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  • John Tesh Oprah Dated In The ’70s, Kitty Kelley Tell-All Reveals

    Celebrity biographer Kitty Kelley cites sources who claim The Queen of Talk, then in her early 20s had an unlikely live-in romance with pianist and Christian pop composer John Tesh.

    So The Divine Madame O’s down with “The Swirl?” Who knew?!

    Kelley’s insiders claim Tesh dumped Oprah, now 56, — in the middle of the night no less — after the social pressures of an interracial romance in 1970s Nashville became too great for the young musician to bare.

    “He said one night he looked down and saw his white body next to her black body and couldn’t take it anymore,” says a friend.

    While Oprah has no comment on the romance whispers, on Monday, John confirmed that he did indeed date the girl that would grow up to be a billionaire chat show diva many years ago.

    “Oprah and I were cub reporters in Nashville nearly 40 years ago and we dated for a short time,” Tesh, 57, revealed to “>The New York Daily News. “We remain friends to this day.”

    Kitty Kelley’s Oprah: A Biography hits booksellers’ shelves on Tuesday.


  • EFF Proudly Presents the First Annual Defcon Getaway Fundraising Contest!

    As the winter snows begin to melt, revealing a landscape full of promise and hope, a hacker’s thoughts turn to flights of fancy: specifically, the thought of being in Las Vegas during the last weekend in July.

    If you’re one of those hackers and you love digital freedom, EFF would like your help spreading the word about our efforts to protect and defend coders’ rights by encouraging your friends and neighbors to join you in supporting us. In return, EFF wants to help the best EFFvangelists enjoy Defcon 18 in style!

    Just register for the Defcon Getaway Fundraising Contest and receive a personalized referral link to send your friends and family. (Registration is free; please don’t spam.) If your invitees become EFF members, you will be credited the amount they donate through the link. The contestant to raise the most money for EFF between now and June 30, 2010, will win:

    – two Defcon 18 Human badges;
    – a standard room at the Riviera Hotel for the nights of July 29-31;
    – two tickets to the Vegas 2.0 Party at the Top of the Riv on July 29;
    – two tickets to the iSEC Partners Party, location and date TBD; and
    – two badges to the Ninja Networks Party, location TBD, on July 31.

    The second place winner will receive two Defcon 18 Human badges, two tickets to the Vegas 2.0 Party, and two tickets to the iSEC Partners Party; the third place winner will receive one Defcon 18 Human badge, one ticket to the Vegas 2.0 Party, and one ticket to the iSEC Partners Party. All winners will receive an EFF Swag Super Pack, including EFF stickers, hats, posters, and more!

    You can join with others to form a fundraising team, of course. Your team will have to figure out on its own how to distribute the prizes after we award them to the team captain.

    Airfare and other travel expenses are not included, and winners remain responsible for all incidental costs. All contestants must be 21 years of age or older. Additional rules apply, please see the Official Rules for details. Donations may be tax-deductible as allowed by law, and referred donors will receive tax acknowledgment letters for their donations.

    Many thanks to Dark Tangent and Defcon for providing the room and Defcon badges, Vegas 2.0 and iSEC Partners for providing the party tickets and Ninja Networks for providing the Ninja Party badges!

    To register for this contest, click here.

  • Urban Farming and Life Skills Support for youth with developmental challenges

    The VISTA members primary responsibility will be to assist in a program that focuses on Dream Green Farm, a program that is designed to provide meaningful employment activities for youth with developmental disabilities. The participants of the program range in age from 18-21 years of age and participate in Life Skills Support classes throughout Luzerne County. Dream Green Farm will provide job training as well as provide the opportunity to give back to the community. Dream Green Farm (DGF) is located on The Lands at Hillside Farms (TLHF) in Dallas, PA. TLHF is a non-profit urban farm. Participants of DGF learn how to raise organic produce for sale at local farmers markets that accept the Farmers Market Nutrition Program vouchers. These vouchers allow low-income residents access to fresh and local produce to help meet the nutritional needs of their families.

  • Live from Microsoft’s Project Pink Unveiling

    Another day, another liveblog. We’re live in San Francisco, where Microsoft’s mobile team is expected to finally pull back the curtains on their long rumored, oft-leaked Project Pink. We’re expecting them to unveil at least two new pieces of hardware today (previously known as “Turtle” and “Pure”), though we’re not sure if they’ll be running Windows Phone 7 or… something else.

    The show is scheduled to begin at 10:00 A.M sharp. We’re in our seats, batteries charged and WiFi pumping — join us after the jump for our up-to-the-minute liveblog.


  • Czech, Mate! Road Trip Through Eastern Europe in a Soviet-Era Škoda- Video

    Here’s an idea: Celebrate the collapse of Soviet Communism 20 years ago by driving a perfectly derelict Škoda to a thermo-nuke silo in the evil empire.

