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  • Judicial Branch Counsel Contradicts Bysiewicz’s AG Claims

    With final arguments scheduled for Tuesday morning in Secretary of the State Susan Bysiewicz’s Superior Court trial to be declared eligible to run for state attorney general, the state judicial branch’s chief disciplinary counsel, Mark DuBois, filed an “amicus,” or friend-of-the-court, brief that largely contradicts Bysiewicz’s legal arguments.

    A state statute requires that the attorney general have 10 years’ experience in the “active practice” of law in Connecticut.  Although Bysiewicz has been registered as an attorney for 24 years, she held two lawyers’ jobs for a total of only six years in the state before winning her current office more than 11 years ago. She seeks a ruling that those 11 years as secretary of the state count as the “active practice” of law — based on reasons including her continual advice in phone calls to local officials about election laws, and her testimony before the General Assembly about such laws. She even claims she’s practicing law when she holds a press conference.

    But DuBois, whose job includes jurisdiction over the unauthorized practice of law, raised arguments to the contrary. He said if an attorney tells a lie or gives bad advice while practicing law, he or she can be subject to professional discipline by the Statewide Grievance Committee.  But if Bysiewicz tells an untruth or gives incorrect advice, that doesn’t happen; it’s dealt with in a political setting.

    Also, he said, when Bysiewicz “appears in her official capacity before legislative committees to advocate for or against some public enterprise or initiative, she is not practicing law, but rather carrying out the duties of her office.”

    He said it’s better for “what are essentially political questions” to be handled without dragging them unnecessarily into the arena of lawyers’ discipline.

    He even included a footnote citing The Courant’s Government Watch column: “The Hartford Courant of April 18, 2010 reported an investigation of the plaintiff concerning the use of her office computer to track holiday cards. The undersigned hopes he does not get a grievance complaint to investigate over the same issue.”

    The column can be read by clicking here.

    In another footnote, DuBois leaves an opening for Bysiewicz; “This is not to say that the plaintiff can never be practicing law when she pursues her constitutional and statutory duties. As discussed below, to the extent that the plaintiff visits … with her staff attorneys  and works with them on legal issues she may well be practicing law.”

    He went on to explain that “a much different analysis would apply when the Secretary interacts with her staff attorneys. Whether she seeks their advice as a client of a lawyer…or as a colleague is not for the undersigned to comment on. How these questions should be answered in the present case is a matter for advocacy by the parties, and decision by the Court.”

    “However” he added, “it may well be that the answer to these questions resolves around whether the conduct in question is that of a political figure who also happens to be a lawyer, or a lawyer who also happens to be a constitutional officer of the state.”

  • Welcome to my new website

    I’ve set up HQ here while the old site gets fumigated. My deep apologies to anyone who tried to find me and either had something terrible installed on their computers, or were warned that I was going to install malware on your computer. I’d do no such thing, but my hosting service left the back door open and all kinds of vermin scurried in. I hope they get it fixed soon. In the meantime, I’ll keep this place fresh with announcements related to my work and events where I’ll be appearing. I’m also in the process of moving over the "Extras" for Mudville and Mamba Point


    Who knows, though? Maybe I’ll like this new miniature site, "just the facts, ma’am" approach and move here for good. For the record, I have backed up all of my content from the old place; it may not be available here, but if you’re dying to read some old blog entry, let me know. I’ll try to dig it up for you. 
  • NCBI ROFL: It’s dogs…it’s dogs in tights (TIGHT tights!) | Discoblog

    subadogEffects of a whole-body spandex garment on rectal temperature and oxygen consumption in healthy dogs.

