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  • 2010 FIA GT1 World Championship to include four Maserati MC12s

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    Maserati MC12

    Maserati MC12 GT1 – Click above to enlarge

    While GT1 cars have faded away from the American Le Mans Series, they’re still running strong in other parts of the world. The 2010 FIA GT1 World Championship kicks off a 10-race series this weekend in Abu Dhabi with two dozen cars signed up, including a quartet of Maserati MC12s. The Maseratis are the defending GT1 champions and this year’s new series will see them challenged by Ford GTs, Nissan GT-Rs, Lamborghini Murcielagos, Aston Martin DB9s and ex-works Chevy Corvettes.

    The format for this year’s events has been changed from a single two-hour race to a pair of one-hour sprints. Four events will be held outside Europe, including this weekend’s races and December’s season finale in Argentina.

    [Source: Maserati, FIA]

    Continue reading 2010 FIA GT1 World Championship to include four Maserati MC12s

    2010 FIA GT1 World Championship to include four Maserati MC12s originally appeared on Autoblog on Sat, 17 Apr 2010 18:36:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • The Volcanic Ash From Eyjafjallajökull Is Worsening, Showing No Signs Of Letting Up

    There’s little indication that the situation in the air in Europe, where there Icelandic volcano Eyjafjallajökull continues to spew ash, will get any better.

    This AP video — via the LA Times — offers the latest on what observers see is a worsening situation. The LA Times also has a handy map of what European airports are closed (hint: lots of them). Preliminary estimates have put airline industry losses around $1 billion.

     

     

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Palm Developer Days, AT&T Launch Talk and More… From the Forums

    Here’s some of the latest talk in the forums:

    We look forward to seeing you in the forums!  Not a member? Remember – registration is free, and the benefits are numerous indeed.

  • TechArt Black Edition Porsche Panamera is all matte-black love

    Tuner TechArt has released a new tuning package for the Porsche Panamera sedan that turns the Stuttgart luxury sedan into something Batman would drive.

    Known as the TechArt Black Edition, this Panamera features an exterior that comes entirely in matte-black. The TechArt Aerodynamic Kit I adds multifunctional daytime running light system in black, a TechArt exhaust system and red TechArt branded calipers peaking through the TechArt 22-inch Formula II light alloy wheels.

    Click here to get prices on the 2010 Porsche Panamera.

    Inside, TechArt’s Black Edition Panamera gets black leather mixed with alcantara as well as hand-sewed stitching and leather piping in flamenco red. It also features trims, door entry guards, cup holder or air vents present themselves in matte-black painted design.

    Yes – we want one badly.

    Make the jump for the high-res image gallery.

    Refresher: The $89,800 Porsche Panamera S is powered by a 400-hp V8 allowing for a 0-60 mph time of 5.2 seconds with a top speed of 175 mph. $93,800 Panamera 4S is powered by the same 400-hp V8. The $132,600 Porsche Panamera Turbo is powered by a turbocharged V8 making 500-hp allowing for a 0-60 mph time of 4.0 seconds with a top speed of 188 mph.

    TechArt Black Edition Porsche Panamera:

    – By: Omar Rana


  • VW Truck Not for Canada?

    VW Names New Light Pickup Amarok: Inuit for Wolf
    Canadian Auto Press

    Do you want an Amarok? Well, even if you somehow knew what that was you’re not going to be able to get one unless you live outside of North America.

    VW Amarok

    VW Amarok

    Yes, the Amarok is Volkswagen’s new light-duty pickup truck, and despite a good opportunity to go up against the likes of Ford’s popular Sport Trac and Honda’s highly successful Ridgeline it’s only going to be sold in South America, where it launch first, early next year, Central America, next spring, and then Russia, Europe, Africa and Australia.

    You’d never know by the prototype’s name, which was simply dubbed “Concept Pickup”, that VW would conjure up something so unorthodox, but it does follow a cast of rather unique nameplates such as Touareg, Tiguan and Routan. The Amarok is at least easier to say and spell than Touareg, and the name conjures up images of running amok in the mud (at least to those who speak English), which is a good thing for a pickup truck.

    “This name fits the characteristics of our pickup perfectly, which will set new standards in its class,” commented Stephan Schaller, CEO of Volkswagen Commercial Vehicles. “We took great care selecting this name, which can be used globally and is meant to invoke positive associations in all relevant international markets. The Amarok is a powerful and robust vehicle with great stamina – just like the wolf,” he added.

