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  • HP Compaq AirLife 100 specs revealed

    This isn’t the first time that we have heard news about HP’s Compaq AirLife 100. This is an Android powered netbook that we have known about since MWC. It has finally passed through the FCC and now the full specs are now available.

    It features a 10-inch screen, 1GHz Qualcomm Snapdragon processor with Wi-Fi / 3G connectivity, 512MB of RAM, and 16GB of flash storage. The screen is a resistive touch screen but it doesn’t have multi-touch capabilities. It’s not yet known if this device will have market access but HP has a list of apps that will come preloaded. The AirLife is set to launch soon in Latin America and in parts of Europe, it has been spotted on their US site as well so it could be available here at some point. The official word from HP is expected soon.

    [via engadget,HP]

  • Burtify yourself for Earth Day with Burt’s Bees special promotion

    Do I need to find my Burt? Apparently so, says an online promotion for Burt’s Bees and an event that’ll be happening in Times Square on Thursday, which is Earth Day. I don’t know about the rest of you, but even as a fan of the products (the Super Shiny lip gloss is fantastic!), I’ve never given much thought to the guy himself. That would be Burt Shavitz, a Maine-based beekeeper and co-founder of the nature-loving company. But I’m considering Burtifying myself via webcam on the FindYourBurt.com site, which involves getting a bushy beard, mutton chops and a goofy hat. Why not? It’ll also tell me how Earth-friendly I am (so I can be closer to Burt-ness). While I’m there, I’ll see factoids like this: "The Burt’s Bees manufacturing facility has zero landfill waste." If you’re out and about in midtown on Earth Day, you can see the marketer’s philosophy at work. Five bearded Burt look-alikes will be pedaling human-powered bike blenders and making smoothies entirely out of Burt’s Bees beauty product ingredients (stuff like milk, honey, mango, yogurt, banana and pomegranate). There will be other sampling, like zero-waste "Burt Kits," giveaways and a free yoga class in Central Park, all via the marketer’s new agency, Baldwin& of Durham, N.C. So, go ahead and Burtify. You can always beautify later.

    —Posted by T.L. Stanley

  • CDMA BlackBerry 9670 flip revealed

    BlackBerry 9670

    Well well well, look at what we have here!   Not only do we get a glimpse of OS 6.0 and its capabilities, but we get decent pictures of a rumored device from RIM sporting the sexy new OS all in one day.  Thanks to BGR, there is a full picture gallery, with the clamshell BlackBerry device shown at every angle.  So far there have been tons of mixed emotions about the device.  While some are claiming that RIM is headed in the wrong direction with the design, some people are really liking the new sleek, rounded look, and others are brushing it off just as they did the full QWERTY slider last month.

    The specifications that this baby holds puts me on the fence.  I’m not a big fan of moving parts, but this is one I would have to try before I knock it.  The device sports a 5.0-megapixel camera, Wi-Fi, full QWERTY keyboard (9700 style), and OS 6.0, giving it the heaviest spec sheet of any BlackBerry to date (rumored or official).  Judging by the device model number (9670), it looks like this clamshell BlackBerry is destined to fall into the CDMA Bold family. 

    What are your thoughts on a flip style BlackBerry?  Sound off in the comments!

    Via BGR


  • Volta Reports More Wide Mineralized Intercepts in the Next Section of Drilling at its Kiaka Gold Project Including 119.5m (at) 1.15g/t Gold VTR.to,

    Volta Resources is one of the few Juniors in Gold space which came back stronger after crisis and after merger Birim Goldfields with Goldcrest Resources company performs very well with recent discoveries.

    Volta Reports More Wide Mineralized Intercepts in the Next Section of Drilling at its Kiaka Gold Project Including 119.5m (at) 1.15g/t Gold, 108.45m (at) 1.06g/t Gold and 94m (at) 1.21g/t Gold

    Press Release Source: Volta Resources Inc. On Wednesday April 21, 2010, 9:06 am
    TSX: VTRTORONTO, April 21 /CNW/ – Volta Resources Inc. (“Volta” or the “Company”) (TSX: VTRNews) announces the drill results from the next completed section at its Kiaka Gold Project, located approximately 120 kilometres southeast of Ouagadougou, the capital city of Burkina Faso. To date, 88 holes (~13,674 meters) have been completed of the current program comprising more than 110 holes ((greater than)17,400 meters) planned for the Central Area at Kiaka. So far results have been received for 71 holes from this area, with the current news release covering the latest 6 holes, which are all located on Section 5600N (See Figure 1). The highlights from this section include:
    – KDH55 : 119.25m (at) 1.15g/t Au, including 56.00m (at) 1.76g/t Au AND