    “OBJECTIVE: To determine whether a full-body spandex garment would alter rectal temperatures of healthy dogs at rest in cool and warm environments… …PROCEDURES: Each dog was evaluated at a low (20 degrees to 25 degrees C [68 degrees to 77 degrees F]) or high (30 degrees to 35 degrees C [86 degrees to 95 degrees F]) ambient temperature while wearing or not wearing a commercially available whole-body spandex garment designed for dogs. Oxygen consumption was measured by placing dogs in a flow-through indirect calorimeter for 90 to 120 minutes. Rectal temperature was measured before dogs were placed in the calorimeter and after they were removed. RESULTS: Rectal temperature increased significantly more at the higher ambient temperature than at the lower temperature and when dogs were not wearing the garment than when they were wearing it. The specific rate of oxygen consumption was significantly higher at the lower ambient temperature than at the higher temperature. CONCLUSIONS AND CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Results suggest that wearing a snug spandex body garment does not increase the possibility that dogs will overheat while in moderate ambient temperatures. Instead, wearing such a garment may enable dogs to better maintain body temperature during moderate heat loading. These results suggest that such garments might be used for purposes such as wound or suture protection without causing dogs to overheat.”

    spandex

    Photo: flickr/zebedee.zebedee

    Related content:
    Discoblog: NCBI ROFL: What kind of panties should I put on my bitch?
    Discoblog: NCBI ROFL: Static cling reduces rat virility: how shocking!
    Discoblog: NCBI ROFL: Finding the frequency of Fido’s farts

    WTF is NCBI ROFL? Read our FAQ!


  • Report: GM to announce repayment of federal loans in full on Wednesday

    Filed under: , ,

    According to The Detroit News, General Motors will announce that it is fully repaying the federal loans it received last summer from both the United States and Canadian governments. In total, General Motors will have paid back about $6.7 billion ($2 billion of which has already been returned) of the $50 billion it received from the U.S., the majority of which was recovered by acquiring a 61-percent share of the automaker.

    For those keeping track of such things and assuming this report is accurate, GM will have paid the entire amount agreed upon with the U.S. Treasury a full two months earlier than anticipated. This accelerated schedule is said to be seen as good news by both the automaker and the federal government. We’d guess that this is also a sign that GM is likely still on track for an initial public offering sometime this year.

    GM CEO Ed Whitacre is expected to make the announcement on Wednesday when he makes a speech at a GM plant in Kansas. Later that day, Whitacre will make his first appearance at Capitol Hill since taking over at the head of the company in January. For what it’s worth, the automaker has also called a press conference on Wednesday that we’ll be attending. Stay tuned.

    [Source: Detroit News | Image: Bill Pugliano/Getty]

    Report: GM to announce repayment of federal loans in full on Wednesday originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 19 Apr 2010 18:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • To the Moon, Then the Skull [Fashion]

    Space imagery traditionally celebrates a sense of wonder and thrill of the unknown. But the ‘Houston, We Have a Problem’ t-shirt chooses a shocking, cryptic aesthetic. $25 (or less with discount code ‘TAKE40’), if that’s your thing. [PublicDomain via boingboing] More »







  • Late Night Breakfast “Pajammy Jam”

    The late night breakfast "Pajammy Jam" will be on April 28th from 9:00pm to midnight in the cafe of the Towers residence hall. Come eat some late night breakfast and maybe get a little studying done for finals at the same time. Join the over 1,000 other students that usually attend this tradition.

    Faculty and staff volunteers are needed as servers (on the cafeteria line at the Towers Residential Suites Cafe) and greeters for one, two, or all three hours and can sign up at http://latenightbreakfast.eventbrite.com/.

    If you have any questions, email David Strauss at [email protected].

  • Wine Tasting Social Event

     RSVP Now

    April 28th, 2010 at 7:30 p.m
    Location: Wine Sync
    122 West Main Street
    Northville, MI 48167
    Cost: $40 & $75

    Wayne State Engineering Alumni Association is hosting a wine tasting social event on Wednesday, April 28th, 2010 at 7:30 p.m. at Wine Sync (www.winesync.com) located in Northville. This event offers WSEAA members and guests an evening to enjoy wine and food and learn how your participation will help support WSU engineering students education in the areas of research through the EAGER program.

    The cost for this event is $40 per person or $75 per couple.  Proceeds from this event will go directly to support EAGER.