    Just in case you were wondering, Amarok means “wolf” in Inuit, so in the same fashion that Volkswagen’s earlier cars followed a windswept theme, such as Scirocco and Corrado, the company embraces an indigenous theme now; the Touareg is named after a nomadic Saharan tribe. Then again, “he loves stones”, the rough translation for Amarok in most South American jurisdictions, might not go over quite as well.

    So is it a wolf in sheep’s clothing? Well, the designers certainly wouldn’t want people to think its styling is timid in any way, and from our view it looks assertive without too much bravado, in keeping with VW’s semi-sophisticated albeit fun-loving brand image. There’s little else we know about the truck, however, other than it will be a four-door pickup truck with four-wheel drive, for starters, with a regular cab to follow, that it was “developed by scratch”, according to a press release, and that it will be “powered by Volkswagen’s powerful yet efficient, next generation common rail turbo diesel engines which will achieve class leading fuel consumption and emissions…” continued the release.

    The truck you’re looking at was shown in Sao Paulo at South America’s largest auto show back in November of last year, but it was shown earlier at Hanover’s IAA Commercial Vehicles Show in September. The production model will be built in Argentina.

    If this is something you’d buy, and we’re guessing Canadians, which already have an affinity for Volkswagens in general and VW diesels in particular, would buy into the Amarok (after all, it’s name is First Nations Canadian), then you should voice your opinion in this publication as well as to your local VW dealer. VW Canada often opts for vehicles that suit our market and not the US, such as the City Golf and City Jetta models, so there’s a chance enough execs are sitting on the fence with respect to the Amarok that a few plugs from fans will tip the scales.







  • The Dodd Bill Will Kill America’s Job Creation Engine And Goldman Is Just The Tip Of The Iceberg

    (This guest post comes courtesy of Frontlinethoughts.com)

    When you draft a 1,300-page “financial reform” bill, various special interests get language tucked into the bill to help their agendas. However, the unintended consequences can be devastating. And the financial reform bill has more than a few such items. Today, we look briefly at a few innocent paragraphs that could simply kill the job-creation engine of the US. I know that a few Congressmen and even more staffers read my letter, so I hope that someone can fix this. The Wall Street Journal today noted that the bill, while flawed, keeps getting better with each revision. Let’s hope that’s the case here.

    Then I’ll comment on the Goldman Sachs indictment. As we all know, there is never just one cockroach. This could be a much bigger story, and understanding some of the details may help you. As an aside, I was writing in late 2006 about the very Collateralized Debt Obligations that are now front and center. There is both more and less to the story than has come out so far. And I’ll speculate about how all this could have happened. Let’s jump right in.

    First, Let’s Kill the Angels

    I wrote about the Dodd bill and its problems last week. But a new problem has surfaced that has major implications for the US economy and our ability to grow it. For all intents and purposes, the bill will utterly devastate angel investing in the US. And as we will see, that is not hyperbole. For a Congress and administration that purports to be all about jobs, this section of the bill makes less than no sense. It is a job and innovation killer of the first order.

    First, let’s look at a very important part of the US economic machine, the angel investing network. An angel investor, or angel (also known as a business angel or informal investor) is an affluent individual who provides capital for a business startup, usually in exchange for convertible debt or ownership equity. A small but increasing number of angel investors organize themselves into angel groups or angel networks to share research and pool their investment capital.

    Angels typically invest their own funds, unlike venture capitalists, who manage the pooled money of others in a professionally managed fund. Although it typically reflects the investment judgment of an individual, the actual entity that provides the funding may be a trust, business, limited liability company, investment fund, etc.

    Angel capital fills the gap in startup financing between “friends and family” (sometimes humorously given the acronym FFF, which stands for “friends, family and fools”) who provide seed funding, and venture capital. Although it is usually difficult to raise more than a few hundred thousand dollars from friends and family, most traditional venture capital funds are usually not able to consider investments under $1-2 million.

    Thus, angel investment is a common second round of financing for high-growth startups, and accounts in total for almost as much money invested annually as all venture capital funds combined, but invested into more than ten times as many companies (US$26 billion vs. $30.69 billion in the US in 2007, into 57,000 companies vs. 3,918 companies). (Wikipedia)

    (Incidentally, angel investing got its name from people who invested in Broadway plays, and the term began to be used for investors in similarly risky startups.)