    Watch the Video: Czech, Mate! Road Trip Through Eastern Europe in a Soviet-Era Škoda

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    1. Reader Sighting: 2009 Škoda Yeti Spotted on U.S. Soil
    2. Do-It-Yourself (Car) Porn: Car-Mounted Video Cameras Tested – Video
  • Video: 2011 Mustang GT wins against Camaro SS, Challenger SRT8 in Motor Trend test

    The folks at Motor Trend did the first comparison between the new 2011 Ford Mustang GT powered by a 5.0L V8 against competitors including the Chevrolet Camaro SS and the Dodge Challenger SRT8.

    Click here to get prices on the 2011 Ford Mustang.

    Of course, we’re huge fans of the Camaro SS but we have yet to drive the new Mustang GT so we really can’t say anything here. However, Motor Trend giving the Camaro SS last place amongst the three muscle car kind of boggles our mind. Let us know what you think.

    Refresher: The 2011 Ford Mustang V6 is powered by the 3.7L V6 Ti-VCT making 305-hp and 280 lb-ft. The 2011 Ford Mustang GT is powered by a 5.0L 4-valve Twin Independent Variable Camshaft Timing (Ti-VCT) V8 engine producing 412-hp with a peak torque of 390 lb-ft. Transmission choices for both models include a 6-speed automatic with a 6-speed manual offered as standard.

    Check out the video after the jump.

    – By: Omar Rana

    Source: Motor Trend


  • Help Me Out At The Ballgame!

    The Chicago Cubs have not won a World Series in 102 years, but starting today their long-suffering fans have new reason to be excited about ballgames at historic Wrigley Field (and for once, it doesn’t have to do with a new pitcher or outfielder).  This year, the team’s new owners have hired twenty Wrigley Field Ambassadors, tasked with making sure every fan at every game has the ultimate baseball experience.  The Ambassadors have been added, in part, to keep people coming to the ball park, which is something many people cannot afford to do any longer, since a day at baseball’s “Friendly Confines,” for a family of four costs almost $330.

    Think of the Wrigley Field Ambassador as the “fan’s agent,” says program coordinator Jahaan Blake.  The Ambassadors will be available to answer fan questions, but will also act pro-actively to offer advice and directions to confused looking patrons.  The Ambassadors will also be in charge of keeping restroom and concession lines under control by directing people to the men’s and women’s rooms that aren’t as crowded.

    Over 700 people applied for only thirty Ambassador positions at the North Side Chicago stadium, which has been the site of some of the most memorable moments in American sports history, including Babe Ruth’s “called shot.”  Even though the team is under new ownership this season, the franchise has been trying to please fans for decades.  In fact, in 1916 the Cubs became the first Major League team to allow fans to keep the foul balls they caught in the stands.  There is no word yet about whether or not fans in 2010 are allowed to keep anything manager Lou Pinella throws into the stands (famous for yelling at umpires and tossing whatever he can get his hands on, after being ejected by the umpire).

  • 2010 Race, Ethnicity, and Community Engagement in Higher Education Conference

    The Race, Ethnicity, and Community Engagement in Higher Education conference at Texas Tech University will take place October 17-20, 2010 and has an proposal deadline of May 31, 2010. For more info and to apply online visit: http://www.educ.ttu.edu/edhe/conferences/recengagement/

    The Race, Ethnicity, and Community Engagement in Higher Education conference at Texas Tech University welcomes submissions from academic professionals engaged in service-centered praxis, researchers in fields of applied or experiential education, regional, local, and international practitioners in service-learning and other forms of community engagement, undergraduate or graduate students with service-learning and other community engagement experience, and students, faculty, administrators, and agency personnel that support community-based research initiatives.

    This conference encourages participants to address a wide range of issues related to research, curriculum design, assessment, institutional support, diversity, community connection, partnerships, and student development. The goal of the conference is to provide participants with multiple perspectives on critical issues, paradigms, and challenges related to race, ethnicity and community engagement in higher education.

    The proposal deadline is coming soon, so please see the full call for proposals at:
    http://www.educ.ttu.edu/edhe/conferences/recengagement/docs/Call%20for%20Proposals.pdf

    and the conference website at:
    http://www.educ.ttu.edu/edhe/conferences/recengagement/

  • Yasmin, Yaz Side Effects Warning Updated For Blood Clot Risk in U.S.

    Bayer is adding new information on blood clots to the warning section of the labels for Yaz and Yasmin birth control pills. The update comes as the drug maker faces thousands of Yasmin and Yaz blood clot lawsuits from women who allege that the company failed to adequately warn about the increased risk of serious and potentially life-threatening injuries. 