    – KDH55 : 39.75m (at) 1.81g/t Au, including 31.10m (at) 2.24g/t Au

    – KRD56 : 66.00m (at) 1.16g/t Au, including 34.00m (at) 1.36g/t Au

    – KRD57 : 94.00m (at) 1.21g/t Au, including 5.00m (at) 2.26g/t Au and 44.00m (at) 1.50g/t Au AND

    – KRD57 : 81.00m (at) 1.02g/t Au, including 11.00m (at) 2.38g/t Au

    – KRD58 : 42.00m (at) 0.78g/t Au, including 3.00m (at) 2.51g/t Au and 3.00m (at) 2.79g/t Au – KDH59 : 108.45m (at) 1.06g/t Au, including 45.35m (at) 1.25g/t Au and 18.75m (at) 1.95g/t Au

    – KKRC32 : 22.00m (at) 0.67g/t Au, including 5.00m (at) 1.60g/t Au

    Kevin Bullock, Volta’s CEO, said, “Once again we have encountered widthsat better than expected grades from the KMZ zone. As we near completion of ourfirst drill campaign at Kiaka we can unequivocally state that the results haveconsistently exceeded expectations. We look forward to soon incorporating allof the results into our initial resource estimate, which will support ourplans to aggressively move to the next stage in developing Kiaka to itsultimate potential.”
    In order to appreciate the extent and geometry of the mineralization on the 5600N section, the results for the intersections for the six Volta holes are highlighted in Table 1 below and on the section in Figure 2. Analyses of the Volta samples were undertaken by fire assay on a 50g charge at ALS Chemex Laboratories in Ouagadougou. Volta’s sampling and assay procedures included QA/QC elements that employed the inclusion of certified standards and blanks.

    More.

  • Sweetening the deal at United Airlines …

    Merger talk is swirling around United Airlines (UAL), with reports of a deal in the works first with US Airways (LCC) and more recently with Continental Airlines (CAL).

    We’re sure there are plenty of operational reasons United’s management might be looking for a deal. But we also couldn’t help noticing that the company has made it substantially more attractive for the top officers themselves to seal a deal — in the case of Chairman and Chief Executive Glenn Tilton, more than three times as attractive as in prior years.

    According to the proxy that UAL Corp., parent of United Airlines, filed at 5:25 p.m. on Tuesday, Tilton’s payout if there’s a change of control rose to $9 million last year — up nearly fourfold from the $2.4 million listed in last year’s proxy. If he loses his job within two years after a deal, his payout would be $14.3 million, up 78% from $8 million last year.

    Other executives have seen similar jumps. Executive Vice President John Tague, also president of United Airlines, would see his payout in a change-of-control rise to $3.7 million, from $1.1 million. Total cost for the top five officers under a change in control scenario, even if none of them are fired: $17.6 million.

    A change of control, for what it’s worth, includes

    “(i) certain acquisitions by a third-party or third-parties, acting in concert, of at least a specified threshold percentage of the Company’s then outstanding voting securities; (ii) consummation of certain mergers or consolidations of the Company with any other corporation; (iii) stockholder approval of a plan of complete liquidation or dissolution of the Company; (iv) consummation of certain sales or dispositions of all or substantially all the assets of the Company; and (v) certain changes in the membership of the Company’s board of directors. “

    The rise in payouts hinges not on the cash severance the executives are promised — that figure has stayed pretty steady at a little over $5 million for Tilton, for example — but in the treatment of their equity and option grants. Whereas last year, getting fired after a merger would have accelerated $2.4 million in restricted stock awards for Tilton, now it would mean $1.4 million in restricted stock, $3.2 million in stock options and $3.6 million in restricted stock units, as well as $866,667 for an additional cash bonus. (Not to worry: They’ll still get travel benefits on their airline when they go, for whatever reason — a $23,683 value for Tilton, plus a whopping $119,240 to defray taxes that would be due on the benefit.)

    All that, of course, is above and beyond what they get from any merger itself, in return for the shares and options they already own outright, plus the pensions and deferred-compensation benefits they have accumulated over time.

