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  • Ferrari F40 reunion planned for 2010 Concorso Italiano

    Filed under: , ,

    2009 Concorso Italiano – Click above for high-res image gallery

    There’s something special about seeing a supercar in person, and it’s a once in a lifetime event to see several in the same place. It’s for that reason we’re big fans of supercar reunions. Last year, as part of the Monterey Classic Car Week festivities, Concorso Italiano hosted a Ferrari 288 GTO reunion as part of the car’s 25th anniversary, and an incredible fifteen examples showed up, making it the largest gathering ever.

    Concorso plans to outdo itself this year with another Ferrari reunion, this time with the F40. More than a dozen owners have already signed on to bring their cars, and we fully expect plenty more to be on hand come August 13th. In fact, the event organizers hope to have more than 40 examples in attendance. The F40’s project director, Leonardo Fioravanti, is also scheduled to make an appearance.

    If you’re a big fan of the F40 or even just Italian supercars in general, then start making your plans to be in Monterey in a little over four months. Until then, take a look at what you missed out on last year in the galleries below.

    Photos by Drew Phillips and Frank Filipponio / Copyright (C)2009 Weblogs, Inc.

    Ferrari F40 reunion planned for 2010 Concorso Italiano originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 09 Apr 2010 19:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Garcelle Beauvais-Nilon “Healing” After Outting Cheating Hubby Mike Nilon

    Garcelle Beauvais is one MILF you don’t want to mess with!

    The former NYPD Blue star says she is “healing” and focusing on her three sons hours after the star lit up cyberspace with reports that she blasted her alleged lothario husband for infidelity in an email to the prestigious Hollywood agent’s co-workers.

    Let this be a lesson to the unfaithful spouses of the world: Screw over the wrong person and your sweaty roll in the hay with the babysitter might become a trending topic on Twitter.

    “….I found out today that MY husband of almost 9 yrs has been having an affair for 5 yrs with some slut in Chicago. I am devastated!!!! And I have been duped!! Our boys don’t deserve this!” the TV stunner spat in a mass email to Mr. Nilon’s colleagues.

    Beauvais-Nilon has since opted for the more diplomatic route: “My focus at this time is on my kids and healing the pain. There will be no further comment,” the actress said in a statement issued Friday.

    The couple has twin sons Jax Joseph and Jaid Thomas, born October 18, 2007. Garcelle also has an 18-year-old son, Oliver.


  • Vonage VoIP Apps Now Available for T-Mobile and AT&T Android Phones [VoIP]

    T-Mobile and AT&T customers with Android phones can now finally download a Vonage VoIP app to their devices to make cheap international calls over Wi-Fi or 3G. They’ll also get free domestic calls, but only over Wi-Fi. More »







  • Yet Another Paywall Experiment Fails

    As we’ve seen time and time again, generally, when newspapers put up a paywall around their content, things do not turn out well. Yet, newspapers continue to put them up. While we applaud the spirit of experimentation, if they simply keep repeating the same experiment over and over again, with the same results, they’re apparently not learning anything. So, it’s not really surprising to see that yet another paywall experiment has ended badly. This time The Valley Morning Star, a small paper in Harlingen, Texas, decided in mid-2009 to implement a paywall. The paper, which has a circulation of about 23,000, was chosen as a test case for Freedom Communications’ stable of newspapers.

    The paywall, which launched the week of July 15th, cost $3.95 a month, 75 cents per day, or was included if you had a subscription to the print version of the newspaper. The rationale was that since online readers were not paying a subscription fee, somehow the value to the print subscribers decreased:


    “It will allow greater value to our many loyal print-edition subscribers by not giving away the news to non-subscribers,” Patton said. “The days of giving content away, which costs money to create and for which we charge our print subscribers, I think, are just over.”

    As we’ve discussed here before, this is a flawed argument. The subscription price of a printed newspaper barely covers the costs of printing and distribution, not the production of the content, which is generally funded with ad revenue.