    The label changes, which were approved on April 7 by FDA (pdf), are expected to be similar to updates made last month in the European Union about the potential risk of blood clots from side effects of Yaz and Yasmin, including new information from four epidemiological studies that provide conflicting information on the risk of Yaz and Yasmin blood clots compared to other birth control pills containing levonorgestrel.

    Two of the studies, which were sponsored by Bayer, found that the risk of venous thromboembolism from Yasmin and Yaz was comparable to the risk found in women who use levonorgestrel-containing combined oral contraceptives, such as Microgynon 30. However, two independent studies found that the risk of blood clots from Yasmin and Yaz side effects was higher than with levonorgestrel.

    One of those studies, conducted in the Netherlands and published in the British Medical Journal in August, determined that Yaz and Yasmin, both of which contain the progestin drospirenone, increased the risk of blood clots in women 6.3 times over those not on birth control, while levonorgestrel-based pills only increased the risk about 4 times.

    Researchers determined that the benefits of Yaz and Yasmin, as well as some other newer forms of birth control pills, were no greater than the benefits of older birth control pills, and suggested women should use the pills with the least side effects. But Bayer has previously suggested that it has identified “several methodological issues” in the two independent studies that suggest Yaz and Yasmin carry higher blood clot risks.

    Yaz and Yasmin are similar pills that are both manufactured by Bayer, containing a combination of ethinyl estradiol and drospirenone, a new type of progestin. Drospirenone, or drsp, impacts the body’s normal mechanism of regulating a balance between salt and water, which could result in elevated potassium levels. This can cause a condition known as hyperkalemia, which is linked to potentially life-threatening heart problems and other health issues.

    About 1,100 Yaz lawsuits and Yasmin lawsuits have been filed in the U.S. on behalf of individual women who allege that they suffered injuries that were caused by the birth control pills, such as a stroke, heart attack, pulmonary embolism, deep vein thrombosis, gallbladder disease and other injuries.

    All federal Yaz and Yasmin cases are consolidated in an MDL, or multidistrict litigation, centralized in the Southern District of Illinois for pretrial litigation. There are also state level Yaz and Yasmin lawsuits consolidated in Pennsylvania and New Jersey courts. As Yasmin and Yaz lawyers continue to investigate and review potential new cases, it is expected that the number of cases filed will increase dramatically over the next year.

  • What Stevens’ Retirement Means for the Environment

    Rachel Hartman has a great roundup of what conservatives are saying about the upcoming Supreme Court battle. But it’s not just on the right that Justice John Paul Stevens’ retirement is causing intense speculation. Environmentalists are also fretting about the implications of Stevens’ exit for the country’s climate struggles.

    Over at Grist, Jonathan Hiskes points out three key ways in which the departure of the Court’s liberal leader could affect the environmental agenda. First and foremost, of course, is the fact that Stevens has been an “environmental rock star”:

    He consistently upheld the ability of federal agencies to regulate pollution, as Dan Farber details on Legal Planet. In the influential Chevron v. NRDC (1984), he wrote the majority opinion defending government agencies’ ability to interpret ambiguous legislation, which enabled the EPA to set effective clean-air standards.

    His crowning environmental achievement was writing the majority opinion in Massachusetts v. EPA (2007), which ruled that heat-trapping pollutants endanger public health and the EPA has an obligation to regulate them. (The Obama EPA is working on it.)

    That latter ruling could well be the subject of contention again, as some lawmakers have insisted that any major climate legislation preempt the EPA from regulating carbon emissions under the Clean Air Act. Which brings Hiskes to his second point: that this isn’t just any year for climate battles, and several major climate controversies could make their way to the Supreme Court in the immediate future:

    The state of Texas has already sued the EPA for seeking to limit CO2 emissions. The National Association of Manufacturers, the American Petroleum Institute, and other manufacturing groups say they will do the same. Any climate action the EPA undertakes will face a torrent of litigation. Same for any climate/energy legislation, should it ever pass out of Congress. You can expect at least some of these key cases to eventually be argued in front of the highest court in the land.

    And finally, there are the ramifications of an extended confirmation battle for the Senate agenda. The upper chamber has already demonstrated its utter inability to do more than one thing at a time, and with financial regulation likely next on its list and Supreme Court confirmation hearings looming, it truly might not get around to climate legislation this year — after which, assuming a Democratic loss of a few Senate seats and possibly even control of the House, the uphill road to climate action will get that much steeper.

