, comics, movies, television shows or original programs. You may view your content using SCEA-authorized devices, including a PlayStation 3 computer entertainment system, PSP (PlayStation Portable) systems, personal computers and VOD Devices. You will also be able to participate in SCEA’s online community in PSN and PlayStation Home, (including chatting via voice and video with your friends) and play games online. Existing PSN accounts will not have to create a separate Qriocity account to enjoy the benefits of Qriocity. If you’ve created a Qriocity account, you may transition that account to a PSN account. Sony Online Services may not be available, or may not be supported, in some countries and some languages.

    How to enable Qriocity now –

    Connect your BRAVIA, Blu-ray Disc Player or home theater system to the Internet.

    Use your remote control to navigate to the Qriocity icon on the XMB (XrossMediaBar) and select ‘Link an Account’. Here you will find your device activation code needed. Go to the Qriocity website and sign into your account (you can use your PSN ID, or create a new account). Select your device and click the “Activate” button. Follow the instructions. It’s very easy, and after trading a few letters around I was watching a trailer quickly.

    * – If you already purchased a 2010 BRAVIA TV, Blu-ray Player or home theater system and the Qriocity service is not active, go to Settings > Network > Refresh Internet Content. Run the update, and then return to the XMB – several new Qriocity options should be available on the far right.

  • Is federalization of disasters misdirecting FEMA efforts?

    This article called “Federalizing Disasters Weakens FEMA–and Hurts Americans Hit by Catastrophes” appeared in a Heritage newsltr last week. We’ve worked with many state and local First Resonders past 10+ years .. and know first hand how budget cuts are whacking mitigation and preparedness big time. The full report is a bit long so only pasting in abstract but it’s an interesting read.

     

    Just curious what you guys think about all this. Is FEMA stretching itself too thin…?! And have you noticed the increased declarations impacting / hindering your local efforts?  j

    Abstract: The Federal Emergency Management Agency has been responding to almost any natural disaster around the country, be it a contained three-county flood, or a catastrophe of near-epic proportions like Hurricane Katrina. As a result, many states and localities have trimmed their own emergency-response budgets, often leaving them ill prepared to handle even rain- or snowstorms without federal assistance. This leaves FEMA stretched far too thin and ill prepared to respond to grand-scale catastrophes. The “federalization of disasters” misdirects vital resources, leaving localities, states, and the federal government in a lose-lose situation. FEMA policies must be overhauled to let localities handle smaller, localized disasters, and to allow FEMA to respond fully and effectively when it is truly needed. If the status quo continues, it will be a disaster for everyone.

     

    Full 13-Apr-2010 post on The Heritage Foundation site

  • Obama to Wall Street: reform now. Speech transcript

    THE WHITE HOUSE

    Office of the Press Secretary

    _______________________________________________________________________________________________

    For Immediate Release April 22, 2010

    REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT

    ON WALL STREET REFORM

    Cooper Union

    New York, New York

    11:50 A.M. EDT

    THE PRESIDENT: Thank you very much. Everybody, please have a seat. Thank you very much. Well, thank you. It is good to be back. (Applause.) It is good to be back in New York, it is good to be back in the Great Hall at Cooper Union. (Applause.)

    We’ve got some special guests here that I want to acknowledge. Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney is here in the house. (Applause.) Governor David Paterson is here. (Applause.) Attorney General Andrew Cuomo. (Applause.) State Comptroller Thomas DiNapoli is here. (Applause.) The Mayor of New York City, Michael Bloomberg. (Applause.) Dr. George Campbell, Jr., president of Cooper Union. (Applause.) And all the citywide elected officials who are here. Thank you very much for your attendance.

    It is wonderful to be back in Cooper Union, where generations of leaders and citizens have come to defend their ideas and contest their differences. It’s also good to be back in Lower Manhattan, a few blocks from Wall Street. (Laughter.) It really is good to be back, because Wall Street is the heart of our nation’s financial sector.

    Now, since I last spoke here two years ago, our country has been through a terrible trial. More than 8 million people have lost their jobs. Countless small businesses have had to shut their doors. Trillions of dollars in savings have been lost — forcing seniors to put off retirement, young people to postpone college, entrepreneurs to give up on the dream of starting a company. And as a nation we were forced to take unprecedented steps to rescue the financial system and the broader economy.