    In any case, after 8 months, the The Valley Morning Star took the paywall down, proudly proclaiming they “will be moving back to a completely FREE Web site.” By now, so many of these paywall experiments have failed that you have to wonder when the industry will finally heed the lessons they teach.

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  • Samsung Strive (AT&T) Review

    The Strive has a full QWERTY keyboard and 2.6″ screen, but it’s not a touchscreen. Does it make up for this with other features and achieve all it “strives” to? Sydney does a full review.


  • Bryant Misses Second Straight Game

    Lakers – Wolves Gameday Page

    Lakers guard Kobe Bryant missed his second straight game on Friday night in Minnesota, opting to rest his various injuries (sore knee, ankle and finger) as L.A. took on the Timberwolves.

    Phil Jackson neglected to speculate as to Bryant’s status for Sunday’s game against Portland, suggesting that he’d address the question over the weekend.

  • Jim Carrey On Tiger Woods: “No Wife Is That Blind!”

    Think it’s safe to say Jim Carrey is Team Tiger?

    On Friday, the newly-single Grinch star hit his Twitter page where he defended the golfer, who returned to the green this week to compete in The Masters — his first tournament since his infidelity scandal broke, linking the sportsman to at least 17 mistresses.

    “Tiger Woods owes nothing [to] anyone but himself. [To] please his father he gave up his childhood and his freedom in the world. That’s enough!” Carrey Tweeted on Friday. “No wife is blind enough to miss that much infidelity. Elin had [to be] a willing participant on the ride [for] whatever reason,” the comedian later added.

    On Wednesday, Jim made several other pro-Tiger posts.

    “If you really wanna see sexual disfunction get 2 know your favorite basketball star! Curling is the only safe sport 4 a married man!” he wrote.

    Jim split from his longtime girlfriend Jenny McCarthy on Monday.


  • The “Mean Prom” Masquerade Continues, Constance Not the First to Face Discrimination

    A number of students from Itawamba Agricultural High School have  joined the discussion on the post The MEANEST Town in America.  According to the most recent comments, there were three

    parent run proms

    for students on the night of April 2, the night of the country club prom that Constance attended with five others. The student, screen name fentdog goes on to say:

    I don’t much about the school run prom. I do know that everyone went to Evergreen because more work was put into it.

    As the photos show, a lot of work went into the Evergreen prom, including a marquee tent with decorations like huge cut outs of masks seen above, balloon arches and disco lights.

    The student writes that the Evergreen  event did not have tickets, that there were no invitations, instead kids were “told about” the Evergreen event. The student writes about Constance

    people tried to go contact her, but she would never pick up her phone. On the night of the prom, she goes to a different one…the school sponsored one. She didn’t know that everyone had decided to go to Evergreen, thus she had a fit. I can personally recall trying to call Constance to go to Evergreen….but she never answered.

    Hmmm, okay. So then why wasn’t she emailed, or Facebooked about it? And what about the other kids who showed up at the country club?

    The Evergreen prom/dance party, the one which had photos that appeared on Facebook, the one with kids dressed to the nines cruising away stretch SUVs, the one “everyone went to” where two girls where photographed tongue kissing, shared the same theme as the original school prom which was to be held at the IAHS Commons, according to a memo, dated February 5, which appears to be from the school, issued by two teachers.

    The apparent memo about the original prom stated the theme, Masquerade. That theme is seen in photos from the Evergreen party.

    The memo also laid down the criteria for the students’ guests. It clearly states that  guests

    must be of the opposite sex

    Constance challenged that.

    Constance isn’t the first student to face discrimination at IAHS. Just before Constance spoke out, another student was forced to leave town…

    On February 4, 2010,  WTVA reported that IAHS student Juin Baize was suspended for wearing make up, women’s clothing and boots to school.  Juin, who per Dan Savage, currently prefers the use of the male pronoun, said

    They told me that I can not come to school dressed like a girl.

    The story continues:

    And that’s unfair…says Juin’s friend, senior Constance McMillen.

    She says a group of girls came to school Thursday morning, dressed as guys in support of Juin dressing like he does.

    Constance says the principal immediately told Juin to go home.