  • Mid-Day Update: Here’s What’s Happened So Far (JAV, DCP, ABK, ENTN, ERI, QLTY)

    mcdonald's big mac hamburger sandwhich burger

    Exchanges:

    • DJIA up 17 points or 0.16% to 11,014
    • NASDAQ up 3 points or 0.14% to 2457
    • S&P 500 up 2 points or 0.22% to 1197

    Today’s Big Winners Thus Far:

    • Javelin (JAV), up 61.9%
    • Ambac Financial Group (ABK), up 46.36%

    Today’s Big Losers Thus Far:

    • Entorian Technologies Inc (ENTN), down 28.89%
    • Emrise Corp. (ERI), down 14.71%
    • Quality Distribution Inc. (QLTY), down 12.82%

    Futures Update:

    Now here’s what you need to know:

    • Javelin (JAV) is up on the news that a rival has put in a stronger takeover bid. The bid, from Hospira Inc., is worth $141 million, $60 million more than Myriad Pharmaceuticals Inc.’s previous bid, according to WSJ.com.
    • The private equity firm Cerberus has had its bid accepted by the defense manufacturer DynCorp (DCP.N) for $1.5 billion takeover, according to Reuters.
    • President and Chief Operating Officer Ajay Banga of MasterCard is set to become the firm’s CEO. He recently worked for Citigroup, before moving to MasterCard in August 2009.
    • California Pizza Kitchen (CPKI.O) is considering selling itself. It has hired investment back Moelis & Company to handle any potential deal, according to Reuters.
    • China’s foreign reserves are up 25% over last year and are now up to $2.45 trillion. Reserves rose by $47.9 billion in the first quarter of 2010.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Crossing swords over cross-platform: Apple vs. Adobe Flash, C#, and Mono

    By Scott M. Fulton, III, Betanews

    It should come as no surprise to anyone that Apple is not a cross-platform tools company, nor a supporter of cross-platform technologies that would threaten to nullify Apple’s baked-in advantages — only during the years Steve Jobs was not in charge had the company even considered opening up its platforms. So the strategy behind the company’s reinforcement of its iPhone OS 4.0 licensing terms, first discovered by Daring Fireball blogger John Gruber last Thursday, is both obvious and unchanged: to direct the course of iPhone/iPod Touch/iPad development traffic directly, exclusively, and entirely through Apple’s channel.

    States the newly added paragraph: “3.3.1 — Applications may only use Documented APIs in the manner prescribed by Apple and must not use or call any private APIs. Applications must be originally written in Objective-C, C, C++, or JavaScript as executed by the iPhone OS WebKit engine, and only code written in C, C++, and Objective-C may compile and directly link against the Documented APIs (e.g., Applications that link to Documented APIs through an intermediary translation or compatibility layer or tool are prohibited).”

    There are several shockers to this paragraph, assuming they are all to be read very literally (which, in the case of Apple, has never not been the case). The clincher, however, is the notion that anything you make to run on iPhone OS must be developed for iPhone OS, including Web apps. If you develop a Web app, it must be made for execution by iPhone’s WebKit, even though WebKit is an open source rendering engine. If you develop a stand-alone app, even though it may use a standard language such as C or C++, it must link to nothing else but iPhone’s APIs.

    So you may use some standard tools, just in a different, prescribed way. For developers, that’s like saying you can’t use standard tools.
    “The key is where they say, ‘Applications must be originally written in Objective-C, C, C++.’ Take a pause and think about what that ‘originally’ really means,” wrote music media developer Hank Williams (no relation) on Thursday. “Developers are not free to use any tools to help them. If there is some tool that converts some Pascal or, Ruby, or Java into Objective-C it is out of bounds, because then the code is not ‘originally’ written in C. This is akin to telling people what kind of desk people sit at when they write software for the iPhone. Or perhaps what kind of music they listen to. Or what kind of clothes they should be wearing. This is insane.”

    The iPhone development channel is Apple’s to direct as it will. Nevertheless, there’s considerable outrage over how the company’s efforts may counteract those of legitimate supporters who had been working to steer mainstream phone app and Web app development Apple’s direction.

    The keynote was sounded Friday, when Adobe Platform Evangelist Lee Brimelow, in a blog post that simultaneously made clear he was speaking for himself and bore the official Flash logo, flipped Apple the bird: “What they [Apple] are saying is that they won’t allow applications onto their marketplace solely because of what language was originally used to create them. This is a frightening move that has no rational defense other than wanting tyrannical control over developers and more importantly, wanting to use developers as pawns in their crusade against Adobe. This does not just affect Adobe but also other technologies like Unity3D…Speaking purely for myself, I would look to make it clear what is going through my mind at the moment. Go screw yourself Apple.”

    For his part, Gruber commented Thursday that he understands the reasoning behind the company’s move, and in a well-reasoned analysis, concluded that iPhone users may end up winning in the end: “I can see two arguments here. On the one side, this rule should be good for quality. Cross-platform software toolkits have never — ever — produced top-notch native apps for Apple platforms. Not for the classic Mac OS, not for Mac OS X, and not for iPhone OS. Such apps generally have been downright crummy. On the other hand, perhaps iPhone users will be missing out on good apps that would have been released if not for this rule, but won’t now. I don’t think iPhone OS users are going to miss the sort of apps these cross-platform toolkits produce, though. My opinion is that iPhone users will be well-served by this rule. The App Store is not lacking for quantity of titles.”