    For good measure, the company also boosted the payout executives would get outside of a change-in-control, if they are fired “without cause” — including if, say, performance isn’t up to snuff or a deal falls through. For Tilton, that figure almost doubles to $12.6 million, from the $6.6 million listed in last year’s proxy. (His everyday pay rose, too.)

    If UAL ultimately does tie up with another airline, we’re sure to hear soundbites about synergy and the value that shareholders and passengers can expect from the deal. As with any merger, only time will tell how much of that value really is there.

    Meantime, for UAL’s top executives, the value of a deal is there in black and white.

    Image source: Deanster1983 via Flickr


  • Jeff Rubin Was Stranded By The Volcano And It Reminded Him Of Peak Oil

    jeff rubinFormer CIBC economist Jeff Rubin couldn’t make it to Lisbon for the Portuguese launch of Why Your World Is About to Get a Whole Lot Smaller: Oil and the End of Globalization.

    But he’s taking the opportunity to harp on peak oil. The past week’s chaos could become standard when rising prices make air travel impractical.

    Rubin’s blog:

    [It’s] not just people who aren’t able to get around. A good chunk of the global food supply chain also relies on air transport to ensure worldwide distribution. Think of all the havoc caused by broken supply chains in our interconnected global economy. From fresh pineapple from Ghana to fresh flowers from Kenya, Northern Europe’s already beginning to notice the disruption from the loss of air freight. The Freight Transport Association in the UK recently warned that British supermarkets could soon start running out of imported fruit and vegetables if the air embargo continues much longer.

    Of course, the wind could change or the volcano could suddenly stop belching and all could quickly return to normal. But while it lasts, take careful note. It may well be a dress rehearsal for what lies ahead. What volcanic ash is doing today, triple-digit oil prices will do tomorrow.

    Rubin expects triple-digit oil by year end, so get used to being stranded.

    Don’t miss: Oh No! Our Most Important World Leaders Are Stranded By The Volcano!

    Join the conversation about this story »


  • Marchionne: Special Ferrari Enzo for 2012, Maserati working on new Quattroporte and 5-Series rival

    Fiat SpA and Chrysler Group CEO Sergio Marchionne is in Turin, Italy today presenting his 5-year business and product plan. One of the exciting things Sergio announced was that Ferrari will introduce a “new special series Enzo” in 2012.

    He said that special-edition Ferrari Enzo will follow the upcoming 458 Italia Spyder in 2011. Also, we can expect a refreshed California in 2013.

    Sergio also said that Maserati is working on a sub-Quattroporte sedan that will compete with the likes of the Mercedes-Benz E-Class and the BMW 5-Series. Hey, if Aston Martin can do a subcompact based on the Toyota iQ (Aston Martin Cygnet), than Maserati should be allowed to compete with luxury mid-size sedans.

    Marchionne also confirmed that a new Quattroporte is in the works.

    Click here for prices on the 2009 Maserati Quattroporte.

    – By: Omar Rana

    Source: WOT


  • Internet Bots Find a Home in Google Buzz

    A credible report from content analytics network PostRank highlights that Internet bots are posting around 89% of all Google Buzz’s content. The percentage is overwhelming, but more curious is how it falls around on categories.

    From all the content automatically posted in Google Buzz, Twitter amasses for 62.57%, transforming Google Buzz into a… (read more)

  • Analysts up targets on Apple after ‘stunning’ results

    After second quarter results from Apple Inc. that the Street called “stunning,” analysts have raised their price targets on the smartphone and computer maker.

    One of the more bullish of the group, Mike Abramsky of RBC Capital Markets, hiked his forecast for the stock from US$275 to US$350. The analyst said Apple is positioned for multi-market share gains at healthy margins.

    While the past 12 months was all about the entry of the iPhone, Apple now faces four large market opportunities that he estimates will see a total two billion units sold. Also due to the company’s strong competitive advantages; Mr. Abramsky told clients that the next leg of valuation may be about iPhone global market expansion, the entry of iPad, further PC share gains and iPod/iTunes contribution.

    Apple beat Canaccord Adams analyst Peter Misek’s near-consensus estimates by 12% on the top line and a whopping 38% on the bottom line.

    Driven largely by strong iPhone and desktop shipments, his fiscal 2010 revenue estimate climbs to US$59.3-billion from US$56.6-billion. His earnings per share (GAAP) estimate rises to US$13.32 from US$11.91. The also analyst raised his price target on Apple from US$300 to US$325.