    And as a result of the decisions we made — some of which, let’s face it, were very unpopular — we are seeing hopeful signs. A little more than one year ago we were losing an average of 750,000 jobs each month. Today, America is adding jobs again. One year ago the economy was shrinking rapidly. Today the economy is growing. In fact, we’ve seen the fastest turnaround in growth in nearly three decades.

    But you’re here and I’m here because we’ve got more work to do. Until this progress is felt not just on Wall Street but on Main Street we cannot be satisfied. Until the millions of our neighbors who are looking for work can find a job, and wages are growing at a meaningful pace, we may be able to claim a technical recovery — but we will not have truly recovered. And even as we seek to revive this economy, it’s also incumbent on us to rebuild it stronger than before. We don’t want an economy that has the same weaknesses that led to this crisis. And that means addressing some of the underlying problems that led to this turmoil and devastation in the first place.

    Now, one of the most significant contributors to this recession was a financial crisis as dire as any we’ve known in generations — at least since the ’30s. And that crisis was born of a failure of responsibility — from Wall Street all the way to Washington — that brought down many of the world’s largest financial firms and nearly dragged our economy into a second Great Depression.

    It was that failure of responsibility that I spoke about when I came to New York more than two years ago — before the worst of the crisis had unfolded. It was back in 2007. And I take no satisfaction in noting that my comments then have largely been borne out by the events that followed. But I repeat what I said then because it is essential that we learn the lessons from this crisis so we don’t doom ourselves to repeat it. And make no mistake, that is exactly what will happen if we allow this moment to pass — and that’s an outcome that is unacceptable to me and it’s unacceptable to you, the American people. (Applause.)

    As I said on this stage two years ago, I believe in the power of the free market. I believe in a strong financial sector that helps people to raise capital and get loans and invest their savings. That’s part of what has made America what it is. But a free market was never meant to be a free license to take whatever you can get, however you can get it. That’s what happened too often in the years leading up to this crisis. Some — and let me be clear, not all — but some on Wall Street forgot that behind every dollar traded or leveraged there’s family looking to buy a house, or pay for an education, open a business, save for retirement. What happens on Wall Street has real consequences across the country, across our economy.

    I’ve spoken before about the need to build a new foundation for economic growth in the 21st century. And given the importance of the financial sector, Wall Street reform is an absolutely essential part of that foundation. Without it, our house will continue to sit on shifting sands, and our families, businesses, and the global economy will be vulnerable to future crises. That’s why I feel so strongly that we need to enact a set of updated, commonsense rules to ensure accountability on Wall Street and to protect consumers in our financial system. (Applause.)

    Now, here’s the good news: A comprehensive plan to achieve these reforms has already passed the House of Representatives. (Applause.) A Senate version is currently being debated, drawing on ideas from Democrats and Republicans. Both bills represent significant improvement on the flawed rules that we have in place today, despite the furious effort of industry lobbyists to shape this legislation to their special interests.

    And for those of you in the financial sector I’m sure that some of these lobbyists work for you and they’re doing what they are being paid to do. But I’m here today specifically — when I speak to the titans of industry here — because I want to urge you to join us, instead of fighting us in this effort. (Applause.) I’m here because I believe that these reforms are, in the end, not only in the best interest of our country, but in the best interest of the financial sector. And I’m here to explain what reform will look like, and why it matters.

    Now, first, the bill being considered in the Senate would create what we did not have before, and that is a way to protect the financial system and the broader economy and American taxpayers in the event that a large financial firm begins to fail. If there’s a Lehmans or an AIG, how can we respond in a way that doesn’t force taxpayers to pick up the tab or, alternatively, could bring down the whole system.

    In an ordinary local bank when it approaches insolvency, we’ve got a process, an orderly process through the FDIC, that ensures that depositors are protected, maintains confidence in the banking system, and it works. Customers and taxpayers are protected and owners and management lose their equity. But we don’t have that kind of process designed to contain the failure of a Lehman Brothers or any of the largest and most interconnected financial firms in our country.