    EAGER – Engineering Alumni Grants for Education and Research – is entering its seventh consecutive year and has proven to be a successful source of funding for collaborative student projects that promote teamwork, engineering ingenuity and creativity.

    Today the EAA is more than 1,000 Engineers strong – one of the most proactive groups on campus – paving the way for the advancement of engineering education and technology at Wayne State University.

    For questions regarding the event, please contact John Micheli at (313) 510-8635 or [email protected].  We hope you can join us for wine tasting.

  • Get Your Country’s Technology-Related Excuses For Not Winning The World Cup In Now

    The next World Cup (wait, can we say that?) soccer tournament begins in less than two months, and it looks like some folks are already lining up the excuses for when their team underperforms on the pitch. The latest one: blaming the use of iPods and video games for preventing teams from building a “collective spirit.” An English coach started the riff by saying, “I’m not a big fan of these big earphones on the way to games,” and that “my thing with the iPod generation is that when they leave the ground and go away to their closeted little lives they shouldn’t forget what’s got them where they are and what impact they can have.” It should be added that his team currently lies near the bottom of the top English league, and their problems likely run much, much deeper than their players’ headphones. But hey, just like when your nation fails at the World Cup, it’s a lot easier to blame technology than anything legitimate, like at the last tournament, when Brazil’s poor performance was blamed on Ronaldinho’s interest in scoring on his PS2 (and his girlfriend) rather than for his team. This pining for the good ol’ days also ignores the idea that technology can deliver some benefits to players and their teams as well, and that the current generation of players might be more effective at bonding over some video games than beers, cards or whatever else their forerunners got up to.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • NASA Scientist Publishes New Book: ‘Coming Climate Crisis? Consider the Past, Beware the Big Fix’

    GREENBELT, Md., April 19 /CHICAGOPRESSRELEASE.COM/ — In the midst of seemingly unending questions about climate change, a new book by Claire L. Parkinson, a world-renowned climate scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., can provide some answers.

    (Logo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20081007/38461LOGO)

    The book, entitled “Coming Climate Crisis? Consider the Past, Beware the Big Fix,” will be published this week by Rowman & Littlefield.

    Parkinson explains why global warming is such a big deal, summarizes 4.6 billion years of climate change on Earth, including periods when Earth was much warmer than now (and others when it was much cooler), and addresses and explains various ‘geoengineering’ schemes being proposed to intentionally modify future climate.

    The book includes a brief history of human impacts and predictions of what might occur in the near future. The bleak nature of some of the predictions, along with the knowledge from climate history that the Earth system is capable of abrupt climate change, make it understandable why geoengineering is being considered. However, Parkinson also explains many limitations of our computer models and potential dangers of unintended consequences, concluding that massive geoengineering “could backfire to become a greater disaster than the one we are trying to correct.” She describes some of the alternatives to geoengineering that could more safely reduce the unwanted changes.

    In this new book, Parkinson attempts to bring balance and perspective and clarify some of the most important and contentious points in the ongoing climate debate. While clearly enthusiastic about what we have learned through science about the history of the Earth and the intricacies of the Earth system, she also cautions against assuming that our understandings are more complete than they really are.

    “This book interweaves discussion of relevant aspects of Earth history, science, the history of science, and human nature,” Parkinson said. “We cannot adequately understand the present or reasonably predict the future without careful consideration of the past and of the quality of the tools at hand.”

    Claire Parkinson is a climatologist at Goddard, where she has worked since 1978, with a research program largely centered on satellite data analysis of sea ice and the role of sea ice in the global climate system. She is also the project scientist for the Earth-observing Aqua satellite mission, has written books on satellite imagery and on the history of science, and has coauthored a textbook on climate modeling and co-edited books on satellite observations related to global change.

    Although the author is employed at NASA Goddard, all opinions expressed in the book are those of the author and are not necessarily shared by others at NASA.