    J.P.Morgan’s Mark Moskowitz hiked his forecast for the stock from US$305 to US$316, telling clients that the company’s quarterly results and outlook should be more than enough to keep pushing the stock higher.

    “While there was some noise around gross margins, particularly as relates to the iPad in the early stages, we believe that the overall revenue and earnings growth profiles have no rivals in large cap technology,” he said.

    Over the next few years, the analyst believes that Apple’s revenue and earnings growth could stay well above 20%, which would require a favorable reset to the stock’s valuation.

    Richard Gardner at Citigroup boosted his price target from US$300 to US$320 and raised his estimates for 2010 through 2012. Apple remains near the top of his list of preferred hardware names.

    “While the shares may take a breather following Wednesday’s rally, we would use any pull-backs as enhanced buying opportunities ahead of what should be a truly banner Holiday season for the company,” he said. “The fact that Apple was able to deliver such significant upside before this year’s significant product introductions/refreshes makes us all the more confident in our positive stance through year-end.”

    Mr. Gardner reminded clients that iPad should contribute to revenue beginning in the second quarter of calendar 2010, followed by an iPhone refresh in July, an iPod refresh in September and perhaps a CDMA iPhone on Verizon’s network in time for the peak Holiday season.

    Deutsche Bank analyst Chris Whitmore, who raised his target from US$325 to US$350, noted that Apple’s revenue upside was driven by “enormous iPhone results” that came in at 8.75 million versus his forecast of 7.25 million. He also pointed to an iPod beat of 10.89 million units compared to Deutsche Bank’s expectation of 10 million.

    As expected, Apple issued conservative guidance. However, Mr. Whitmore expects iPhone and Mac demand will remain robust, in addition to strong international expansion and new product cycles.

    “The iPad is off to a very strong start with demand characterized as ‘shocking’ and tracking ahead of management expectation,” he told clients. “In addition, we expect the iPhone to be refreshed this summer which remains immensely profitable and continues to ramp internationally.”

    Jonathan Ratner

  • Beta Test The Skyfire Browser Now

    The browser options for Android just are growing all the time. If you don’t like the stock browser or just want a change of pace, hit the market and replace the browser (unlike other unnamed OSX’s). Now you can beta test the upcoming Skyfire browser. The XDA has gotten a hold of this app and has shared it with the rest of us.

    Skyfire is nothing new, all you Windows mobile and Symbian users has being enjoying this browser for a long time now. Tired of waiting for Flash 10 to finally hit? You don’t have to now because this browser supports flash 10, all major Web 2.0 standards, including Ajax, JavaScript. So without prolonging your agony, click this link to download it now.

    [via xda]

  • TAB Welcomes: Adam Jackson

    Adam Jackson - Macworld 2009I was a PC for the longest time. In the late 90s Apple caught my attention as Macs were all we had in grade school. Then, in 2001, the iBook G3 was released, then iTunes and then the iPod. After spending an hour on Mac OS X 10.1, I was hooked and decided it was time to switch to Mac. Soon after switching, I started blogging about Apple but given that I was only 13 years old, the content was less than readable. That didn’t stop me from writing about Apple nearly every day.

    In 2003, I attended my first Macworld and attended every expo from NYC, Boston and San Francisco until the most recent MWSF in January. I became a total conference junkie and even found myself at CES and Photoshop World finally earning the grand invitation and attending Apple Town Hall events and WWDC as press. All the while, I was a lone blogger with a passion for spreading the word about Apple and its products.

    Today, at the ripe old age of 23 I’ve seen Steve Jobs speak nearly 30 times, have written over 5,000 articles and reviews about Apple and was even interviewed in the movie MacHeads which premiered last year. It’s safe to say that I am a Mac head and I’m happy to be joining the TAB team as a contributor among the ranks great writers like Darrell Etherington, Charles Jade and Nick Santilli.