    That’s why, when this crisis began, crucial decisions about what would happen to some of the world’s biggest companies — companies employing tens of thousands of people and holding hundreds of billions of dollars in assets — had to take place in hurried discussions in the middle of the night. And that’s why, to save the entire economy from an even worse catastrophe, we had to deploy taxpayer dollars. Now, much of that money has now been paid back and my administration has proposed a fee to be paid by large financial firms to recover all the money, every dime, because the American people should never have been put in that position in the first place. (Applause.)

    But this is why we need a system to shut these firms down with the least amount of collateral damage to innocent people and innocent businesses. And from the start, I’ve insisted that the financial industry, not taxpayers, shoulder the costs in the event that a large financial company should falter. The goal is to make certain that taxpayers are never again on the hook because a firm is deemed “too big to fail.”

    Now, there’s a legitimate debate taking place about how best to ensure taxpayers are held harmless in this process. And that’s a legitimate debate, and I encourage that debate. But what’s not legitimate is to suggest that somehow the legislation being proposed is going to encourage future taxpayer bailouts, as some have claimed. That makes for a good sound bite, but it’s not factually accurate. It is not true. (Applause.) In fact, the system as it stands — the system as it stands is what led to a series of massive, costly taxpayer bailouts. And it’s only with reform that we can avoid a similar outcome in the future. In other words, a vote for reform is a vote to put a stop to taxpayer-funded bailouts. That’s the truth. End of story. And nobody should be fooled in this debate. (Applause.)

    By the way, these changes have the added benefit of creating incentives within the industry to ensure that no one company can ever threaten to bring down the whole economy.

    To that end, the bill would also enact what’s known as the Volcker Rule — and there’s a tall guy sitting in the front row here, Paul Volcker — (applause) — who we named it after. And it does something very simple: It places some limits on the size of banks and the kinds of risks that banking institutions can take. This will not only safeguard our system against crises, this will also make our system stronger and more competitive by instilling confidence here at home and across the globe. Markets depend on that confidence. Part of what led to the turmoil of the past two years was that in the absence of clear rules and sound practices, people didn’t trust that our system was one in which it was safe to invest or lend. As we’ve seen, that harms all of us.

    So by enacting these reforms, we’ll help ensure that our financial system — and our economy — continues to be the envy of the world. That’s the first thing, making sure that we can wind down one firm if it gets into trouble without bringing the whole system down or forcing taxpayers to fund a bailout.

    Number two, reform would bring new transparency to many financial markets. As you know, part of what led to this crisis was firms like AIG and others who were making huge and risky bets, using derivatives and other complicated financial instruments, in ways that defied accountability, or even common sense. In fact, many practices were so opaque, so confusing, so complex that the people inside the firms didn’t understand them, much less those who were charged with overseeing them. They weren’t fully aware of the massive bets that were being placed. That’s what led Warren Buffett to describe derivatives that were bought and sold with little oversight as “financial weapons of mass destruction.” That’s what he called them. And that’s why reform will rein in excess and help ensure that these kinds of transactions take place in the light of day.

    Now, there’s been a great deal of concern about these changes. So I want to reiterate: There is a legitimate role for these financial instruments in our economy. They can help allay risk and spur investment. And there are a lot of companies that use these instruments to that legitimate end — they are managing exposure to fluctuating prices or currencies, fluctuating markets. For example, a business might hedge against rising oil prices by buying a financial product to secure stable fuel costs, so an airlines might have an interest in locking in a decent price. That’s how markets are supposed to work. The problem is these markets operated in the shadows of our economy, invisible to regulators, invisible to the public. So reckless practices were rampant. Risks accrued until they threatened our entire financial system.

    And that’s why these reforms are designed to respect legitimate activities but prevent reckless risk taking. That’s why we want to ensure that financial products like standardized derivatives are traded out in the open, in the full view of businesses, investors, and those charged with oversight.

    And I was encouraged to see a Republican senator join with Democrats this week in moving forward on this issue. That’s a good sign. (Applause.) That’s a good sign. For without action, we’ll continue to see what amounts to highly-leveraged, loosely-monitored gambling in our financial system, putting taxpayers and the economy in jeopardy. And the only people who ought to fear the kind of oversight and transparency that we’re proposing are those whose conduct will fail this scrutiny.