    This has become a very big deal in the US. Angel investors put as much money to work as all the mainstream venture capital funds. And the internet has greatly expanded the network of angel investors. In 1996 there were about ten organized angel networks, most quite small. Now there are many hundreds, and some of them are quite large and organized, with some serious money amongst the members.

    “Angel investors committed fewer dollars but increased the number of investments during the first half of 2009,” according to “The Angel Investor Market in Q1Q2 2009: A Halt in the Market Contraction” by the Center for Venture Research at the University of New Hampshire. Total investments in the first half of 2009 were $9.1 billion, a decrease of 27% over the first half of 2008, the study reports. However, 24,500 entrepreneurial ventures received angel funding during the period, a 6% increase from the first half of 2008. The number of active investors in the first half of 2009 was 140,200 individuals, virtually unchanged from the same period in 2008. (Tech Transfer Blog)

    And according to a conversation I had with the very enthusiastic David Rose of Angelsoft this week in New York, the numbers are growing as the economy improves. If you assume that as many new ventures were funded in the latter half of 2009, then we are looking at 50,000 new businesses last year. At an average of (my guess) 10 employees a firm, plus all the business they contract for, that is at least 500,000 jobs, with the promise of many more for the firms that become viable.

    Angel investors do more than just provide money. Many are successful businessmen, and they give guidance and often bring their networks of contacts and potential business partners to the new venture. While I can’t find the statistics, I will bet you that companies that are started with angel money are more successful than those that aren’t.

    And remember, that is 50,000 new businesses or more every year, as 2009 was not exactly a banner economic year. This is the very heart of the job-creation machine in the US. It is what keeps this country competitive. And the Dodd bill places this at severe risk. Let’s look at how it would handcuff potential investors.

    Here are a few quotes from Venture Beat, a publication of the venture industry. ( http://venturebeat.com/2010/03/26/angel-investing-chris-dodd/)

    “There are three changes that should have a particular effect on angel investors, a catch-all category which includes everyone from friends and family members who invest in a startup, to unaffiliated wealthy individuals, to side investments made by venture capitalists acting on their own.

    “First, Dodd’s bill would require startups raising funding to register with the Securities and Exchange Commission, and then wait 120 days for the SEC to review their filing. A second provision raises the wealth requirements for an “accredited investor” who can invest in startups – if the bill passes, investors would need assets of more than $2.3 million (up from $1 million) or income of more than $450,000 (up from $250,000). The third restriction removes the federal pre-emption allowing angel and venture financing in the United States to follow federal regulations, rather than face different rules between states.”

    This is not a partisan issue. Let’s look at what former Google employee, angel investor, and Obama supporter Chris Sacca has to say:

    “Obviously, I’m deeply concerned about Senator Dodd’s proposal to place these restrictions on angel investing. I think angel investing is undeniably one of the largest engines for job creation as well as innovation and competitiveness on the global scale for the United States. There’s no doubt about it that the restrictions that he’s proposing would absolutely chill investing.

    “Specifically, one of the things we need to take into account is while 10 years ago it may have taken years to build a company, companies are now built in a matter of weeks. So this 120-day waiting period is frankly ridiculous. I have companies with tens of thousands and hundreds of thousands of users that are built in a matter of weeks. They’re generating actual dollars of revenue, creating jobs, investing in real estate office space, capital equipment, etc. If they had to wait 120 days to actually apply for the ability to obtain financing it would absolutely just crush that market.

    “I think this is a very short-sighted proposal. It seems far afield from the problems that the banking committee is actually trying to address.”

    Additionally, allowing states to set the rules rather than having one set of rules that governs business startups, is guaranteed chaos and adds another layer of costs. Which state will require what rules and how will they conflict? Will a startup have to register with each state where there might be an investor? Aaaggghh! Seriously?

    So why is it in there? Let me offer an informed speculation. Remember when I was writing about four years ago about the SEC wanting to raise the accredited investor standards to $2.5 million? I provided a link to let readers comment on that proposal, and about 400 of my readers made 99% negative comments. It went away. And the SEC also lost the ability to regulate hedge funds, through a court decision that said the agency didn’t have appropriate Congressional authority.