    For information about “Coming Climate Crisis? Consider the Past, Beware the Big Fix,” visit:

    http://www.rowman.com/isbn/0742556166

    For information about NASA Goddard Space Flight Center research, visit:

    http://www.nasa.gov/goddard

    SOURCE NASA

    http://www.nasa.gov

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Microsoft aiming to buy a Mobile Ad network of their very own

    Millennial-Media-2009-Was-The-Year-Of-Mobile-Predictions-For-Top-10-In-2010 With Google going for Admob and Apple owning Quattro, it seems if you make a mobile OS you need an ad network to go with it.

    Business Insider is reporting that Microsoft is making overtures at Millennial Media, one of the larger mobile ad networks, and had been negotiating the likely $500 million deal for the last 2 months.

    According the Business Insider’s sources the two companies have agreed on basic terms but have not finalized the deal yet.

    Acquiring Millennial could quickly give Microsoft broader reach across more publishers and in mobile apps on the iPhone, Android, and other platforms, including of course Windows Phone 7. According to Nielsen, Millennial reaches more than 80% of U.S. mobile Web users, while Microsoft’s in-house solution only reaches around 50%.

    It has recently been suggested that Google uses ad revenue generated by devices to pay OEMs, in essence paying OEMs to use their free software. Microsoft may need a similar strategy to make their handsets cost-neutral or generate additional profit for their own OEMs.

    Read more about the possible deal at Business Insider here.


  • If the X10 lands on AT&T, will anyone buy it?

    Reading over the comments left on this site, it looks like the buzz has died down for the Sony Ericsson Experia X10. The phone was unveiled back in November, but no U.S. carriers have announced support for the device.

    We have heard over and over that the X10 is almost guaranteed to appear on AT&T, but the carrier has been silent in a time that has many competing phones being announced.  A trusted source of Engadget is now claiming the X10 will finally appear on AT&T around late July.

    It was originally pitched as a high-end phone, but the X10 still runs the aging Android 1.6 firmware. There have been signs that Sony Ericsson could update the phone to Android 2.1 this year, but that is not supposed to happen till September. Sony Ericsson also told us the X10 would not support multitouch, but other unofficial sources have offered conflicting reports.

    With AT&T set to receive multiple high-end phones this year with Android 2.1 (Dell Streak 5, Samsung Galaxy S, Nexus One), how many are still thinking about Sony Ericsson? Does it need Android 2.1 before you would consider purchasing it? Does the multitouch support (or lack thereof) even matter?

    Related Posts

  • Foto espía del Peugeot 308 GTi

    Peugeot_308_gti

    Hace poco nos hacíamos eco del rumor por parte de la firma francesa de resucitar las siglas GTi y que posiblemente llegarán bajo un hipotético Peugeot 308 GTi, que podría ser presentado en el Salón de Paris de este mismo año en octubre.

    Parece ser que el proyecto está en un nivel avanzado, puesto que han pillado una foto de un 308 cinco puertas, tal y como ya contamos el 308 GTi sólo se vendería con carrocería de cinco puertas. Parece que además del motor, que previsiblemente será el famoso 1.6 THP de 200 CV, también contará con un kit estético para dotarlo de más caracter.

    Esperaremos a ver si tenemos más información o nuevas fotos, de lo que podría ser un interesante renacer de los modelos GTi.

    Vía | Autosblog.fr



  • AndroidGuys: Finalist In The Wirefly.com Blog Awards!

    Check this out! AndroidGuys has made it to the finals for the Wirefly.com Best Android Blog! What a huge honor! We’re looking to our readers to cast your votes for AndoidGuys as many times as you can (right now, we’re in last place!). Your incentive? Well, Wirefly will give us $250, we’ll match it, and take that $500 and invest it in prizes and give aways for our readers! We’ll give out those prizes on our weekly podcasts, our new Facebook page, or on Twitter!

    We want to be your one-stop outlet for Android related news! Thanks so much for your support!