    McMillen said, “Mr. Wiygul came to Juin and told him he had to leave and I stopped Mr. Wiygul and I said Mr. Wiygul why are you making him leave? Because he’s dressed like a girl? And he said yes, and I said you know that’s not fair because all of us are dressed like boys. Why aren’t you telling us to leave? And he just said I’m following orders from the school board and I said you can’t rightfully make him leave and not make us leave because, I mean, it’s the same thing.”

    Juin was was given a suspension notice and sent home, and when he returned to school after his first suspension, he was suspended again. The reasons for a student’s suspension are supposed to be noted on the suspension form, but that part of Baize’s suspension notice was left blank, according to Kristy Bennett, legal director of the ACLU of Mississippi.

    Bennett told Dan Savage:

    Juin’s case was a situation where a transgender student wanted to attend school dressed in feminine clothing, and the school district would not even let him attend school.

    Neither the superintendent nor school board attorney wanted to go on camera with WTVA, but both did talk to WTVA by phone at the time of the incident, telling the news station that they.

    are simply following the handbook rules, which allows a student to be sent home, if he or she is determined to be a distraction.

    The situation escalated, and Juin’s mother, who had just relocated from Indiana to stay with relatives, moved Juin out of state to live friends, fearing for Juin’s safety. Juin is currently attending a virtual school, and the ACLU which was investigating the cae said they won’t be pursuing it.

    Juin not being in Fulton makes it difficult for us to pursue any kind of legal action here. And personally, I feel it may be a better decision for Juin to relocate and move on with his life.

    The “distraction” issue is being used by the American Family Association to bolster the IAHS school board’s decision. In an editorial published on the Itawamba County Journal site, NEM360.com, Bryan Fisher, the AFA’s Director of Issues Analysis cites a Supreme Court decision, Morse v. Frederick (2007)

    that school officials are entitled to restrict student speech and expressions in order to maintain an orderly, disruption-free school environment.

    But a reader succinctly refutes that, stating that Fisher misrepresents Morse v. Fredrick, which was case about drug usage, quoting an analysis:

    Joseph Frederick, a student at Juneau-Douglas High School  in Juneau, Alaska, displayed a banner at a high school event on which was written:  “Bong Hits 4 Jesus.”  The principle, Deborah Morse, regarded the banner as promoting illegal drugs and confiscated the banner and suspended the student.  After the Ninth Circuit held that the principle violated the student’s First Amendment’s rights, the Supreme Court overturned and held that his rights were not violated…

    Chief Justice Roberts wrote “[And] that the rights of students ‘must be applied in light of the special characteristics of the school environment.’ … Consistent with these principles, we hold that schools may take steps to safeguard those entrusted to their care from speech that can reasonably be regarded as encouraging drug use.”

    The environment at IAHS may come up very soon. Chris Keifer reports in NEM360.com

    The American Civil Liberties Union is questioning the motives behind the two events as it drafts its lawsuit seeking damages from the Itawamba County School District…

    We are disappointed at the sparse attendance (at the event McMillen attended), and we’re looking further into the situation,” said Kristy Bennett, legal director of the ACLU of Mississippi.

    “Whatever we find will be brought to the court’s attention, whether it is in the damages trial, or whatever. There will still be a trial on the merits. The case didn’t end in the preliminary hearing.”

    [ht Dan SavageQueerty.com]

  • Video: A lap with Fernando Alonso’s F1 Ferrari – as soundtracked by slide guitar

    Filed under: , ,

    “Playing” a Fernando Alonso lap of Bahrain in a Ferrari F10 – Click above to watch video after the jump

    One of the questions creative types hate most is “Where do get your ideas?” So we won’t ask where this guy got the idea to “play” a lap of Bahrain, we’ll just chuckle and shake our heads at the fact that he actually did it. Sliding his fingers along a Gibson X-plorer, he recreates one of Fernando Alonso’s entire laps at the Bahrain GP down to gear changes and high-rev oscillations. So it won’t get this guy to Wembley, but it will get him all over the Internet, and that’s almost like the same thing, right? Follow the jump to check it out. Top tip, Jordan!

