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  • Video: BMW Z4 GT3 does a hot, wet lap of the ‘Ring

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    BMW Z4 GT3 on a lap of the ‘Ring – Click above to watch video after the jump

    Richard Göransson of Schubert Motorsport took the BMW Z4 GT3 around the ‘Ring, and while the thing has a glorious sound the word that kept coming to mind during the 11-minute stint was “handful.” That could have been because Göransson was trying to extract everything he could get from the car in the wet, but our suspicion is that whoever pilots this little racer is going to need steady nerves and quick hands. And don’t get us wrong about that – we’d love the chance to try it our ourselves. Follow the jump for the action.

    Gallery: BMW Z4 GT3

    [Source: Auto Tuning]

    Continue reading Video: BMW Z4 GT3 does a hot, wet lap of the ‘Ring

    Video: BMW Z4 GT3 does a hot, wet lap of the ‘Ring originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 12 Apr 2010 09:56:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Doctor accused of providing drugs to addicts to be sentenced

    A Southern California doctor who authorities charge needlessly prescribed drugs to addicted patients is expected to be sentenced Monday.

    In court papers, Assistant U.S. Atty. David M. Herzog called Dr. Daniel J. Healy "nothing more than a drug dealer in a lab coat" who "created and nurtured an army of addicted customers." Some patients referred to him as "the Candyman," according to the documents.

    Healy, 54, has pleaded guilty to one count of dispensing oxycodone without a legitimate medical purpose; other counts were dropped in exchange for his guilty plea. Prosecutors have asked U.S. District Judge Manuel Real to send him to federal prison for more than 17 years. Healy’s defense attorney has asked that his client be sentenced to less than five years.

    Healy ordered more than 1 million tablets of hydrocodone in 2008 — 10 times more than the average American pharmacy, according to government records. The drug, better known by the brand names Vicodin and Norco, is an addictive painkiller for which there is a thriving black market, particularly among teenagers and young adults.

    Healy allegedly hauled in so much cash that he kept an automatic money-counting machine in his office to quickly sort through the thousands of dollars that came in on a daily basis.

    Read The Times’ full examination of the Healy case.

    — Shelby Grad

  • Samsung Galaxy S passes through FCC with AT&T bands

    Samsung Galaxy S

    You may remember the Samsung Galaxy S from CTIA last month – the promising phone that was slightly overshadowed by Sprint’s WiMAX beast, the EVO 4G.  But let’s not forget about some of it’s powerful specs like the 1GHz processor, 4.0-inch Super AMOLED capacitive touchscreen, and Android 2.1, just to name a few. 

    Last week, rumors were afloat that the Galaxy S was headed to AT&T (which you may recall from Aaron’s post).  The rumors stemmed from the Samsung I897 receiving bluetooth certification and carrying AT&T’s standard radio frequencies (GSM/EDGE 850/1900 MHz).  And though the specs from the certification were VERY similar to what we know of the Galaxy S, the interesting part is that the model number for the Galaxy S is I9000, not I897 (though I imagine it’s entirely possible for different variants to carry different model numbers).

    Fast forward a few days, and the Samsung I9000 has shown itself on the FCC website sporting 3G bands indicative of AT&T.  However, Engadget is quick to point out (and with good reason) that “Samsung could have just filed the testing paperwork to cover devices headed to Canada and Mexico.”  In any case, there’s a strong chance that we’ll be seeing the Samsung Galaxy S showing it’s face over at AT&T (Maybe they’ll call it the iGalaxyS?) this summer.

    But don’t despair, there’s still plenty of time for another (T-Mobile perhaps) version to make its way through the FCC too.  Where would you like to see the Galaxy S?  Leave your comments below!

    Via Engadget


  • 21 John Mayer Douchism Motivationals

    Most celebrities, at one time or another, have said something in front of a camera or into a microphone that they later wish they hadn’t. There are also times when comments are taken out of context and seem a lot worse than they really were. With John Mayer, we wish that were the case. There’s no way to sugarcoat it — every time this guy opens his mouth, something douchey comes out of it. Here are 21 of the finest John Mayer douchisms, formatted in the only way you might get any benefit from them, as motivational posters.


  • 3DTV Skeptic at NAB Show

    Here is an interesting video comment from Greg O’Brien re 3DTV.

    P.S. I am in Las Vegas and all ready for the NAB Show now. Very excited and looking forward to see some cool stuff.