    I enjoy writing editorials that excite readers and inspire others to give their thoughts. When I’m not writing, I enjoy taking photographs, tweeting and blogging about food & life.

    photo by Scott Beale / Laughing Squid

  • Demo: LOST PLANET 2 Multiplayer

     

    LOST PLANET® 2 Content: LOST PLANET 2 Multiplayer Demo
    Price: Free
    Availability: All Xbox LIVE regions
    Dash Text: LOST PLANET returns with the long-awaited sequel to the 2 million-plus selling action shooter! LOST PLANET 2's all-new co-op feature allows up to 4 players to team up in Campaign Mode, forming new tactics and strategies to tackle situations that would be impossible alone. In this multiplayer demo, you and 15 other players battle it out on an all-new map, Turbulent Jungle. Choose from one of two modes popularized in the original LOST PLANET: Elimination or Post Grab. All the new VSs, weapons, and support items from the Campaign mode are also available in multiplayer. Grab your weapon of choice, plan out your attack, and get into the heat of battle with players from all over the world!

     

    Add the free LOST PLANET 2 Multiplayer Demo to your Xbox 360 download queue

     

    Like the demo? Pre-order the full game

     

  • Mentor ObTape Trial Set to Begin June 1 in Federal MDL

    A federal judge has rejected a motion to have the several Mentor ObTape vaginal sling lawsuits dismissed, clearing the way for a consolidated trial of three “bellwether” cases to begin on June 1. 

    The Mentor ObTape trial was originally scheduled to begin in February, but the start was delayed while the court considered, and ultimately agreed to, the plaintiffs’ request that three of the lawsuits be tried at the same time.

    All of the cases involves similar allegations that problems with the Mentor ObTape sling, which is used to treat female stress urinary incontinence, resulted in complications such as vaginal extrusions, urinary tract erosion, severe pain and infection. Some women have required multiple surgeries to remove the sling and have been left with permanent and debilitating injuries.

    Mentor Corp. distributed approximately 16,271 ObTape slings between 2003 and 2006, when it was removed from the market. Also known as a bladder hammock, the sling is used to provide support for the vaginal wall, reinforcing the muscles that control the flow of urine. According to the complaints, a defective design of the Mentor ObTape can block oxygen and nutrients, increasing the risk that women may suffer severe and debilitating injuries following bladder surgery.

    In December 2008, the U.S. Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation centralized the federal Mentor ObTape litigation in the Middle District of Georgia, before U.S. District Judge Clay D. Land. The lawsuits were made part of a multidistrict litigation (MDL) for pretrial proceedings, and three cases originally filed in Georgia were selected for early trial to gauge how juries are likely to respond to evidence that will be presented throughout the litigation.

    According to court documents filed by Mentor in January, seeking to have the initial cases dismissed, approximately 348 lawsuits over the ObTape vaginal sling have been filed by women who have experienced problems.

    In a scheduling order issued April 13, Judge Land indicated that Mentor Corp.’s motion for summary judgment will be denied and the three cases will be consolidated for trial beginning on June 1.

  • Report: Hyundai to introduce stop-start tech in two years

    Filed under: , ,

    The HyundaiKia train and its full head of steam don’t look likely to give out any time soon. To wit, the company has been adding style to its price and fuel frugality, and technology isn’t being left out. The Sonata Hybrid is on its way for next year and will boast better mileage than the 35-mpg Elantra Blue, and now the company has announced it will be engineering stop/start ability into much of the H-K model line in America over the next two years.

    We won’t see those cars until “the next product cycle” in 2012, but when we do, the projections are that it will yield three percent better fuel economy. True, that might only take the Sonata Hybrid up to 38/40 mpg, but who knows how much a gallon of gas will cost by then – we’re sure every little bit will count. CO2 reduction should be equally improved.

    [Source: Automotive News – Sub. Req’d]

    Report: Hyundai to introduce stop-start tech in two years originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 21 Apr 2010 08:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Why it matters that the FDA Is beating USDA for control of food system

    by David Gumpert

    Small-scale food producers and farmers have been vocal about their concerns that the Senate will pass highly burdensome food-safety legislation.

    Equally worried, but much less vocal, is the U.S. Department of Agriculture. It frets over major gains by its arch-rival, the U.S. food and Drug Administration, over local food producers and small farms. USDA is so worried it has even had its Senate allies include language that “prohibited the FDA from ‘impeding, minimizing, or affecting’ USDA authority on meat, poultry, and eggs,” according to Andrew Kimbrell, executive director of the Center for Food Safety.

    The legislation, if it passes as expected (and is signed into law, as President Obama has already vowed to do), will represent a major coup for FDA, and in the process, a loss in influence for USDA. The bill wouldn’t so much take power from USDA as give FDA new power, and
    in the process providing FDA a leg up on its rival.