    Adobe Flash engineer Adrian Ludwig demonstrates a Flash app appearing in Apple's iPhone App Store for the first time.

    In October 2009, an Adobe developer shows a Flash application appearing in Apple’s App Store — a provision which Apple will no longer continue to make.


    Someone who knows from personal experience how Steve Jobs thinks on the matter is former Apple products division President (later founder of Be, Inc.) Jean-Louis Gassée. In a blog post Sunday evening that employed one of his trademark metaphors (you just have to read it for yourself), Gassée also made clear he understood exactly where Jobs was coming from, and that he doesn’t look so insane: “Steve Jobs has seen enough in his 34 years in the computer business to know, deeply, that he doesn’t want to be at the mercy of cross-platform tools that could erase Apple’s competitive advantage…Does anyone mind that Jobs won’t sacrifice the truly strategic differentiation of the iPhone platform on the altar of cross-platform compatibility? Customers and critics don’t. They love the end-result.”

    But if there’s anyone who absolutely knows 100% of the time where Steve Jobs is coming from and where he’s going, it’s Steve Jobs. Usually uncommunicative with the press, Jobs did take the time to respond by e-mail to Greg Slepak, whose company Tao Effect makes utility software for Mac. In an exchange that began with Jobs’ signaling his appreciation of John Gruber’s post, Slepak wrote to Jobs, “From a developer’s point of view, you’re limiting creativity itself. Gruber is wrong, there are plenty of [applications] written using cross-platform frameworks that are amazing, that he himself has praised. Mozilla’s Firefox just being one of them. I don’t think Apple has much to gain with 3.3.1, quite the opposite actually.”

    To which Jobs responded: “We’ve been there before, and intermediate layers between the platform and the developer ultimately produces sub-standard apps and hinders the progress of the platform.”

    One of the developers whose key product falls under the category to which Jobs referred, and was thus the target of his criticism, is Miguel de Icaza, whose Mono platform from Novell extends a .NET Framework-like runtime, and the ability to write in C#, to both Linux and Macintosh. The MonoTouch package extends some of that capability to the iPhone platform. De Icaza provided some comments to Betanews late this morning, which we’ll present shortly.

    Copyright Betanews, Inc. 2010



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  • 10 Plastic-Free Lunch Boxes

    Packing lunch in a reusable container is good for the environment and the wallet, but what type of material should you use? With growing concern over the effects of plastic used for food storage (not to mention plastic’s overall eco-unfriendliness), we’re turning our attention toward materials like stainless steel, wood, and cloth. Here are 10 beautiful, functional, and plastic-free ways to carry your lunch.

    Read Full Post


  • Map Of The Day: Awesome Visualization Of Global Debt Levels

    As government debt levels surge worldwide a sea of red balance sheets have begun to engulf the world.

    This map from the SASI Research Group and Worldmapper points out just how bad the problem is, particularly in Europe and Japan.

    Via Financial Armageddon:

    Debt Map

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • More Funding for Liberty Dialysis

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Mercer Island, WA-based Liberty Dialysis, which operates more than 100 dialysis clinics around the U.S., has received a new investment from KRG Capital Partners, Bain Capital Ventures, and Ignition Partners, according to a press release on Friday. The funding amount was not disclosed. Liberty Dialysis was founded in 2002 and is led by CEO and co-founder Mark Caputo. The firm is backed in part by Seattle-area Ignition’s later-stage growth fund.










  • iAd, and what it means for Android

    To borrow an old Canadian adage, owning a phone other than Apple’s iPhone is like sharing a bed with an elephant. No matter what it does, or how much you want to ignore it, you are affected by its every movement.

    Yesterday proved no different, as Apple revealed details about its iPhone OS 4.0. With the announcement comes many improvements, many of which (folders, dedicated e-mail app, etc) are already present on Android. However, Apple made one move that’s going to be causing a few waves: iAd. As a mobile advertising platform for iPhone apps, it gives developers a chance to split the revenues of advertising 60-40 with Apple. Thankfully, the developers get the 60.

    Stupid naming scheme aside, iAd is part of Apple’s recent strategy to set precedents. Apple, as many people in tech will point out, dislikes working with Adobe product. This has resulted in a lack of Flash support for both iPhone and iPad. This lack of support became a large issue when the company decided to release their iPad tablet, as Adobe claims that Flash is installed on 98% of Internet enabled desktops, and 75% of all video online is viewed through their technology. How would they be able to tout the iPad as the “ultimate browsing experience” if it could not see half the videos and a large amount of ads that are on the Internet?