    [Source: YouTube via New York Times]

    Continue reading Video: A lap with Fernando Alonso’s F1 Ferrari – as soundtracked by slide guitar

    Video: A lap with Fernando Alonso’s F1 Ferrari – as soundtracked by slide guitar originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 09 Apr 2010 19:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Nissan: We never considered dropping the Titan pickup

    About a year ago, the faith of the Nissan Titan pickup looked really hazy. Sales of the full-size truck were down and plans to team up with Chrysler to use the Dodge Ram basis fell through.

    After all that Nissan remained a bit quiet about what it has in the works for the full-size pickup segment… until now.

    According to Carlos Tavares, Executive Vice President and Member of the Board of Nissan Motor, the company never stopped considering a replacement for the Titan.

    “We didn’t consider stopping. When the Chrysler deal fell through, we immediately started on a truck of our own. We are committed to this market. We recognize that it’s an important part of this market, so we are not going to step out,” Tavares told Inside Line.

    Last we heard anything, Nissan said that it will continue to sell the Titan while it works on the successor.

    – By: Kap Shah

    Source: Straightline


  • Weekend Reading: The Toilet Paper Entrepreneur, by Mike Michalowicz

    tp_apr10.jpgWhile this week’s entry in the Weekend Reading series is an established book from 2008, it is still a highly touted read for aspiring entrepreneurs with little time and resources that are looking to get a business started. The Toilet Paper Entrepreneur: The Tell-It-Like-It-Is Guide to Cleaning Up in Business, Even If You Are At the End of Your Roll, by Mike Michalowicz is an entertaining hard-edged read mixed with valuable business lessons from an experienced entrepreneur.

    Sponsor

    In 1996, at the age of 24, Michalowicz started his first company Olmec Systems, where we was recognized as Young Entrepreneur of the Year by the Small Business Administration. On New Year’s Eve 2002, he sold Olmec Systems, and on New Years Day 2003, he launched his second company, PG Lewis & Associates, which quickly grew until being sold to Robert Half International. Michalowicz’s current company, Obsidian Launch, is a business growth accelerator specifically aimed at young entrepreneurs.

    tpe_cover_arp10.jpgIn his book, Michalowicz provides advice for the up-and-coming entrepreneurs of the world on how to get a business started with the bare essentials, including some tips for taking advantage of little-known resources to get ahead quickly. But above all, Michalowicz knows that starting a business takes more than planning and acting on that plan; it takes the entrepreneurial spirit, and passion.

    “What makes you lose track of time, complete tasks almost effortlessly, and come out even more energized? When you are talking with friends, what is the one subject you can just go on and on and on about, until they are rolling their eyes? Answer these questions and you’ve found your heart’s desire,” writes Michalowicz. “And when you have found you insatiable thirst, your passion, you will have taken the most important step to launching a company that will excel.”

    Throughout the book, Michalowicz provides “TPE Tips,” which are small, but valuable nuggets of information that will help a small business gain ground on-the-cheap. An example from the first chapter of the book explains how while every business needs a web presence, not every business needs a website.

    tpe_mike_apr10.jpg“You can establish a web presence by sing Facebook.com, MySpace.com, Squidoo.com or a million other social sites,” says Michalowicz. “Spread the word about what you are doing through these social sites and set up free email. Supplement your social networking site with a free blog at Blogspot.com. That’s more than enough to get some business rolling in.”

    This echoes similar advice we’ve discussed from other books, such as Gary Vaynerchuk’s Crush It! which focuses heavily on building your personal brand. Author of the Personal Branding Blog, Dan Schawbel, says Michalowicz has built his brand quickly and efficiently and suggest that entrepreneurs pick up the book in order to “stop wasting time and start building your entrepreneur brand today.”

    The title alone should tell you that this book is lighthearted and easy on the brain, but don’t take its outward appearance at face value. The Toilet Paper Entrepreneur is full of great advice for entrepreneurs – advice that still holds true in 2010. Be sure to also visit the TPE website where Michalowicz regularly blogs and posts videos of updated advice.