    Might We Suggest…


  • mocoNews Quick Hits 04.19.2010


    iPhone 4G and 3GS side by side

    »  Next generation iPhone—supposedly found a bar—has a front-facing video chat camera, flash on camera and improved display. [Gizmodo]

    »  Those who buy the new HTC Desire handset from T-Mobile UK will get two free films on the operator’s new on-demand movie service. [Mobile Entertainment]

    »  Your BlackBerry isn’t as secure as you may think. [InfoWorld]

    »  Some tips for Opera Mini iPhone users. [Gadgetwise]

    »  Another phone outed: BlackBerry Pearl 9105 has a T9 keypad. [Boy Genius Report]


  • PETAP LLC Presents the Release of Partners in Education and Tuition Assistance Programs (PETAP)

    GRAND JUNCTION, Colo., April 19 /CHICAGOPRESSRELEASE.COM/ — PETAP LLC presents PETAP.org, an organization that focuses on providing tuition assistance and higher education resources for students. With a national community focus, PETAP.org partners with academic and corporate lending institutions.

    The objective of PETAP.org is to include financial and academic resources partnerships at national and local community levels to support and promote higher education. PETAP.org is designed to be a one stop resource for information on accrediting organizations, campus based and online schools, academic and career assessment counseling and testing, creating an education plan, finding the right school, tuition assistance, and business partnership options.

    PETAP.org provides business partnership opportunities for schools, colleges and universities, affiliates, and academic resource partners. Corporate Lending Partners can provide discounted tuition assistance credit to eligible applicants. Member Schools can benefit from PETAP.org by being listed on PETAP.org’s Partner School Directory.

    PETAP.org’s degree and certificate program directory is easy to use and organized by campus. There are over 2000 schools listed with hundreds of higher education program options available. Customized searches can be performed to locate Online schools, Traditional schools, Vocational schools, and Natural Healing schools and degree or certificate programs. PETAP.org provides access to a directory of information that is intended to assist students in making the best decisions about educational plans and goals.

    For more information visit http://www.PETAP.org

    About PETAP LLC:

    Partners in Education and Tuition Assistance Programs is a company that offers complimentary no obligation information about higher education programs, as well as information to students who need financial and academic resources.

    *(LOGO 72dpi: Send2Press.com/mediaboom/10-0419-petap_72dpi.jpg)

    This release was issued on behalf of the above organization by Send2Press(R), a unit of Neotrope(R). http://www.Send2Press.com

    SOURCE PETAP LLC

    http://www.PETAP.org

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Gov. Rell, Democratic, GOP Leaders Pledge To Close $725 Million Budget Deficit Before Regular Session Ends May 5

    Trying to capitalize on the bipartisanship that led to a budget deal for 2010 last week, Republican Gov. M. Jodi Rell offered a new plan Monday – including an early retirement plan for state employes – to solve the state’s ongoing fiscal crisis for the next fiscal year.

    In an unusual display of cooperation, Rell stepped outside of her Capitol office after the meeting and stood side-by-side with the top Democratic and Republican leaders to declare they will continue working together – after several vetoes and essentially a full year of sometimes-bitter clashes over financial issues.

    When asked if she believes the two sides can reach a deal for the 2011 fiscal year before the legislative session ends May 5, Rell responded, “I’m always optimistic.”

    Rell and the Democrats agreed not to discuss the plan in detail because it is still being reviewed by fiscal analysts in the coming days.

    But insiders said the plan includes an early retirement proposal for state employees, which would save money in the short-term by prompting the departure of highly paid employees who would be replaced by lower-paid, new employees. Rell said the early retirement is “one of the things” that she has asked Democrats to consider in the plan.

    “There are no taxes and no cuts to municipal aid,” Rell told reporters outside her suite of offices.

    The plan also assumes that the state will receive about $356 million in federal stimulus funds to close a projected deficit of about $725 million for the fiscal year that starts in July. Another idea being discussed is deferring another payment of $100 million into the state employees’ pension, but some lawmakers say that is essentially a shell game because the money must eventually be paid and no one’s pension is being reduced. An initial $100 million was deferred for the current fiscal year, and another $100 million is being discussed for the next fiscal year. The legislature, however, would not be requeired

    Republicans are also asking for $150 million in additional concessions from the state employee unions, but the unions have rejected that idea.