    Apple then did what it does best, and set a precedent.

    Enter HTML5. Slowly gaining steam within web circles lately, this update to a developing language makes videos and ads a plugin-less experience on the Internet. Gone would be the days of users having to install Flash and (shudder) Shockwave in order to view content. As long as a browser were up to date, users would be able to see what site designers wanted.

    Android is not averse to HTML5, as any device with 2.0 or better has support for the format. Hell, Ian Hickson, the HTML5 Editor (yes, that’s a formal title) is a Google employee. This should mean that we, as Android users, should have nothing to worry about… right?

    Not necessarily.

    Along with the iPhone 4.0 came its software development kit (SDK), which included the following lines:

    3.3.1 — Applications may only use Documented APIs in the manner prescribed by Apple and must not use or call any private APIs. Applications must be originally written in Objective-C, C, C++, or JavaScript as executed by the iPhone OS WebKit engine, and only code written in C, C++, and Objective-C may compile and directly link against the Documented APIs (e.g., Applications that link to Documented APIs through an intermediary translation or compatibility layer or tool are prohibited).

    This segment of the agreement effectively locks out the use of Adobe’s Flash-to-iPhone compiler. Developers have used this program to import their designed apps into a format which the Apple App Store can, in turn, process. This means that developers who have been developing using this tool will have to find another way, just because Apple doesn’t enjoy that platform.

    The company is looking to send a statement which is “You work our way, but if not, don’t let the door hit you on the way out.”

    This was especially evident with the iPad launch, as developers were scrambling to grab a piece of the early-adopter pie. Because everyone doesn’t want to be late to the party, they’re all the more quick to adopt whatever Apple tells them to. The Wall Street Journal doesn’t have HTML5-compliant video and adspace? Well, it better damn well get some if it wants to be part of the tablet revolution.

    Apple has little to lose if publishing body doesn’t want to play by their rules; they’d have about five thousand other publications willing to make the changes so they can enjoy the “Featured App” space on iTunes and the money involved with being available at launch. The advantages of a company complying with these demands are huge – they get to be part of the new wave, and in some cases, set precedents on how they price their apps.

    However, the setbacks Apple brings to developers who have been doing everything “right” by their standards (up until now) rubs me the wrong way.

    My main concern is Apple’s ability to just impose these new standards. It would seem more beneficial to the web in order to have a standard (such as HTML5 or Flash) that maximizes accessibility, instead of a splintering between the two mediums. It’s as if Apple’s snubbing of Flash turned on big red signs in newsrooms and development studios around the world, flashing “DROP EVERYTHING AND CHANGE YOUR VIDEOS TO HTML5 IF YOU WANT TO KEEP YOUR TRAFFIC UP.”

    What I don’t want to see in the future is Apple eventually deciding that HTML5 is not as good as something they could do in-house. Suddenly at Apple’s behest, developers will have to make another switch to iPlugin 2.5x, and devices that aren’t compatible (and aren’t selling as well anymore) are left crippled. The developers have no incentive to include apps for older hardware (because of labor costs or the elimination of features), and early-adopters get shafted.

    It’s worth to mention that Admob, the largest SDK for mobile ads, is both owned by Google and is available to develop for Flash. At the moment, it has three SDKs: Flash, Android and iPhone. Now that it’s directly competing with Apple’s iAd, it will be interesting to see if Admob will change to Apple’s new standards or perhaps cater more to Android developers.

    Ultimately this situation seems to be similar to the argument that people have been making between the Android Marketplace and Apple App Store have been making for a good long while now: what freedom of development are they willing to sacrifice in order to reach both greater audience and greater profits? Are developers going to allow themselves to be influenced by one company’s actions? How will people react to Adobe’s response?

    Some part of me enjoys just being caught in the middle of it.

    Related Posts

  • Volkswagen Phaeton, fotos espía

    Interesantes fotos espías las que acaban de llegarnos a la redacción. Se trata ni más ni menos que de la segunda generación del Volkswagen Phaeton casi totalmente al desnudo. Por un lado nos parece algo realmente extraño ya que su nivel de ventas no es realmente el adecuado para un modelo de este tipo y por otra parte debido a la posición de Volkswagen sobre estos modelos en el mercado.

    Sobre las novedades en el diseño, debemos destacar la calandra cromada de líneas rectas y las ópticas un tanto más afiladas. En la parte trasera nos encontramos con unos nuevos pilotos que hacen uso de la teconología LED.

    En lo que respecta a la motorización, no hay nada confirmado pero se espera que reciba una gama completa de nuevos motores llegando a un máximo de 340 CV de potencia.