    Filed under: Science & Technology, Television

  • Uh-Oh! Samsung Galaxy Hits FCC with AT&T Bands

    Yep, you read that right.  That big, beautiful Samsung Galaxy S has been spotted hanging out in the FCC with AT&T bands in tow. You’ll have to forgive us if we’re not 100% over the moon with this news.  If AT&T keeps in line with their recent Android strategy, the Galaxy S could be hampered by lock-downs and restrictions.  As much as we’d like to be spreading nothing but positivity, we have to sprinkle some trepidation in the mix.  Here’s hoping Ma Bell doesn’t do anything stupid with the phone, like restrict apps outside of the Android Market or remove Google in favor of Yahoo.

    Might We Suggest…

    • CTIA First Impressions: Samsung Galaxy S
      Just left the keynote from Samung and spent a few minutes playing with the Galaxy S.  First off, words cannot describe just how sharp and bright the screen is.  SuperAMOLED really is that – SUPER.  Th…


  • Live Studio Audience Coming To “Anderson Cooper 360″

    CNN has come up with an unorthodox way to boost ratings for Anderson Cooper’s fleeting network news program, Anderson Cooper 360.

    The cable news network is pulling a page from the book of tawdry daytime talk shows and classic sitcoms by inviting a live studio audience to sit in on Anderson’s nightly broadcast, The Hollywood Reporter said Monday.

    The trial run of episodes will be called “specials” and are scheduled to tape on April 15 and 22. Depending on how the format is received, live studio audiences could become a regular part of the format of 360, sources say.


  • Google Acquires Visual Search Company Plink

    Google has acquired yet another company, the first one from the UK and the latest in a growing string of small acquisitions started a few months back. The company in question is Plink, a mobile visual search startup, which got Google’s attention with its image-recognition technology. The small two-man team will start working on the Google Goggles proj… (read more)

  • Cool Nissan Sentra SE-R breaks speed limit in ad by TBWA

    Cool ad. 400K+ views in 9 days. Good job and good idea.

    “They wanted to be able to show speed, basically, and there are some challenges with that — they can’t show an actual car driving like that for obvious reasons,” said Trevor Campbell, director of earned media at TBWAToronto, which launched the ad virally last week on Nissan Canada’s YouTube channel.

    [HT FP Blog]

    Filed under: advertising, Marketing, Video, YouTube

  • Toyota Recall Litigation Centralized in California

    The U.S. Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation has decided that the federal Toyota litigation, involving class action lawsuits and individual injury lawsuits filed over sudden acceleration problems with millions of recalled vehicles, will be consolidated and centralized for pretrial litigation in the Central District of California. 

    According to an order issued April 9, 2010, there are currently 11 Toyota sudden acceleration cases pending that involve sufficiently common questions of fact to support centralization in a multidistrict litigation, or MDL, for pretrial proceedings. In addition, the court knows of about 40 similar lawsuits which may be included in the MDL at a later date.

    The consolidation of the Toyota recall litigation comes as federal regulators look for ways to penalize Toyota over what they say was an intentional cover up of problems with sudden acceleration in Toyota vehicles that put lives at risk. Last week, the Department of Transportation (DOT) announced that it was fining Toyota $16.4 million. However, U.S. officials also sent a letter to Toyota saying that if it were not for statutory limits, they would have fined the company more than $13 billion, and are considering other fines against the company.

    While the $16.4 million is minor for a company the size of Toyota, experts say the real damage could be the inclusion of the federal government’s fines, condemnation, and documentation indicating a cover up in the Toyota recall lawsuits. The DOT says it has internal memos indicating that Toyota sat on the gas pedal problem for four months before issuing a recall, which could make the company vulnerable to punitive damages.

    Toyota has recalled nearly 9 million vehicles since September 2009, with 8.5 million recalled due to complaints that they can accelerate out of control. The acceleration recalls were done in waves, starting with 4.2 million recalled for problems involving the floormats, and then later recalls indicated that there was a mechanical or electrical problem with the gas pedals.

    The gas pedal problems have resulted in a number of Toyota consumer class action lawsuits, Toyota injury lawsuits and Toyota wrongful death lawsuits filed by family members of people allegedly killed when their vehicles accelerated out of control.

    The federal Toyota litigation will be centralized before U.S. District Judge James V. Selna for coordinated handling. The panel indicated that the district, where Toyota’s USA division is headquartered, was best suited to handle the potential flood of Toyota gas pedal lawsuits.

    The panel stated that Selna has the proper experience with complex litigation to handle the case, and pointed out that many of the witnesses are relevant documents are likely located in this district. The panel also said that consolidation under Selna will avoid duplicate discovery, inconsistent rulings from different judges and to serve the convenience of the court, the parties and witnesses.