    So, what’s a regulator to do? Get the language you want inserted into a 1,300-page bill, and add a few extra dollops of authority just to see if you can get it. (And someone from some state regulatory organization had to have lobbied for removing the federal exemption. Those things just don’t appear without someone pushing them.)

    During the last contretemps, the SEC had a carve-out (if I remember correctly) for venture capital and private equity funds, as far as the accredited investor qualifications were concerned. They left the limits at “just” $1 million for venture and private equity, while appropriately acknowledging that they had no wish to hurt the venture capital or angel investing mechanisms in the US.

    I testified before Congress that the limits should be removed altogether with regard to investments like hedge funds. My argument is philosophical in nature. Quoting from my 2007 testimony (the entirety of which is here: http://www.2000wave.com/article.asp?id=mwo012607):

    “Why should 95% (or maybe soon to be 99%!) of Americans, simply because they have less than $1,000,000 (or $2,500,000?), be precluded from the same choices available to the rich? Why do we assume those with less than $1,000,000 to be sophisticated enough to understand the risks in stocks (which have lost trillions of investor dollars), stock options (the vast majority of which expire worthless), futures (where 95% of retail investors lose money), mutual funds (80% of which underperform the market), and a whole host of very high-risk investments, yet deem them to be incapable of understanding the risks in hedge funds?”

    Equal Choice, Equal Access, Equal Opportunity

    “…. If you were to tell investors that they would be discriminated against because of their gender or race or sexual preference, there would be an outcry. To put it simply: it is a matter of Choice. It is a matter of Equal Access. It is a matter of Equal Opportunity. Congress should change the rules and allow all investors to be truly equal, at least as to opportunity.

    “I believe it is time to change a system where 95% (and maybe soon to be almost 99%) of Americans are relegated to second-class status based solely on their income and wealth and not on their abilities. It is simply wrong to deny a person equal opportunity and access to what many feel are the best managers in the world, based upon old rules designed for a different time and different purpose. I hope that someday Congress will see to it that small investors are invited to sit at the table as equals with the rich.”

    Let me sadly acknowledge that it is likely that the accredited investor limits will be raised. The handwriting is on the wall, as regulators seem to really want that and have the ear of the bill writers. I hope that is not the case, but I fear that it is. It is not the end of the world, but rather more of a point of personal liberty to me.

    But that is not the case in respect to venture and angel investing. There, the difference between the definition of an accredited investor, at a level of $1 million vs. $2.5, million is absolutely critical to the national enterprise. Think of it as a wide pyramid. The number of individuals with a net worth of over $1 million was about 4% of the population a few years ago (it may be less now). The percentages then drop fast for each increase of a million dollars. By raising the standards to $2.5 million, we would be cutting out millions of potential angel investors.

    Unless I am missing something, I hear no cry to protect angel investors from themselves. This is a relatively seasoned group. They know that the majority of their angel investments will fail, which is why they get larger portions of the companies they do invest in. The risks are high.

    It is not enough that we are going to raise taxes on angel investors. Do we also need to restrict their activities?

    Registering an offering with the SEC can be VERY expensive. Legal and accounting bills can mount up to a $100,000 before you know it. And does the SEC really want to monitor 50,000 additional offerings each year? Do you think there would be any hope of a 4-month response time? The most a poor regulator could do would be a cursory reading to make sure the proposal checked all the boxes. I can tell you that an angel investor does more than cursory checking before he puts in money.

    Let’s do a back-of-the-napkin cost analysis. 50,000 new ventures times $100,000. That’s $5 billion. That is a hefty cost burden to put on risky new businesses, many of which are raising less than a million. And angel investors typically will not pay for that cost. That will have to be borne by the entrepreneurs, who don’t have the money to being with. Otherwise they wouldn’t need the angels. This will kill many new businesses before they can even get launched.

    Quite frankly, I think when the SEC commissioners look into this they will realize the disaster that would be visited upon them if this became law. Their budgets and man-power are already stretched. A little pushing and prodding from those who can should go a long way. If you can make a few phone calls, please do so. I know I will.

    Here’s what needs to happen. Get rid of the disastrous rule requiring filing with the SEC. It makes no sense and will cost hundreds of thousand of jobs and divert the SEC from their main tasks. Angel investing has not been a problem to date, and there is no need to fix something that is not broken.

    Second, if you really think we need to raise the accredited investor limits, then carve out an exemption for venture capital.

    And keep the clause that gives startups federal exemption.