    USDA had for more than a decade pinned its hopes on gaining the upper hand in food safety through the National Animal Identification System (NAIS), but when that bombed earlier this year, FDA had a clear opportunity, which it has expertly exploited through the pending legislation.

    The FDA’s growing authority over the American food system will likely include the power to quarantine large sections of the country if it decides there’s a food safety emergency and to randomly inspect virtually all food producers, including roadside stands, and monitor and approve their preparation of detailed, and costly, hazard-control plans. Moreover, the legislation gives the FDA a new foothold among farmers via the authority establish safety standards (about use of compost, application of fertilizers, etc.) under the euphemistically titled United Nations program, “Good Agricultural Practices”.

    With power, of course, comes money—in this case, lots more money, for inspectors to carry out all those random inspections of thousands of tiny food producers.
    “We are seeking better controls at the point of production,” crowed FDA’s commissioner, Margaret Hamburg, in a February speech about food safety. One main “point of (food) production”—the farm—has of course been USDA’s turf.

    The FDA and USDA have long participated in an uneasy alliance overseeing the food supply, with confusing responsibilities (USDA oversees animal slaughtering, FDA oversees dairy production). The loss of influence for USDA that will come via the food safety legislation is merely the latest failure for USDA. A few months ago, it suffered a major setback when farmer ire forced Ag Secretary Tom Vilsack to trash, at least temporarily, its own version of a food safety program—the National Animal Identification System (NAIS). The program would have allowed the USDA to oversee the registration of hundreds of thousands of farms, and the RFID-chip tagging of literally billions of animals (including chickens, goats, sheep, cattle, and so forth)—ostensibly to protect America’s meat supply from the ravages of quickly-spreading animal disease.

    Why should anyone care about which bureaucratic behemoth comes out on top in this kind of rivalry?

    For one very good reason: For all its coddling of Big Ag, the USDA has shown itself to be increasingly supportive of the growing local-food movement in recent years, while the FDA has long been very tough on small food companies, and shows no sign of wanting to encourage the move to locally-grown food.

    And while Michael Taylor, the FDA’s food safety czar, talks in speeches about approving of “sustainable” food production, the agency’s actions toward those involved in promoting sustainable agriculture have long been the opposite. Any food company that even begins to suggest its food might provide health benefits becomes a target of the agency’s knee-jerk reaction that it is positioning food as a drug. Back in 2006, the FDA sent warning letters—threats of court action and possible shutdown—to 29 Michigan cherry growers, for citing studies suggesting health benefits in concentrated cherry juice.

    In 2008, FDA filed suit against a small seller of herbs, coconut oil and other health foods for allegedly making similar food-as-drug claims. To avoid legal bills that would have bankrupted it, Wilderness Family Naturals signed a consent decree with the FDA that allows the FDA to conduct twice yearly examinations over a three-year period of its labeling and advertising—that the company has to pay for to the turn of $100 an hour.

    When the FDA tried to impose the same kind of burden on Organic Pastures Dairy Co., a California producer of unpasteurized milk, as part of a settlement of an FDA suit for, in part, suggesting that raw milk helps alleviate symptoms of asthma (which has been demonstrated in large-scale European studies), the dairy fought back. Just a few weeks ago, a federal judge, Oliver Wanger, castigated the FDA lawyer arguing for the sanctions.

    In questioning the FDA’s lawyer, Judge Wanger referred to the inspection provision as a “death penalty” on OPDC. “I simply am not convinced that this draconian, if you will, remedial construct is in any way necessary. I don’t think the public is going to be jeopardized in any way by not having this, what I call the death penalty provision in here. This is taking Organic Pastures out without going to a magistrate and stringing them up and throwing a noose around its neck and hanging it until dead.”

    Meanwhile, USDA, long a proponent of Big Ag, has been steadily becoming more and more supportive of locally-grown food and smaller farms. Symbolically, Ag Secretary Vilsack has become a key proponent of the People’s Garden, a vegetable garden that grows outside the department’s huge Washington headquarters building. In dedicating the garden last year, Vilsack said, “It started off as a relatively small project and now it’s expanding rather dramatically and we think we’re going to get a lot of attention over the course of the next couple of years as this spreads.“The agency is also pushing a rule to encourage providers of school lunch programs to young children to use locally-grown food.