    Discuss


  • Is this the Project Pink Turtle?

    projectpinktutrle

    Excitement must be running pretty high for this single photo, unnecessarily turned into a video, to be considered newsworthy by Engadget, but they claim that the above device, caught in a coffee shop is the Turtle, the portrait slider by Microsoft set to replace the side-kick.

    The device appears to be cradled and seem pretty slim in form factor and possibly a bit too nondescript in appearance to excite the teens.

    Pop over to Engadget to read (a tiny amount) more.


  • Spaceflight’s past and future










    A reveler wears a helmet in the shape of a Sputnik satellite during the 2007 Yuri’s
    Night celebration at NASA’s Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif.




    Space enthusiasts are celebrating nearly five decades of human spaceflight – and anxiously awaiting word on what will happen in the decade ahead.


    The celebration reaches its peak on Monday – which happens to be the 49th anniversary of the first human flight into outer space, made by Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin, as well as the 29th anniversary of the first space shuttle launch. Back in 2001, spaceflight fans began organizing “Yuri’s Night” parties to mark the occasion.


    For the 10th annual Yuri’s Night, 188 parties (and counting) have been organized in 63 countries on all seven of the world’s continents. Yes, that includes the Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station in Antarctica … and probably someplace close to where you live as well.

    …(read more)

  • Comments Are Back! [Announcements]

    Earlier our comment system was temporarily shut down while our tech team worked their magic. It’s back up and running the way it should be again, but if you happen to see any odd quirks please report them in an email with the subject line of “Uh oh! This is broken!” More »







  • Here’s The Real Reason Small Companies Create All The New Jobs

    Paul KedroskyI previously posted this at Growthology and Infectious Greed.  The original title was:

    Drunks, A Wall, Entrepreneurs, And Jobs

    ——————

    That young firms account for most of the job creation in the U.S. – as written about my Kauffman colleagues Dane Stangler, Bob Litan, and others — has quickly become one of those compelling facts that changes the way you apprehend the entrepreneurial world. Young firms assume their rightful priority of place, and the vexing conflation of young/growth firms with small firms is finally and rightly undone.

    I am going to take a different perspective on the relation between young firms and job creation, however. I want to explain its mathematical inevitability, and I’m going to do that using the probabilistic idea of the drunkard’s walk.

    It works like this: Imagine an inebriated bar-goer having exited the bar, and now standing outside along the wall. Imagine further drunkards-walk that in his or her state every single step is random, a coin flip whether it will be toward or away from the bar wall.

    At first, however, the bar-goer is at the wall, so further steps toward the wall can’t happen. The only direction he or she can go with that first step is toward the curb. After that things change, of course, with at least some steps toward the wall possible, after which the drunkard is back at the wall and unable to go further. Given enough time, and with 100% probability, the drunkard will eventually end up in the gutter away from the wall.

    Evolutionary theorist Stephen Jay Gould famously used the idea of the drunkard’s walk to explain the rise of complexity over time in humans. It wasn’t progress, he argued, just a blind evolutionary process staggering away from a left wall of minimum biological complexity.

    The same holds in job creation. Young companies are the single-celled paramecia of the economic world: at t=0 they stand at the bar wall facing the gutter. They can’t lose jobs because they haven’t created any yet. All they can do initially, other than fail, is stagger away from the zero employment wall. Now, we know that about half of young companies last five years, more than enough time for companies to stagger back and forth such that, even if we assume no managerial skill, the drunkard’s walk model tells us they will grow and add jobs, even if only because that left bar wall prevents them from going below zero jobs.

    The same doesn’t hold for older companies. They have been in business long enough that at t=0 they are already some distance from the bar wall, staggering back and forth. They can create jobs, of course, but they can also lose many jobs, the latter being something young companies mathematically cannot do given how they start at the left wall of zero employment.