    “Though these cases have attracted an unusual amount of publicity to the Panel’s work, in all relevant aspects, the issues here are neither dramatically different nor more complex than those we regularly resolve,” the panel stated in its transfer order.

    As Toyota sudden acceleration lawyers file additional cases in the future over problems with Toyota vehicle gas pedals, the lawsuits will be transferred into the MDL. If the cases do not settle or otherwise resolve during pretrial litigation, they will be returned to the district where they were filed for individual trials.

    Photo Courtesy of: http://www.flickr.com/photos/danielctw/ / CC BY 2.0

  • Kmart Told Me To Lie On Application To Get A Job

    Senyaka said she applied for a temp job at Kmart and the company told her to lie on the screening questionnaire to improve her chances of getting hired.

    She writes:

    I think if might pass being print worthy of your website.

    I put in for a temp job at my Local Kmart for a unloader/stocker.. Just until my real job training in 2 months kicks in..

    I filled out on their in-store computer and took a 70+ question about various situation and whatnot.

    I call back and was told that if I didn’t get a call after 3pm, to call them.

    Completely understand, it takes time and they might be or get busy.

    So after 3pm, I call and got told that the 70+ questions are graded by color. Red, Yellow, Green (guessing like in a traffic light and green is good)

    and that I can reapply in 90 days and that I should “Fib” to pass.

    Being told to lie to get a job….By HR…

    I contact Sears and Kmart on their various telephone hotline to be told to call the person that told me to lie about the fact that they told me to lie.

    I have used the information from your website to forward my email to other people within their company.

    Guess I’m too honest to work there. I don’t see that as a bad thing.

    So there you have it. Apparently Kmart is going after people who say the right things, but not necessarily those who do them.

  • 2011 Mercedes CLK: Hello Sexy!

    2011 Mercedes CLK Coupe

    The new Audi A5 and BMW 3-series coupes may have a bit more to worry about as Mercedes is readying a new version of their C-series coupe, the CLK for a March 2011 release. The CLK has been Mercedes sporty 4-seater coupe since 1996 and has always been a handsome automobile. Released in a hard top and convertible, the CLK was always marketed as a somewhat less expensive alternative to its more expensive older brother the two-seater SL. Keep in mind that Mercedes also produces the E-class coupe which is a sexy car. This does however beg the question – will the CLK simply be a smaller version of the E-class? Supposedly yes, but with a much different look and feel. Platform architecture will be similar as the cars will share the same 2760mm wheelbase as well as some internal parts.

    Although the final design has yet to be penned the above early sketch should give you an idea of where it’s headed. 2011 should be a very interesting year for Mercedes.


  • GOP on Offense Ahead of Supreme Court Showdown

    As expected, Republicans this weekend already began threatening trouble for Democrats if President Obama nominates someone left of mainstream to succeed Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens. Stevens announced Friday that he plans to retire from the court this summer.

    Sens. Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.), speaking on MSNBC Sunday, and Jon Kyl (R-Ariz.), appearing on ABC, did not rule out the use of a filibuster during the nomination process, expected to take place this year. Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah.) told The Associated Press that the president is in for “a whale of a fight” if he nominates an activist judge.

    And Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.), on FOX News, reconfirmed a statement he made Friday indicating that he is open to opposing an up-or-down vote. Additionally, Alexander made clear he may vote against the nominee. “If the president picks someone from the fringe instead of from the middle, or if he picks someone who will apply their feelings instead of applying the law, then that might be an extraordinary case when I can’t vote for that nominee,” Alexander said.

    Speculation over potential nominees includes several individuals widely regarded as being the most likely suspects. They include: Solicitor General Elena Kagan; Merrick Garland, D.C. federal appellate judge; and federal appellate judge Diane Wood in Chicago.

    Over at National Review, Abigail Thernstrom questions why a black nominee, such as Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick, has yet to be floated by her NRO colleagues.

    And it’s no surprise that this morning’s latest buzz has some bloggers in a tizzy: “Oh Please God No: On Hillary Clinton for Supreme Court ” Kevin Glass writes this morning on Townhall.com. Clinton is the latest atypical candidate being floated as a nominee. Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm is among the other outliers being discussed, according to multiple news outlets.

    But conservative blogs in general are pretty quiet on the SCOTUS short list this morning. No Monday posts as of 10:20am today from RedState, Little Green Footballs or Michelle Malkin.