    “Obviously, it is totally up to the unions,” said House Republican leader Larry Cafero of Norwalk. “It’s a unilateral thing.”

    When asked if the Democrats would support additional union concessions, House Speaker Christopher Donovan – a major union supporter – said, “We’re looking at the governor’s proposal right now, and it’s not in there.”

    Besides attempting to close the gap, Rell and lawmakers are trying to find the best way to borrow $1.3 billion to cover operating costs for the 2011 fiscal year. Under the law, they must find a way to “securitize” certain revenue streams to pay off those bonds. Despite a formal rejection by the Democratic-controlled legislature, Rell said Monday that she still supports legalizing the keno electronic gambling game and using about $60 million in keno revenues each year to pay off the bonds.

    The Democrats have responded by saying they would use revenues from utility customers of the Connecticut Light & Power Co., which has ignited an intense campaign by CL&P with newspaper and radio advertisements that rip the proposal.

    “This hidden tax will cost electric customers $180 million every year for the next 10 years,” says the advertisement by CL&P. “Customers of municipal electric providers would be exempt from paying; UI customers won’t pay until 2014. These funds would be used to float new revenue bonds designed to offset the state’s deficit – creating more debt to pay existing debt. Don’t let the state use your electric bill to pay for its own debt. Fight this hidden tax at www.NotMyBill.org”

    “I have never liked that option from the beginning,” Rell said of the electric option. “I don’t think there’s a lot of support for that.”

    No follow-up meetings are scheduled yet as the numbers will be crunched and analyzed in the coming days.

    Donovan said that crafting a deal is possible because all sides are moving forward.

    “We’ve been working together – the bunch we have here today. We know where each other are,” Donovan said. “The governor has put forward a proposal that we’re going to take a look at, building off the success of last week where we closed 2010. Our hope is that we continue that effort and close 2011.”

    “There was a huge step forward when we closed the deficit for 2010,” said Senate President Pro Tem Donald Williams, the highest-ranking senator. “Everybody’s resolved to roll up our sleeves and tackle this fiscal problem. … I don’t think anybody expected us to close the 2010 deficit in a bipartisan way this session. We did that.”

    “I’m more optimistic after the meeting that we can balance our 2011 budget – whether it’s May 5 or shortly thereafter,” said Senate Republican leader John McKinney of Southport. “I think the governor’s plan that she put forward is a pretty good one. There are some things in there I don’t like. Obviously, I don’t like the deferral of pension funds. But, by and large, I think her openness to an early retirement program for state employees – something that legislative Republicans offered about two years ago – helps us get to where we need to be, not just for 2011, but structurally for 2012 and 2013 as well.”

    Both McKinney and Cafero said that there would be a much better chance for budget savings if Democratic leaders put more pressure on SEBAC for more concessions.

    “Were the Democratic leadership to publicly say that SEBAC should come to the table and sit down with the governor … that would go a long way to getting them to the table,” McKinney said. “But the silence of the Democratic leadership gives a lot of strength to SEBAC’s current position.”

    In April 2008, the Republicans unveiled a budget in which the cornerstone was an ERIP – rather than a simple retirement incentive plan that starts only at the age of 55.

    “I predicted in April … that this thing would be in force by February 2009,” Cafero told Capitol Watch on Monday night. “I said to the governor, publicly and privately, that there’s a whole host of people who are out there with 25 years [of service] who are just shy of the age.”

    Under the SEBAC agreement, those eligible must have a magic number of 75. For example, a person who is 54 years old with 21 years of service would reach the number of 75.

    “We got calls and calls and calls when we came out with our plan” for early retirement, Cafero said. “We missed a whole group of people that we could now capture” at an earlier age.

    The GOP plan would save about $65 million in the 2011 fiscal year – assuming 1,000 jobs at $65,000 each.

    McKinney and Cafero had no advance notice Monday that Rell would support an early retirement plan.

    “We need the flexibility to consolidate agencies,” Cafero said. “The only way you’re going to get flexibility” is to do an ERIP.