    In short, the central thing about job creation from young companies is its inevitability. It is a species of mathematical certainty (one driven by initial simplicity and a wall) that young companies must create the most jobs (even without assuming particular skill on their part, or taking into account sectoral or economic growth, both crazily conservative assumptions). That the drunkard’s walk applies to the economics of young firms is an mind-altering realization (in a good way), one that helps put the messy data of company and job creation in a more plain and meaningful context.

    Also at Infectious Greed: A Tourist Trip Through Network Economics

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Citizen Journalism Startup Plans Global Expansion

    All Voices, a “citizen media” site that is trying to create a kind of crowd-powered newswire service, today announced an ambitious expansion into 30 countries that it believes aren’t getting enough coverage from traditional media, including Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, India, Sri Lanka, Egypt and China. In effect, the company is attempting to create a Reuters-style service that brings news and insight from places that traditional media entities aren’t covering, either because they don’t care or because they’ve cut back their foreign reporting budgets.

    Once the service gets well-established in those countries, Aki Hashmi of All Voices — a former Knight-Ridder and Reuters executive — says the service plans to expand into 30 more. Hashmi says the site has grown by over 400 percent in the past year and now has 337,000 contributors in 180 countries generating 4 million unique visits per month.

    “If you look at AP and Reuters, they have about 40-50 percent of the world covered,” says Hashmi. “But how do you cover the rest of the world? You need a global network of professional and citizen reporters.” All Voices already has contributors in some or all of the countries, he says, but the proposed expansion will take the company deeper into those areas and create virtual news desks, consisting of both citizen journalists and professional journalists who are either freelancing or have been laid off. While All Voices won’t be approaching or hiring specific journalists in these areas, Hashmi says the service has found that journalists inevitably come forward, because they want their content to reach a larger audience, and to potentially get paid for it.

    The service — which was founded in 2008 by former Sevin Rosen venture capitalist Amra Tareen based on a trip to her home country of Pakistan following a devastating series of earthquakes — is even modeled on a wire service or professional media outlet such as Reuters or Associated Press. Writers begin as “stringers,” which is the common term in the journalist business for a freelancer who files occasionally for a newspaper, wire service or broadcast network. As their content is rated, both by readers and by All Voices’ ranking algorithm, they gain reputation within the system and can be promoted first to “reporter” level and then to the top level, known as “anchor.” The site has no editors, although it has a community manager.

    One writer who calls himself “California Mike” says he is 60 years old and is “a crazy old coot who probably should have inhaled more often during the ’60s, danced more during the ’70s, had more sex during the ’80s, made more money during the ’90s and been more patriotic during the ’00s.” According to the ranking shown below, he has contributed 386 reports and 789 comments and his stories have generated over 800,000 page views. Many of his reports are more like blogs posts, with his thoughts about current events. Hashmi says that writers can use nicknames, but that if they want their contributions to be syndicated through Google ) News or to be paid by the site, they have to use their real name.

    No one is going to become rich writing for All Voices, however, even with page views like California Mike’s. Much like other user-generated content sites such as Demand Media, AOL’s Patch.com or Associated Content, the rate of pay at All Voices is low — and it isn’t seen as payment so much as an incentive program. Once a contributor builds a certain reputation within the site by contributing stories and having others rank their content for credibility, they can earn anywhere from $2 per thousand page views (for a stringer) to a maximum of $4 per thousand (for an anchor). Writers also gain rank within the system by promoting their content through social networks such as Facebook and Twitter.

    By comparison, Demand Media pays about $15 for a 500-word piece and about $7.50 for shorter items, while Examiner.com pays based on page views, but the exact rate is set based on how much advertising the site gets for its pages, as well as other factors (some writers who have worked for the site say it works out to about 3 cents per page view). Examiner — which is part of the portfolio of companies controlled by oil and real estate billionaire Philip Anschutz — recently acquired Vancouver, British Columbia-based “citizen journalism” outfit NowPublic for a reported $25 million. It says it has contributors (which it calls “examiners”) in 50 cities in the U.S.