    It has backed up its trumpeted “Know Your Food, Know Your Farmer” campaign with hard dollars directed toward promoters of locally-grown food. In recent months, it has begun promoting a grant program to encourage farmers markets—$5 million will be awarded this year, and $10 million each in fiscal 2011 and 2012.

    “Farmers markets are an integral part of the urban/farm linkage and have continued to rise in popularity, mostly due to the growing consumer interest in obtaining fresh products directly from the farm,” USDA says on its web site.

    Certainly USDA, with more than 100,000 employees, can hardly be said to be marginalized. But if recent developments are an indication, the policy emphasis is on giving the federal government ever-greater control over America’s food system, down to the smallest growers and producers, and the FDA, with its iron-fist approach, is the vehicle of choice to exert that control. Hard to believe, but in this good-cop-bad-cop routine, USDA is the good cop.

    Related Links:

    USDA downplays own scientist’s research on ill effects of Monsanto herbicide

    Ask Umbra on food dehydrators, cage-free and free-range poultry, and e-readers

    USDA research chief concerned about ‘safety of organic food’






  • Record breaker: newest new Moon spotted! | Bad Astronomy

    Thierry Legault is a French amateur astronomer… and if ever the word “amateur” were misleading, it’s here. Thierry is an incredibly accomplished astronomer; his pictures have graced my blog many times in the past. Like when he caught the Shuttle and Hubble silhouetted against the Sun, or this lighthearted picture of someone painting the Sun, or the Shuttle and the space station transiting the Sun.

    Come to think of it, he seems to have a fetish with the Sun. But that’s good, because he’s done it again: he’s captured a record-breaking picture of the newest new Moon!

    thierrylegault_newmoon_ann

    It’s very hard to see, so I bracketed it with those red lines. Thierry caught the Moon when it was as absolutely close to the Sun as it could get at the time, so in fact this is the youngest Moon it could possibly be!

    So what does that mean?

    moon_sun_pathHopefully this terrible diagram I slapped together may help. Picture yourself on the Earth (that should be easy) marked by the E in the drawing. Once a day it appears that the Sun (yellow circle) circles the Earth (black path). The Moon (crescent symbol) circles the Earth once per month — well, it rises and sets every night, but relative to the Sun the Moon moves slowly across the sky. The Moon’s distance to the Sun changes so that at sunset every night, the Moon is in a noticeably different part of the sky than it was the night before.

    New Moon is when the Moon and Sun are as close together as they can be, and it happens once per month or so. But since the Moon’s orbit is tilted, it doesn’t always pass directly in front of the Sun (creating a solar eclipse); it misses by a bit. But still, the Moon is so close to the Sun in the sky that we’re basically seeing the half of the Moon that’s unlit (the lit half is facing away from us, toward the Sun). When it’s offset a bit from the Sun, only the barest, slimmest bit of it is lit that we can see, producing an extremely emaciated crescent.

    When you go outside and first notice the crescent Moon with your eye, it’s usually been a day or two since it passed its closest point to the Sun. The crescent is thicker, making it easier to see, and it’s farther from the Sun than at the exact moment of New Moon, reducing the glare. The closer the Moon is to the Sun, the thinner the crescent and the brighter the sky, making it doubly harder to catch. In Thierry’s case, he caught it when it was only 4.6 degrees from the Sun — only about 9 times the diameter of the Moon itself!

    That’s why astronomers prize seeing the thinnest possible crescent; it’s a contest, like anglers catching the biggest fish or bird watchers seeing a rare species. It shows that the person involved has used a lot of skill and experience… and clearly Thierry has those!

    thierrylegault_scope_setupThis picture shows just how difficult Theirry’s setup had to be. Look how close to the Sun he was shooting! The screen blocks a lot of the glare from the sky, and the circular hole lets the ’scope see the Moon while cutting back on glare a little more. To reduce the sky brightness further he used an infrared filter; the sky doesn’t emit as much infrared light, so it appears a little bit darker, while the Moon does reflect IR (from the Sun), making it easier to spot. He used a filter that let through light at a wavelength at 0.85 microns, just a hair outside what the human eye is sensitive to.

    Of course, he couldn’t see the Moon with his eye. So he aligned the telescope with the stars the night before to get it properly tracking the sky, and then used a computer program to aim the telescope at the position of the Moon. And obviously, it worked!