  • 1968: Tunnel Port Ford Mustang vs. Chevrolet Camaro Z/28 – Archived Comparison

    Race driver Sam Posey evaluates 1968’s best American “sedans.”

    The Camaro and Mustang first met on these pages in March of 1968, but the clash was part of a six-car showdown—and they finished fifth and sixth, respectively. We knew the two cars had more potential than the relatively wimpy cars Detroit had given us for that test, so for the July issue that same year we invited both to send us the hottest they had to offer. We had the cars delivered to Lime Rock Park in Connecticut, where we met up with Trans-Am wizard-driver Sam Posey.

    _______________________________________________

    Originally published in Car and Driver magazine in July 1968.

    The Lime Rock pit straight is a wavy, gray blur. Up front two roaring Holleys are trying to suck a hole in the at­mosphere. “A 7000 rpm redline? Christ Almighty, it’s gonna burst.” But it doesn’t, and Sam Posey snaps the shift lev­er into fourth at seven grand as the speedometer climbs past 110 in one of the absolute wildest street machines ever to come out of Detroit. No question about it: we’re in the middle of one of the most beautiful goddam road tests in the annals of mankind.

    Keep Reading: 1968: Tunnel Port Ford Mustang vs. Chevrolet Camaro Z/28 – Archived Comparison

    Related posts:

    1. 2010 Lingenfelter Chevrolet Camaro SS vs. 2010 Roush Ford Mustang Stage 3 – Comparison Tests
    2. 2010 Chevy Corvette Grand Sport vs. 2010 Ford Mustang Shelby GT500 – Comparison Tests
    3. 2010 Chevrolet Corvette Grand Sport vs. 2010 Ford Mustang Shelby GT500 – Video
  • Windcuts: Generating 3D Form from Wind Movement Data

    windcuts.jpg
    Windcuts [flickr.com] consists of various experiments that turn quantitative sensor data into visually compelling physical instantiations. Wind movement measurement data, such as wind direction, velocity and temperature, was used as the foundation to generate a 3D form, which was then physically drilled out of a piece of wood.

    The direction of the physical line corresponds with the direction of the wind. The width and speed of movement reflects the wind speed. The temperature is mapped unto the height. The materials ‘surface plateau’ height represents zero degrees Celsius. So when the shape dips below the surface, it means the wind’s below zero degrees.

    In terms of innovative wooden data representations, we already have:
    . Tidal Data Table
    . Weeping Willow Mood Sculptures
    . Stock Market Data Sculpture
    . 3D MRI Scan Model
    . Bus Route Structure
    . Global Cities

    Via @mtchl.


  • Techart goes all matte with Panamera Black Edition

    Filed under: , , ,

    Techart Panamera Black Edition – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Painting a car matte black is nothing new. In fact, a quick look at the Autoblog archive reveals that both manufacturers like Lotus and Mazda as well as dozens of tuners have succumbed to the trend. Hamann, Brabus, Gemballa and Novitec have all come out with special edition models with the flat black livery. The latest to join the club is Techart, which recently unveiled the Panamera Black Edition.

    Completely swathed in matte black, Techart’s latest model features their aerodynamic kit, 22-inch alloy wheels (painted in black, of course), daytime running lights and a custom exhaust system. The color theme continues on the inside with black leather and Alcantara seating in addition to a matte black dashboard, door panel trim, center console, air vents, cup holder and pretty much anything else that can be painted.

    The price for the Black Edition? €220,000, which is nearly an €85,000 premium over the base price of a Panamera Turbo in Germany. Yikes! Follow the jump for the brief press release from Techart and browse through the images in the high-res gallery below.

    [Source: Techart]

    Continue reading Techart goes all matte with Panamera Black Edition

    Techart goes all matte with Panamera Black Edition originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 19 Apr 2010 17:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • The Anatomy of a Tweet [Infographic]

    It looks a lot like a migraine. Those 140 characters? Packed with data. [mehack via ReadWriteWeb] More »