    And, if you really want to create jobs, then cut capital-gains taxes on new ventures and angel investing to 10% or less. Let’s create some incentive to get America moving!

    Some Quick Thoughts on Goldman

    Goldman Sachs is all over the news after being charged with fraud. The way I see it, this is essentially a charge that there was not full disclosure. And it appears to me that that is true. It also is true that Goldman will argue (or I think they will) that only very sophisticated investors who signed very lengthy offering documents were involved, and they should have known better. They were also reaching for yield.

    But this is just the tip of the iceberg. I was writing about these “CDOs Squared” in late 2006, and many of these were done in 2007. It was obvious to me (and others) that they were going to blow up. I often wondered who was buying the equity tranches of these synthetic CDOs.

    Last week I read a very interesting report from propublica.org about a hedge fund called Magnetar, which basically did the same trade as in the Goldman deal. And they did those deals with nine banks.

    I should apologize here and note that I intended last week to send you the entire, if lengthy, article as an Outside the Box, but for the first time in years just got overwhelmed in New York and did not have the time. You can read the whole article at http://www.propublica.org/feature/the-magnetar-trade-how-one-hedge-fund-helped-keep-the-housing-bubble-going.

    Let me quote a few paragraphs.

    “From what we’ve learned, there was nothing illegal in what Magnetar did; it was playing by the rules in place at the time. And the hedge fund didn’t cause the housing bubble or the financial crisis. But the Magnetar Trade does illustrate the perverse incentives and reckless behavior that characterized the last days of the boom.

    “Magnetar worked with major banks, including Merrill Lynch, Citigroup, and UBS. At least nine banks helped Magnetar hatch deals. Merrill Lynch, Citigroup and UBS all did multiple deals with Magnetar. JPMorgan Chase, often lauded for having avoided the worst of the CDO craze, actually ended up doing one of the riskiest deals with Magnetar, in May 2007, nearly a year after housing prices started to decline. According to marketing material and prospectuses, the banks didn’t disclose to CDO investors the role Magnetar played. [emphasis mine]

    “Many of the bankers who worked on these deals personally benefited, earning millions in annual bonuses. The banks booked profits at the outset. But those gains were fleeting. As it turned out, the banks that assembled and marketed the Magnetar CDOs had trouble selling them. And when the crash came, they were among the biggest losers.”

    Look at the charts below. The financial institutions are once again soaring on new profits, with almost 30% of total corporate profits and a huge proportion of the growth in profits coming in the last 12 months.

    financial profits

     

    Side bet: Goldman and at least 8 other banks are going to have serious litigation costs, if they don’t actually have to eat the losses of the investors in these synthetic CDOs. Understand, these were not securitizations of actual mortgages. They were securitizations of derivatives that acted like these mortgages, and the worst tranches of them to boot. On top of their loan losses, there could be tens of billions of losses to investors in the CDOs they sold. This will play out over years.

    As Pro Public noted, the hedge funds did nothing illegal. If the housing market had continued to go up another year or two, most of them would have imploded while waiting for the market to break. More than a few funds did. It can be a difficult thing to bet on the end of the world and then have to wait.

    The issue is disclosure. I wonder if the ratings agencies knew. Would that have changed their views?

    I hope someone writes an in-depth investigative book about this. I’ll buy it.

    La Jolla and Dallas

    Tomorrow night I am going to a birthday party for the publisher of this letter, Mike Casson, who will be 65. Mike and I have been close friends and business associates for 40 years. We can’t remember how many deals we have done together over the the decades. But there was one thing in common with all of them: we have never had a piece of paper or a contract. It has all been done by handshake. My grandfather was born in Texas in 1859, and he taught my Dad who taught me that in Texas a man’s handshake is his contract. Mike is a true Texan and a true friend. Without him, you would probably not be reading this letter. A man could not ask for a better friend and partner.

    This week has been a whirlwind. After a speech on Tuesday in New York, I appeared on Bloomberg and Fox Business, and then the next day did Yahoo Tech Ticker, along with meetings and an in-depth interview with Steve Forbes at his office, which will be up soon, as well as a turn on Canada’s BNN, remote from the Nasdaq. (I am sure you can Google the others if you care to.)

    Then a dinner with Art Cashin (of CNBC fame) with Tiffani and son-in-law Ryan. Art was in rare form, and we learned a lot. (Art, you can’t waffle on me on Maine! You have to be there!)