    Related content from GigaOM Pro (sub req’d):

    Developers, Meet Your Hungry New Market, the News

  • Build your own Ferrari 599 GTO

    Filed under: , , ,

    What do you get when you start with a 599 GTB Fiorano, lose 430 pounds, add 49 horsepower and import street-legal tech from the track-only 599XX? The sum of those many marvelous parts is the 599 GTO, the fastest road-going Ferrari in the automaker’s legendary history.

    The folks in Maranello unleashed it’s king Horse to the public earlier this week before its official unveiling next month at the Beijing Motor Show, with the promise to build precisely 599 examples carrying the venerable GTO designation. The good news is Ferrari created a vehicle configurator that lets you customize your 599 GTO to your heart’s content. The bad news: at an estimated $460,000, most of us couldn’t afford it.

    But still, it’s fun to dream, and with the hundreds of available combinations you’ll have plenty of time to play. Hues for the 50s and 60s are available, along with metallic finishes, and you can choose your own seat type (racing buckets come in small, medium and large), steering wheel type, a host of available carbon fiber accents, over a dozen different interior stitching options and plenty more. Check it out and start saving your pennies for the launch later this year.

    Gallery: Ferrari 599 GTO

    [Source: Ferrari]

    Build your own Ferrari 599 GTO originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 09 Apr 2010 19:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • 8-Bit Wedding Cake Topper [Videogames]

    I know two things: Only fools fall in love and only geeks use pixelated versions of themselves as wedding cake toppers. I just don’t know if the toppers are edible, but I want to nibble on the bride’s dress anyway. More »







  • Politics of Oil: Terrorism and Corruption

    A U.S. soldier looks out from a tower at the massive Bayji oil refinery in northern Iraq.

    A U.S. soldier looks out from a tower at the massive Bayji oil refinery in northern Iraq.

    The Bayji oil refinery in northern Iraq reflects a mix of forces that define Iraq:  oil and politics, terrorism and corruption.

    Bayji produces 70 percent of the country’s refined fuel including gasoline, kerosene and diesel oil.  But millions of dollars of fuel has disappeared over the years, ending up in the hands of terrorists.

    Two years ago Al Qaeda and other insurgent groups were a constant threat, intimidating truck drivers as they filled up at Bayji’s fuel distribution points and stealing the fuel at gunpoint.  Inside the compound, corruption was rampant.

    “Two or three years ago we had here, maybe the biggest corruption in Iraq,” says refinery director Ali Al-Obaidi.

    He arrived in 2007 as part of a joint U.S.-Iraqi corruption crisis team.  The U.S. military set up a  base on the refinery grounds.  Obaidi  began cleaning house.  He fired corrupt workers and started carefully checking documents.  At the distribution points, he added a fuel metering system to monitor the payload for every truck leaving the refinery.

    But his team can’t control what happens once the tankers pull out.  The corruption has now moved beyond the refinery gates and into the trucking system.

    Col. Adel Faiz, chief of the refinery’s oil protection force says the drivers now “change the document.  They change the stamp.  They play with the destination of the tankers.”

    The refinery team would prefer to move fuel through pipelines, but they say they’re meeting resistance from politicians in Baghdad in bed with the trucking companies

    Col. Adel and Dr. Obaidi say that fighting corruption has made them some powerful enemies in the oil ministry.  Both men have had warrants issued for their arrest.

    Obaidi credits a small but visible U.S. military presence for keeping his political enemies off his back.  “Just their presence here,” he says, “can neutralize this type of pressure, and I feel more stronger.”

    All U.S. troops are supposed to leave Iraq by the end of 2011. But the refinery management would like to see the Americans stick around longer.  They guarantee more security and less corruption– the keys to attracting foreign investors and building Bayji’s future.

  • Is A “Winnie The Pooh” Live Action Movie On The Way?

    The inhabitants of The Hundred Acre Woods may be getting a new lease on life with whispers that a Winnie The Pooh live action/CGI film (Think Alvin & The Chipmunks) is headed for the big screen. Word is Universal Studios and director Spike Jonze (Where The Wild Things Are) are in negotiations to bring Disney’s classic animated franchise to theaters.

    “It’s going to be a darker version… How everything got started in Ashdown Forest,” says an insider.