    Related posts:

    1. Volkswagen Touareg, nuevas fotos espía
    2. Volkswagen Passat, fotos espía
    3. Fotos espía del Volkswagen Amarok
  • Texas Stadium Implosion: Football’s Loss, Seismologists’ Gain | Discoblog

    Texas-Stadium---ImplosionThousands of onlookers gathered on Sunday to watch and film the planned implosion of the Texas Stadium in Dallas. The 65,000-seat-stadium was home to the Dallas Cowboys for 38 years and was witness to some thrilling football moments–but all good things must come to an end. The stadium was demolished because the team moved to the new billion-dollar, state-of-the-art Cowboys Stadium last season.

    An 11-year-old named Casey Rogers, the winner of a local essay-writing contest, pushed the button that triggered the implosion, and thus set off 1.5 tons of explosives that brought down the stadium in a systematic manner. In the end, just three pillars stood leaning, leading Herbert Gears, mayor of the Dallas suburb of Irving where the stadium was located, to joke to AFP: “Now we’ve got Stonehenge.”

    Not only were curious onlookers on hand to observe the implosion, but so were a group of seismologists. In a project nicknamed “Demolicious,” a team led by Jay Pulliam of Baylor University in Waco, Texas used seismometers around the stadium to try and get a clearer picture of the region’s geological features.

    Nature News reports:

    Pulliam and his team hope that seismic waves from the planned explosion can help to image Earth’s crust in the region, an area of interest to seismologists because it is where the Ouachita deformation was created when a supercontinent of Africa and South America crashed into North America about 300 million years ago. The team also hopes to improve understanding of why small earthquakes occurred in the region in 2008–09 after waste water was pumped deep underground in the process of extracting natural gas from shale.

    Earlier last month, Pulliam and his team set up their instruments–a seismometer, an accelerometer, and a clock linked to a GPS–near the stadium. The instruments were set up to record the exact timing of the implosion and the rate at which the seismic waves traveled through the ground. However, Pulliam wasn’t quite sure what to expect from the implosion’s seismic waves. Speaking to Nature News before the big event, he called the process a “terrific experiment.”

    Meanwhile, here’s a video of the implosion:

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    Image: Dallas Morning Observer


  • Welcome to the IPS Asia-Pacific Classroom

    The gender students from AIT

    The gender students from AIT

    BANGKOK – IPS Asia-Pacific’s offices became a classroom twice in recent weeks as two classes of graduate students from the Asian Institute of Technology came to discuss issues of journalism, gender, environment as well as the media mindset.

    On Mar. 30, a class of 16 graduate students in the gender and development studies module spent two hours at the IPS regional office in the Thai capital, with their professor, Babette Resurreccion. The students were from varied courses, backgrounds and countries, ranging from Nepal, Bangladesh, Vietnam and Nigeria.

    IPS Asia-Pacific Director Johanna Son discussed the IPS news philosophy, including its approach to gender and the MDG-3 project. She began by presenting the findings of a survey IPS Asia-Pacific had done among media and development advocates on their perceptions of gender sensitivity and language, and then linked that to the ‘Talking Gender in the Mekong Media’ report the organisation released recently.

    Also taking part in the discussion to share their experiences was regional correspondent Marwaan Macan-Markar and media project coordinator Lynette Corporal.

    Students from different countries asked about gender and media, after IPS Asia-Pacific Director Johanna Son made a presentation.

    Students from different countries asked about gender and media, after IPS Asia-Pacific Director Johanna Son made a presentation.

    The questions asked by the students generated quite an interesting debate, ranging from how journalists approach objectivity, bias and fairness, how to translate academic-oriented writing to writing for general audiences and how to work on gender-friendly language. Son also explained that while it is common to assume that dropping all the suffixes of ‘-men’ makes news copy gender-friendly, such is not the case as there is nothing wrong about saying if a quoted source is a she or a he, for instance.

    The second class, an environment class of six students, came on Apr. 7, as part of their course at AIT Extension programme for the Norway-based Fredkorpset exchange programme.

    Son used a current story in the region that the students, from Vietnam, Laos and China, could very well identify with – the drought in the Mekong region and the just-finished Mekong summit that highlighted political, environment and development issues around China’s dam-building in South-east Asia’s longest river. For this she used material from the IPS news wire, including a slideshow by a Lao journalist on the Mekong drought, as well as reports on the Mekong summit.

    The students, from Vietnam, Laos and China, are writers part of environmental organisations or federations in their countries. They will be assigned to different countries in Asia to work on environmental journalism.

    Environment writers at the IPS office.

    Environment writers at the IPS office.

  • Medieval recycling

    Historian Robin Fleming’s recent lecture at Harvard was on economic calamity in early medieval Britain, and how people in desperate straits turned to “recycling” Roman ruins for what they needed.

    The Radcliffe Fellow, on leave from Boston College, used dozens of slides — of knights in helmets, stone churches, iron fixtures, and more. But one picture was contemporary: a Haitian man, hammer poised in midair, scavenging rebar from post-earthquake rubble.