    This week I fly to La Jolla for my annual Strategic Investment Conference, co-sponsored by my partners at Altegris Investments. As usual, we are sold out and I have a few upset friends who could not get tickets. I think we will have to move it to a larger venue next year. It is quite the all-star lineup. Niall Ferguson, George Friedman, Lacy Hunt, Paul McCulley, David Rosenberg, Gary Shilling, Jon Sundt, Mike West and your humble analyst. Seriously, I think we do the best conference in the country. I will report back!

    And the Mavericks start the playoffs on Sunday. I think there are half a dozen teams that could win it. We have been doing well lately. I am looking forward to being home most of the next six weeks, and I’m hoping the Mavericks go deep into the playoffs (and win?!?).

    It’s time to hit the send button. Have a great week. I know I am.

    Your ready for the weekend analyst,

    John Mauldin
    [email protected]

    Copyright 2010 John Mauldin. All Rights Reserved

    John Mauldin, Best-Selling author and recognized financial expert, is also editor of the free Thoughts From the Frontline that goes to over 1 million readers each week. For more information on John or his FREE weekly economic letter go to: http://www.frontlinethoughts.com/learnmore

    To subscribe to John Mauldin’s E-Letter please click here:
    http://www.frontlinethoughts.com/subscribe.asp

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Spying School District Snapped Thousands of Student Photos [Privacy]

    In February, Philadelphia’s Lower Merion School District had remotely activated webcams of school-provided MacBooks 42 times. In fact, the school snapped thousands of photos in total, a collection one especially creepy district employee called the “little LMSD soap opera.” The Philadelphia Inquirer has the latest news in the saga, which you can catch up with on their website, Philly.com. More »







  • Saturday video fun — Radiskull & Devil Doll

    I can’t remember when this Joe Sparks creation was a big thing on the web, but I do know it was an entire epoch or two back from the net of today. I can also tell how far back it was by the state of my Radiskull and Devil Doll, “Now it’s time to kick it,” t-shirt.

    Here’s episode one, “I am the Radiskull”

  • $3 Million Grant Will Push Green Jobs and Sustainable Hydrokinetic Power

    Tulane University has won a $3 million federal grant to build RiverSphere, a renewable energy center focusing on hydrokinetic powerTulane University has just won a $3 million grant from the U.S. Economic Development Administration to build RiverSphere, a renewable energy center that will focus on developing new hydrokinetic turbines.  The project includes floating barge facilities that will be available to private technology companies for testing prototype hydrokinetic turbines in the slow moving currents of the Mississippi.

    Hydrokinetic turbines are emerging as a more sustainable way to draw power from water, compared to conventional hydropower which involves building dams to create intense water pressure.  Hydrokinetic turbines can operate on the available current in natural waterways as well as canals and other manmade streams, and they can be tethered in place with minimal disruption of the surrounding environment.

    (more…)

  • Saab will continue to offer OnStar service on its cars

    Saab Cars North America said it will continue to offer GM’s OnStar feature on its vehicles. The relationship starts with the 2010 model year, offering OnStar in the same format as GM’s U.S. vehicles. Buyers will get one year free, with the option to renew.

    GM has previously provided its service to Volkswagen, Audi, Subaru, Lexus, Acura and Isuzu, however, those relationships ended throughout the last six years.

    GM sold Saab to Spyker Cars in February. Spyker CEO Victor Muller, recently said that Saab is in talks with possible partners about exchanging technologies as it tries to cut cost and hit profit by 2012.

    – By: Omar Rana

    Source: Automotive News (Subscription Required)


  • Earthquakes Volcanoes & Solar Activity – 18-24 April new DANGER for quakes, volcanoes & weather by Piers Corbyn

    Article Tags: Headline Story, Piers Corbyn

    article image

    Piers Corbyn, astrophysicist of WeatherAction.com long range weather & climate forecasters today announced important findings connecting solar-lunar effects on earthquakes and volcanoes and warned that the major solar explosion (Coronal Mass Ejection) of 13th April will increase risk of: more earthquakes, renewed eruption of Iceland’s volcano & extreme weather events world-wide as it hits Earth in his predicted Solar-Lunar Impact periods 18-24 April.