    Third, this plan would enact the strongest consumer financial protections ever. (Applause.) And that’s absolutely necessary because this financial crisis wasn’t just the result of decisions made in the executive suites on Wall Street; it was also the result of decisions made around kitchen tables across America, by folks who took on mortgages and credit cards and auto loans. And while it’s true that many Americans took on financial obligations that they knew or should have known they could not have afforded, millions of others were, frankly, duped. They were misled by deceptive terms and conditions, buried deep in the fine print.

    And while a few companies made out like bandits by exploiting their customers, our entire economy was made more vulnerable. Millions of people have now lost their homes. Tens of millions more have lost value in their homes. Just about every sector of our economy has felt the pain, whether you’re paving driveways in Arizona, or selling houses in Ohio, or you’re doing home repairs in California, or you’re using your home equity to start a small business in Florida.

    That’s why we need to give consumers more protection and more power in our financial system. This is not about stifling competition, stifling innovation; it’s just the opposite. With a dedicated agency setting ground rules and looking out for ordinary people in our financial system, we will empower consumers with clear and concise information when they’re making financial decisions. So instead of competing to offer confusing products, companies will compete the old-fashioned way, by offering better products. And that will mean more choices for consumers, more opportunities for businesses, and more stability in our financial system. And unless your business model depends on bilking people, there is little to fear from these new rules. (Applause.)

    Number four, the last key component of reform. These Wall Street reforms will give shareholders new power in the financial system. They will get what we call a say on pay, a voice with respect to the salaries and bonuses awarded to top executives. And the SEC will have the authority to give shareholders more say in corporate elections, so that investors and pension holders have a stronger role in determining who manages the company in which they’ve placed their savings.

    Now, Americans don’t begrudge anybody for success when that success is earned. But when we read in the past, and sometimes in the present, about enormous executive bonuses at firms — even as they’re relying on assistance from taxpayers or they’re taking huge risks that threaten the system as a whole or their company is doing badly — it offends our fundamental values.

    Not only that, some of the salaries and bonuses that we’ve seen creates perverse incentives to take reckless risks that contributed to the crisis. It’s what helped lead to a relentless focus on a company’s next quarter, to the detriment of its next year or its next decade. And it led to a situation in which folks with the most to lose — stock and pension holders — had the least to say in the process. And that has to change. (Applause.)

    Let me close by saying this. I have laid out a set of Wall Street reforms. These are reforms that would put an end to taxpayer bailouts; that would bring complex financial dealings out of the shadows; that would protect consumers; and that would give shareholders more power in the financial system. But let’s face it, we also need reform in Washington. (Applause.) And the debate — the debate over these changes is a perfect example.

    I mean, we have seen battalions of financial industry lobbyists descending on Capitol Hill, firms spending millions to influence the outcome of this debate. We’ve seen misleading arguments and attacks that are designed not to improve the bill but to weaken or to kill it. We’ve seen a bipartisan process buckle under the weight of these withering forces, even as we’ve produced a proposal that by all accounts is a commonsense, reasonable, non-ideological approach to target the root problems that led to the turmoil in our financial sector and ultimately in our entire economy.

    So we’ve seen business as usual in Washington, but I believe we can and must put this kind of cynical politics aside. We’ve got to put an end to it. That’s why I’m here today. (Applause.) That’s why I’m here today.

    And to those of you who are in the financial sector, let me say this, we will not always see eye to eye. We will not always agree. But that doesn’t mean that we’ve got to choose between two extremes. We do not have to choose between markets that are unfettered by even modest protections against crisis, or markets that are stymied by onerous rules that suppress enterprise and innovation. That is a false choice. And we need no more proof than the crisis that we’ve just been through.

    You see, there has always been a tension between the desire to allow markets to function without interference and the absolute necessity of rules to prevent markets from falling out of kilter. But managing that tension, one that we’ve debated since the founding of this nation, is what has allowed our country to keep up with a changing world. For in taking up this debate, in figuring out how to apply well-worn principles with each new age, we ensure that we don’t tip too far one way or the other — that our democracy remains as dynamic and our economy remains as dynamic as it has in the past. So, yes, this debate can be contentious. It can be heated. But in the end it serves only to make our country stronger. It has allowed us to adapt and to thrive.