    Perhaps fifth century Britain, thrown into abject poverty by the withdrawal of Roman power, offers a lesson to the modern world. In some countries, after all, culture, industry, and governance are fragile too, and await the fall of some modern Rome.

    Recycling can earn us a living, early Britain tells us. (The Haitian man agrees; he sold his rebar to Chinese scrap dealers.)

    But the same dark century also says that sometimes recycling is not a way to make money; it is a way simply to survive. Its pervasiveness in a society can reveal a depth of impoverishment so profound that it signals a world devoid of money, factories, literacy, and political structure.

    Without the “comforting similarity” of life that Rome brought, Fleming said, Britain’s nascent cities emptied out, London among them, and devolved into “highly mobilized, small-scale communities” forced to make do on their own.

    She told an audience of 50 at the Radcliffe Gymnasium that, at around 400 A.D., Rome was beleaguered by wars elsewhere and began to withdraw its soldiers and administrators from remote Britain. The empire also stopped sending shiploads of precious metals to back up the local bronze currency.

    Without “the unifying force” of the state, its culture, and its manufacturing prowess, said Fleming, Britain was plunged into centuries of economic travail. Within a generation, fifth century Britain — once “as Roman as any place on the planet,” she said — was without the production, supply, transportation, and money systems Rome had brought to its colony.

    The result was a population “deskilled” for centuries and forced to rely on wholesale scavenging, said Fleming. With no money, no industry, and no legacy of craft, there was no one left to quarry stone, smelt metals, or make pottery. (For one thing, she said, Britain was “a-ceramic” for the next 600 years.)

    But there was at least plenty to recycle. By the second decade of the fifth century, Roman-era towns, manufacturing sites, forts, villas, and temple complexes had fallen into ruins. People raided buildings for quarried stone, iron clamps, and hefty 2-pound nails. They stripped lead pipe from deftly engineered water systems. They robbed graves for pottery and cooking utensils.

    But these scavengers also left behind a rich material record of what they stole, recovered, and reused. That’s another lesson from early Britain, this one for historians. The material record, often little valued by scholars, can be richer than the textual record, said Fleming.

    Yet historians of early medieval Britain still cling to text as the preeminent way of shining light on the period. “Most of you think historians are in the past business, but we’re really in the text-interpretation business,” she said. “And we’re as attached to the written word as any professor of literature.”

    One famous written source — just 17 words — is still so well regarded by scholars that it trumps archaeological evidence, said Fleming. But there are better sources for historians of early medieval Britain, she said: 10,000 kilos of archaeological evidence, for instance, which can be dated to the fifth century.

    Fleming, a one-time junior fellow in the Harvard University Society of Fellows, is using the year at Radcliffe to finish her third book, “Living and Dying in Early Medieval Britain.”

    Text sources are important to her. Among other things, she is a scholar of the Domesday Book, the great survey of England’s lands completed in 1086 for William the Conqueror.

    But material culture is also important, she said, in this case the “vast stores of Roman-period material” that Fleming said had piled into ruins after the collapse of Rome in Britain. Thousands of Roman sites became vast repositories for scavengers, who combed ruins for brick, tile, iron, lead, and — above all — quarried stone.

    Until the 11th century, virtually all stone used to make early Christian churches was from Roman ruins, said Fleming. And as late as the 14th century — 900 years after the fall of Romanized Britain — masons were still using Roman brick and tile.

    Architectural surveys of churches built from Roman materials show there were 300 in the London region alone. “Everywhere you look,” said Fleming of present-day British structures, “you see Roman material.”

    And it was abundant. She used the example of a Roman bath in East Sussex. It was abandoned in the third century, hidden until the 19th under a slag heap, and finally excavated in the 1970s. The simple bath yielded up “a whole universe of brick and tile,” 13 tons of it, said Fleming.

    So vast was the scale of material that salvage operations went on from the fourth to the 20th centuries. Roman engineers had used iron in buildings and walls: clamps, hinges, window grilles, gate pulls, and giant nails. The Coliseum in Rome, Fleming said, offering an example, contains an estimated 300 tons of iron clamps.

    Most scrap metal was reforged. Most villages had lost the art of smelting — making metal from ore — but they still had smithies with hot fires. Metal tools that were still useful — agricultural tools, spoons, harnesses — were saved from the melting pots.

    Roman pottery, scavenged from dump sites and ritual graves, was popular among medieval recyclers too. But in some communities, old pots were sometimes repurposed, sometimes broken just so their circular bottoms could be used as molds for large-scale brooches.

    There’s a lesson here for historians, said Fleming. In the absence of reliable narratives about ancient lives, we can recover some of those lives, she said, “if we bother to look at material evidence they left behind.”