    This was an amazing feat. And the only way to beat it is to catch the Moon at exactly that closest solar approach when the distance is actually smaller (or, if you like, closer to the point where the two paths of objects intersects on the sky). That’ll make this observation even harder… but I suspect Thierry’s already planning his next attempt.


  • Arcade: Puzzle Chronicles & AFTER BURNER CLIMAX

     

    Content: Puzzle Chronicles
    Price: 800 Microsoft Points
    Availability: All Xbox LIVE regions except Japan and Korea
    Dash Text: (ONLINE INTERACTIONS NOT RATED BY THE ESRB) Enter the dark and savage lands of the Ashurin Empire as you battle to avenge the atrocities the Empire brought upon your tribesmen. On your heroic quest to topple the Empire you will fight fierce beasts and battle hardened warriors in this new Puzzle RPG hybrid game. Featuring an active puzzle combat mechanic, deep story, and robust character development Puzzle Chronicles will bring you into the next era of Puzzle RPGs. There are no refunds for this item. For more information, see www.xbox.com/live/accounts.

     

    Add the free Puzzle Chronicles demo to your Xbox 360 download queue

     

    Content: AFTER BURNER CLIMAX
    Price: 800 Microsoft Points
    Availability: All Xbox LIVE regions
    Dash Text: Take to the skies and experience blazing speeds in the world’s fastest fighter jets! There are no refunds for this item. For more information, see www.xbox.com/live/accounts.

     

    Add the free AFTER BURNER CLIMAX demo to your Xbox 360 download queue

     

  • Hamann BMW Z4 E89 tuning

    Hamann Z4 E89 tuning

    A Hamman divulgou as primeiras imagens de seu mais novo trabalho, o Hamann Z4 E89 tuning. Utilizando como base a BMW Z4 sDrive35i, a preparadora germânica buscou maximizar o seu desempenho buscando alternativas para melhorar a potencia de seu motor e seu comportamento dinâmico, assim como um upgrade em seu visual.

    De acordo com a Hamman, seu motor 6 cilindros de 3.0 litros com 302 cavalos originais ganhou o reforço de mais 54 cv e agora disponibiliza 356 cv de potencia. Esse resultado foi alcançado através da reprogramação da central e injeção do modelo. Além disso, seu sistema de velocidade máxima limitada foi destravado permitindo-o atingir a velocidade máxima de 285 km/h.

    A suspensão do BMW Z4 tuning também foi retrabalhada para garantir uma melhor estabilidade, através de novas molas que rebaixaram o sistema em 30 mm. Em conjunto com essa mudança, foram adicionados um jogo de rodas de aro 20 e “tala” de 8,5 calçadas com pneus 235/30ZR20 nas rodas dianteiras e rodas de aro 20 e “tala” 10 com os pneus 295/25ZR20 no eixo traseiro.

    Em seu exterior, o cupê Hamann Z4 E89 tuning recebeu um esportivo bodykit contendo saias laterais, aerofólio traseiro e spoiler dianteiro, além de contar com duas saídas duplas das ponteiras de escapamento e de luzes diurnas em Leds em seu para-choque dianteiro. Como opção, ainda existe a possibilidade de personalizar o seu interior com acabamentos de alumínio e revestimentos em couro.

    Hamann Z4 E89 tuning
    Hamann Z4 E89 tuningHamann Z4 E89 tuningHamann Z4 E89 tuningHamann Z4 E89 tuning

    Hamann Z4 E89 tuningHamann Z4 E89 tuningHamann Z4 E89 tuningHamann Z4 E89 tuningHamann Z4 E89 tuningHamann Z4 E89 tuningHamann Z4 E89 tuningHamann Z4 E89 tuningHamann Z4 E89 tuning

    Fonte: WorldCarsFans


  • T-Mobile USA Announces Garminfone

    It’s been a long time coming but the long awaited Gamifone has been announced for a T-Mobile release. Garmin was one of the first members of the OHA, promised to produce an Android handset, seemed like it would never come to fruition. This may be the first announcement of great Android devices for T-Mobile.

    As expected the Garmifone will be loaded with a bunch of navigation orientated applications. One of the main features will be Garmin Voice Studio; this app allows customers to record custom voice directions from family and friends. This handset features a 3MP camera and 3.5 HVGA touch screen. Included will be a car dock. Unfortunately, this will be an Android 1.6 device, since its being released later in the year, 2.1 may be loaded on to the handset. I can’t wait to see how this stacks up to Google Maps.

    [via themarketnews]