    And I read a report recently that I think fairly illustrates this point. It’s from Time Magazine. I’m going to quote: “Through the great banking houses of Manhattan last week ran wild-eyed alarm. Big bankers stared at one another in anger and astonishment. A bill just passed… would rivet upon their institutions what they considered a monstrous system… such a system, they felt, would not only rob them of their pride of profession but would reduce all U.S. banking to its lowest level.” That appeared in Time Magazine in June of 1933. (Laughter and applause.) The system that caused so much consternation, so much concern was the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, also known as the FDIC, an institution that has successfully secured the deposits of generations of Americans.

    In the end, our system only works — our markets are only free — when there are basic safeguards that prevent abuse, that check excesses, that ensure that it is more profitable to play by the rules than to game the system. And that is what the reforms we’ve been proposing are designed to achieve — no more, no less. And because that is how we will ensure that our economy works for consumers, that it works for investors, and that it works for financial institutions — in other words, that it works for all of us — that’s why we’re working so hard to get this stuff passed.

    This is the central lesson not only of this crisis but of our history. It’s what I said when I spoke here two years ago. Because ultimately, there is no dividing line between Main Street and Wall Street. We will rise or we will fall together as one nation. (Applause.) And that is why I urge all of you to join me. I urge all of you to join me, to join those who are seeking to pass these commonsense reforms. And for those of you in the financial industry, I urge you to join me not only because it is in the interest of your industry, but also because it’s in the interest of your country.

    Thank you so much. God bless you, and God bless the United States of America. Thank you. (Applause.)

    END 12:16 P.M. EDT

  • Who Wants A Watch Containing Volcanic Ash From Last Week’s Icelandic Eruption? [Watches]

    From the same chap who brought us the watch with actual moon dust and parts from Apollo 11, comes the timely (sorry) Icelandic Eyjafjallajökull watch. With—you guessed it—volcanic ash. Pretty fast, considering it only erupted last week. More »







  • Five New Ferrari Special Series Models to Surface by 2013

    edo competition Enzo XX Evolution

    An all new Ferrari 458 Spider and a Ferrari Enzo are already slated for a release by 2013 and the big news is that Ferrari will unveil four new models other than these two scorchers, with in the next three years.

    The Ferrari buffs are already preparing themselves to receive the 458 drop-top and an all-new 612 Scaglietti with a V12 engine next year and the 612 may even surface as a hybrid option . What was also announced was a new special series Enzo which is supposed to join the all-new 599 GTB Fiorano in 2012.

    The Scuderia 458 is also up for a facelift in 2013 while California M is slated to arrive somewhere around the same time. Within the next three years Ferrari is in the mood t o conquer the supercar market and the good thing is that Ferrari is also thinking about greener options.

  • Americans for Prosperity blames NC consumer advocacy group for ‘Wall Street corruption’ (video)

    Dirty Money.jpgYesterday, about 20 members of the conservative group Americans for Prosperity — with nearly as many members of the media in tow — gathered in downtown Durham, North Carolina to protest “Wall Street corruption” and the financial reform bill now moving through Congress.

    Why Durham? Because it’s home to the Center for Responsible Lending, a consumer advocacy group that has pushed for tougher banking rules. The Center is also the former employer of Eric Stein, a leading voice for financial reform who now works in President Obama’s Treasury Department.

    You may be wondering: How do you link the Center and Stein, staunch proponents of Wall Street reform, to “Wall Street corruption?” By painting the advocates as the ones who are too cozy with bankers and financial interests.

    Taking a cue from a now-famous memo by Republican strategist Frank Luntz [pdf] — which argued back in January that, because financial reform is popular, “the single best way to kill [financial reform] legislation is to link it to the Big Bank Bailout” — the Durham protesters called the Congressional bill “permanent bailout legislation.”

    (As the fact-checking group Politifact points out, the bill doesn’t include bailouts: It creates a trust, funded by taxes on large financial institutions, that would enable the closing of failed banks.)

    In particular, Americans for Prosperity zeroed in on $15 million given to the Center for Responsible Lending by John Paulson, a hedge fund manager implicated in the current federal investigation of Goldman Sachs. The demonstrators said Paulson’s “dirty money” was reason enough to demand Stein’s removal (“Stein must resign!”) and halt the financial reform bill until Congress investigated Stein, the Center and Paulson.