  • T-Mobile myTouch Slide Shows up in the Wild Wearing a Pretty Red Dress



    We were hoping that the myTouch Slide would have picked up a bit of sexiness since we last checked in.  It seems T-Mobile and HTC might be trying to do exactly that, putting a shiny gloss of red paint on the handset.  A recently leaked photo from TmoNews has the phone looking every bit ready for a release next month.  Sure, the red looks nice and the handset appears to be  solidly built.  Now, if we could just address that confusing looking keyboard before it hits shelves…

    Until we hear otherwise, we’re going to roll with the following specs:

    • Sliding 4-Row QWERTY
    • 320×48o screen resolution
    • 1300mAh Battery
    • MicroSD slot
    • Optical trackpad/ Push Button
    • Camera w/ LED flash
    • 3.5 mm Headphone Jack
    • 320×48o screen resolution

    Might We Suggest…

    • First Look at T-Mobile myTouch Slide

      We’d recently started hearing whispers that T-Mobile would be expanding their myTouch handset into a line of phones, starting with a slideout QWERTY model.  With no pictures, specs, or estimate…


  • Iceland parliament committee implicates former PM, bank chief in banking crisis

    [JURIST] Seven Icelandic government officials acted with gross negligence in their management of the country’s financial system prior to a 2008 bank collapse, according to a report released Monday by a parliamentary panel. The Special Investigation Committee (SIC), convened in 2008 by the Icelandic Parliament to investigate the collapse of the country’s three largest banks, determined that then-Prime Minister Geir Haarde and former central bank head David Oddsson knew that banks were assuming overseas debt but took no action to prevent or mitigate the effects of the accumulation. The SIC also found that former Minister of Finance Arni Mathiessen, then-banking minister Bjorgvin Sigurdsson, former Financial Services Authority director Jonas Jonsson and central bank officials Eirikur Gundason and Ingimundur Fridriksson failed to take appropriate action when presented with information about the poor state of the country’s financial sector. When Kaupthing, Landsbanki and Glitnir were taken over by the Icelandic government in 2008, they were holding debt equal to more than 900 percent of Iceland’s gross domestic product, causing the country’s economy to collapse and the government to rely on loans from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) to meet its obligations. A parliamentary panel will decide whether to take legal action against the officials.
    Iceland was hit hard by the financial crisis that emanated from securities related to the US mortgage market. The country began considering whether to seek EU accession last year, with Prime Minister Johanna Sigurdardottir arguing that adopting the Euro would help stabilize the country’s economy. In 2008, the United Kingdom used anti-terrorism laws to freeze $4 billion in assets held by Landsbanki after its takeover by the Icelandic government.

  • The Ultimate La-Z-Boy [Concepts]

    You can have your plush periwinkle recliner with optional Big Gulp holder. I’m sticking with the Galatea Spa chair by designer Verenice Macedo. More »







  • Hennessey signs DiMora to sell Venom GT overseas

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    Hennessey Venom GT – Click above for high-res image gallery

    You might say the American automotive industry is divided into two groups: The Big Three, and the rest. That latter category might include up-and-comers like Tesla, niche manufacturers like SSC, as well as super-modifiers like Hennessey and wannabes like DiMora. Those last two are hoping to break out obscurity with high-end offerings of their own, and have teamed up along the way to make it happen.

    After decades of tuning Vipers and ‘Vettes, Hennessey recently debuted the new Venom GT, a of Lotus on ‘roids with a supercharged Corvette LS9 V8 mounted amidship. It can be ordered, starting at around $600,00, with 725, 1,000 or even 1,200 horsepower. Sounds exactly right for the Middle East, doesn’t it?

    To that effect, Hennessey has signed DiMora – the effort behind the vaporware Natalia SLS super-sedan – to sell the Venom GT in the Middle East and in India, two burgeoning markets for rich toys like this one.

    [Source: Inside Line]

    Hennessey signs DiMora to sell Venom GT overseas originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 12 Apr 2010 09:38:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Google reportedly working on its own Android-based tablet

    Google tablet

    Might Google be working on an Android-based tablet? The New York Times says yes (and there’s really no reason for anybody to think that Google doesn’t have a host of new products being tested underground somewhere), reporting that Google CEO Eric Schmidt was blabbing about it recently.

    [Schmidt] told friends at a recent party in Los Angeles about the new device, which would exclusively run the Android operating system. People with direct knowledge of the project — who did not want to be named because they said they were unauthorized to speak publicly about the device — said the company had been experimenting in “stealth mode” with a few publishers to explore delivery of books, magazines and other content on a tablet.

    With the advent of the Nexus One, there’s no doubt that Google’s capable of launching and growing its own product. (OK, headaches included.) Is some sort of slate/tablet/e-reader on the horizon? No reason why there couldn’t be. [NYTThanks to everybody who sent this in.