    Click to download PDF file, Earthquakes Volcanoes Solar Activity & NEW Connections by Piers Corbyn

    Read in full with comments »   


  • Want To See A Crazy-As-Hell Chinese Real Estate Website With Tons Of Ads?

    We’re not sure what this means, but we promise, you will never complain about the number of ads on a website ever again after checking out Soufun.com, a major Chinese real estate portal partly owned by Telstra, in Australia.

    Seriously, no picture can do justice to the spectacle, so you should just go check out the website yourself. It won’t mess up your computer, we’re pretty sure. (via Bill Bishop)

    soufun

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Video: 2011 Honda CR-Z promotional video is pretty awesome

    Gaucho Productions, the London-based film and digital agency, has produced the launch film for the new Honda CR-Z. The 90 second film was commissioned by Honda Motor Europe, debuted at the international press launch of the CR-Z, and will be used for press and marketing across Europe, the Middle East and Africa.

    Click through for the video.

    Click here for more news on the Honda CR-Z.

    Refresher: The 2011 Honda CR-Z is powered by a 1.5L i-VTEC mated to Honda’s Integrated Motor Assist hybrid system. It produces a total of 122-hp and a maximum torque of 128 lb-ft when mated to manual transmission (123 lb-ft for CVT models). Fuel-economy is estimated at 31/37 mpg (city/highway) for the manual model and 36/38 mpg for the CVT model. Sales begin in the second half of 2010.

    2010 Detroit: 2011 Honda CR-Z:

    2010 Detroit: 2011 Honda CR-Z 2010 Detroit: 2011 Honda CR-Z 2010 Detroit: 2011 Honda CR-Z 2010 Detroit: 2011 Honda CR-Z

    2010 Detroit: 2011 Honda CR-Z:

    – By: Omar Rana


  • David Jaffe shares a little something about Modnation Racers

    He’s the man behind God of War and Twisted Metal. You’ve seen him talk smack against the potential ripoffs of his brainchildren, you’ve seen him judge the PSN reality show, The Tester, but what does David Jaffe

  • Coolest HTC HD2 ROM(Other than ours which will be updated next week)

    image

    Well guys, after long awaiting for T-mobile’s local stores to get some HD2 stock, I have given up and ordered one off Ebay, so while waiting for it, here is the first ROM I will flash. This ROM is done by Mr.MAKK, who I have known for a long time to be an awesome ROM cooker, with ROMS that come fully packed with everything and more. He has released an HTC HD2 ROM, and I am happily anticipating my HD2 so I will be able to flash it and love it.

     

    His ROMs are special to me because of many reasons. The first is… it looks pretty cool, with the wood grain finish and classical look. To its nice skin of just about everything that others don’t do like Media Player, and others.

    If you own an HD2 and want a new ROM to try out. I sincerely recommend this ROM, because its just that awesome.

    Changelog L6g:
    Build – 23559 & 21898,
    Cookie home tab & editor 1.7,
    lockscreen graphix,
    2.10 WITH T-MOBILE COMPATIBLE,
    clean ram 2.2,
    htc messaging client,
    mortscript 4.3,
    mm taskmanager,
    bg for all removed,
    phone settings icon added,
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  • Video: Vaughn Gittin takes first win of 2010 Formula Drift season

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    Vaughn Gittin Jr. at the 2010 Long Beach Formula Drift event – Click above to watch the video after the jump

    Formula Drift kicked off the 2010 season last weekend with its 5th annual Streets of Long Beach event on turns 9, 10, and 11 of the Grand Prix course that’ll see ALMS and IndyCar action this weekend. Our man Michael Harley’s GSR Autosport team faced plenty of adversity in its inaugural event, and it was the more seasoned (and well funded) teams that fared better.

    At the end of the knockout stages, Vaughn Gittin Jr., in his new 2011 Mustang sponsored by Falken Tire and Monster Energy Drink, stood atop the podium. This is Gittin’s best ever start to a season, with his last win coming at Irwindale in 2008. Rounding out the top three were Rhys Millen in his Hyundai Genesis Coupe in second and Tanner Foust in his NASCAR V8-powered Scion tC in third.

    Vaughn was nice enough to send over video of his victorious drifting runs that includes some fantastic in-car footage. Hit the jump to watch, and be sure to turn up the volume!