    Facing South asked some of the Americans for Prosperity protesters why they were demonstrating at the Center’s offices in Durham, and received a wide range of responses, ranging from “Wall Street corruption” to concern about the $15 million deal and dislike for ACORN (which isn’t connected to the Center):

    The demonstrators Facing South interviewed were unclear about the nature of the Center’s connection to Paulson. Of the $15 million Paulson gave to the Center, one man demanded to know “where the money went;” another assumed it went to Center “salaries and things like that.” At one point, the protesters chanted “give the money back!”

    A Center spokesman says it’s hardly a mystery: The $15 million from Paulson was used to launch the Institute for Foreclosure Legal Assistance, which trains local legal aid centers to help families facing foreclosure. The Institute isn’t even run by the Center for Responsible Lending; it’s managed by the National Association of Consumer Advocates.

    As for the Center’s and Stein’s ties to Wall Street, big banks certainly don’t see them as helpful allies. The financial industry has dispatched over 1,500 lobbyists to Washington to defeat the financial reform bill these advocates support. Payday lenders, which the Center has targeted for charging up to 400% interest, spent over $2.6 million in lobbying last year to ensure they’re not regulated under the bill, up 75% from the year before.

    Given their common opposition to reform, it’s perhaps no surprise that John Paulson and banks are more closely aligned to Americans for Prosperity and other conservative groups. According to the Center for Responsive Politics, nearly 60% of Paulson’s campaign contributions have gone to Republicans, who are opposing the reform legislation.

    Americans for Prosperity itself has direct links to banking interests. James C. Miller III, who is listed as one of Americans for Prosperity’s directors, served as the executive director of then-Vice President George H.W. Bush’s Presidential Task Force on Regulatory Relief. He also served on the board of the J.P. Morgan Value Opportunities Fund and as a consultant to Freddie Mac. James E. Stephenson, another AfP director, serves on the board of the Republic Bank of Georgia.

    For conservative websites like BigGovernment.com, which has helped publicize the Center/Stein/Paulson allegations, the attack almost seems personal. One of BigGovernment’s editors is Mike Flynn, former leader of the Consumer Rights League — a front group supported by payday lenders to oppose reform which shares an office with the tea party-connected group FreedomWorks.

    Meanwhile, a Senate vote on the financial reform bill is expected within days, and as the Los Angeles Times reports, “Wall Street is battling aggressively against the legislation.”

    Sue Sturgis assisted with reporting for this story.

    PHOTO: Americans for Prosperity demonstrator in Durham, NC (Chris Kromm)

  • Wicked Audio Earbud Collection Feature Skulls, Eight Balls & Other Style Icons

    wicked audio 1024x179 Wicked Audio Earbud Collection Feature Skulls, Eight Balls & Other Style IconsIt has been a while since we’ve seen any adorable earbuds come out. Fortunately Empire Brands has launched some cute and aesthetically appealing headphones, with four new lines of earbuds. The Wicked Empires, Wicked Little Buds, Jaw Breakers and Metallics all feature bold design elements and superior sound, providing consumers an eye-catching accessory and an enjoyable listening experience. The Wicked Empire line is punk-inspired, offering a multitude of designs including a skull, eight ball, ace of spades, star and knight symbol. Wicked Little Buds come in four stylish colors that have a semi-glossy finish with a light-weight form. The Jaw Breakers line includes four bold colors with a candy theme and lastly the Metallics line is composed of four metallic colors. All these new buds range anwhere from $12.99 to $34.99 and are currently available at www.empirebrandsinc.com or FYE.

    • The Wicked Empire line is top notch and punk-inspired, offering a multitude of designs including a skull, eight ball, ace of spades, star and knight symbol. $34.99
    • The Wicked Little Buds come in four stylish colors that have a semi-glossy finish, providing an edgy look, along with a light-weight form that creates a “barely there” feeling. $29.99

    • The Jaw Breakers line includes four bold colors with a candy theme, guaranteeing a match to anyone’s unique style. $17.99
    • The Metallics line is composed of stylish and vibrant earbuds in four metallically brilliant colors, which are available at an affordable price without sacrificing quality. $12.99