    [Source: Vimeo]

    Continue reading Video: Vaughn Gittin takes first win of 2010 Formula Drift season

    Video: Vaughn Gittin takes first win of 2010 Formula Drift season originally appeared on Autoblog on Sat, 17 Apr 2010 17:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Russia lower house approves WWII amnesty law

    [JURIST] The Russian State Duma voted 437-0 Friday to approve a bill giving amnesty to veterans as well as concentration camp and Leningrad siege survivors for most crimes committed during World War II by. If approved in the upper house, the bill would apply to an estimated 100-200 persons, but the amnesty would not apply to crimes of murder or sexual crimes against minors. The legislative action commemorates the sixty-fifth anniversary of the Great Patriotic War, as the period of the war along the Eastern Front between 1941 and 1945 is known in Russia.
    The legislative measure may be part of Russian efforts to rehabilitate the image of the Soviet Union. In October, a Russian historian who was researching Soviet treatment of German prisoners of war during World War II was charged with violating privacy laws. Also in October, a Russian court rejected a libel suit brought by Stalin’s grandson Yevgeny Dzhugashvili against the Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta for a report that Stalin ordered the death of Soviet citizens. In September, critics of this rehabilitation expressed outrage when a renovated Moscow train station was unveiled with inscriptions praising Stalin. A controversial December 2008 poll found that Russians considered Stalin the third most popular Russian in history, a result criticized by many.

  • Macroscopic quantum mechanics

    In one story I can’t currently locate, the protagonist is fighting the ultimate infection. It seems impossibly mutable. Turns out it has evolved to exploit quantum effects, and it’s finding the perfect mutation by exploring all the many worlds of variation.

    That wasn’t the only science fiction story of the past decade to imagine that biological organisms, operating at atomic scales, might exploit quantum effects. Alas, science fiction memes don’t last long these days. Protein exploitation of quantum effects has become a mainstream research topic. This Nov 2009 Sci Am news article is a good overview of the underlying physics; note especially the resolution to the old debate about how the quantum/classical transition happens …

    How Noise Can Help Quantum Entanglement: Scientific American

    … In the modern view that has gained traction in the past decade, you don’t see quantum effects in everyday life not because you are big, per se, but because those effects are camouflaged by their own sheer complexity. They are there if you know how to look, and physicists have been realizing that they show up in the macroscopic world more than they thought…

    … This work suggests that, contrary to conventional wisdom, entanglement can persist in large, warm systems—including living organisms. “This opens the door to the possibility that entanglement could play a role in, or be a resource for, biological systems,” says Mohan Sarovar of the University of California, Berkeley, who recently found that entanglement may aid photosynthesis … In the magnetism-sensitive molecule that birds may use as compasses, Vedral, Elisabeth Rieper, also at Singapore, and their colleagues discovered that electrons manage to remain entangled 10 to 100 times longer than the standard formulas predict…

    A quick search on scholar.google.com finds many references on how quantum effects might alter molecular behavior in neurons.
    It’s a small, small world after all.


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  • David Goldman: The Coming Wave Of CDO-Related Lawsuits Is Going To Be Insane (GS)

    Credit specialist and Asia Times contributor David Goldman is on record believing that SEC vs. Goldman Sachs (GS) is going to be huge.

    First, he argues, logically, that if anything, it’s Fabrice Tourre who has the leverage over his employer:

    [The SEC has] nailed a 32-year-old Goldman vice president who cobbled together the tainted structure, and he appears to be singing. Investment banks aren’t like the mafia. No-one takes twenty-year sentences and keeps their mouth shut. This case very well might open up others.

    And then here’s why this goes way beyond Goldman.

    Investors who lost a trillion dollars in subprime CDO’s now will descend like Harpies upon the banks that packaged them, with subpoenas for every email and internal memorandum involved. The civil suits that could arise from this are potentially innumerable.

    It’s a good time to get into the bunker where financial stocks are concerned.

    Indeed, that seemed to be the calculs on Friday, when financials were sold off dramatically. It’s also why, in the end, the frailties of the SEC’s case, may not matter very much. At issue is not whether Goldman would lose a civil case — at issue is reputational damage, and the opportunity for others who lost money to reason: well, if the SEC has grounds to sue, then so do we.

    Read the whole Abacus CDO Pitchbook here >

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Watch: Lost Planet 2 final episode trailer

    Don’t get too comfy with the releases already on the market. Capcom has one more bomb around the corner to try and make you shell out what’s left of your gaming cash. Lost Planet 2 is hitting