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  • Why is 5,000 a Key Psychological Level?

    Damn you Dow Jones index flirting with 11,000!

    If Australian stocks follow the overnight U.S. lead, they will fail to break through key psychological resistance levels and decline. In the U.S., the mental block investors have was compounded by U.S. Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke who, in a “dog bites man” kind of story, said that unemployment and rising home foreclosures would “challenge” the U.S. recovery.

    Gold was up $15 on the day.

    By the way, is that phrase “key psychological levels” just a load of horse pucky used by analysts and commentators to try and explain things they don’t understand? Why is 5,000 a key psychological level? Why not 5,031? Or 5,187? Or 42?

    “The charts – especially the volume indicators and the moving averages – are an aggregate expression of people’s psychology and sentiment,” explained our resident trader Murray Dawes last week when we asked him about it. “It doesn’t’ have anything to do with valuations. But it does have to do with expectations. And whether you like it or not, those tend to be self-fulfilling. So if people believe 5,000 matters, then it matters.”

    Murray, by the way, is one of the few traders we’ve worked with who DOES understand the fundamental picture. In fact, he’s a bit of an Austrian at heart, or at least considers that perspective in his “big picture view.” That informs all of his trading. And he’s actually a bit in the deflationist camp right now, although when we looked at his update last week for Slipstream Trader he was doing just fine – despite being wary of a big drop in the market.

    Rio Tinto isn’t wary at all. Rio’s Andrew Harding, who heads its copper business, said that copper prices looked good based on tight supply. “From a supply point of view, there are just not a lot of new stories out there…It would be hard to imagine what would cause a collapse in the copper price.” Hubris alert.

    We could imagine it easily enough. All you have to do is go back a few years. It’s not a feat of imagination at all. Just memory. Copper sold for a shade under US$9,000 a tonne in July of 2008. By December, it had fallen to $2,812 – a previously unimaginable decline.

    As our friend Rick Rule says, in the resource markets, you’re either a victim or you’re a contrarian. So what is it right now? Diggers and Drillers editor Alex Cowie probably has the hardest job at our shop at the moment. He has to pick resource winners while being aware that the market may be like a few years ago, when forecasts and expectations became wildly unrealistic.

    Alex is doing just fine. In fact he recommended a copper stock a few months ago which is travelling nicely. We remember being skeptical at the time. But the question is whether it’s like 2007 – where you have another year of euphoria in front of you. Or 2008, where you may have another few months.

    Dan Denning
    for The Daily Reckoning Australia

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  • Murdoch: iPad May Save Newspapers [Blockquote]

    Rupert Murdoch is in love with the iPad. It’s not hardware. It’s not the software. It IS THE FUTURE!. The future of newspapers, he says. Well, Rupert, here’s some news for you: The WSJ iPad app sucks kangaroo balls. More »







  • Late Late Night FDL: Narcissus

    Featuring new videos from Beans & Fatback and Solander.

    What’s on your mind tonight?

  • Blu-ray earns US$ 331M from Q1 2010 sales

    There’s no doubting now that the Blu-ray is the chosen HD format of this generation. Home Media Magazine and blu-ray.com’s data reveal that a whopping 68.5% increase of Blu-ray sales were incurred in Q1 of 2010.
     
     
     

  • Best Buy to Begin Selling Nook [Unconfirmed]

    Starting on April 18th, you supposedly won’t have to run to a Barnes and Noble to get a Nook because it seems that the ebook reader is starting to pop up in Best Buy‘s inventory system. [Engadget] More »







  • America Is About To Drop Off This List Of Safest Credit Ratings

    According to CMA Datavision, the U.S. ranks below nine other countries in terms of the safety of its sovereign debt. Norway is #1 and this has been discussed before on this site. But it’s interesting how the Netherlands, Australia, Sweden, and Hong Kong beat out the U.S. as well.

    CMA’s latest report explains that Sweden and Hong Kong are new entrants into this top ten list, displacing France and Belgium. The U.S. could be next to drop off the list as well, given that it’s dead last.

    Chart

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Ohio Third Frontier Research And Development Center Attraction Program

    ohio-3rd-frontier

    The RDCAP Proposal must involve the attraction and build-out of a high-quality, large, nationally designated and highly visible corporate, non-profit, or federal research and development center or laboratory facility that involves one or more of the following criteria:

    • Conducts value-added applied research;
    • Performs industry-directed and industry-oriented problem solving; and,
    • Develops technologies that can be commercialized in partnership with a for-profit company.

    RDCAP proposals may address any of the following opportunity areas or combinations thereof:

    • Advanced Energy (with an emphasis on fuel cells, photovoltaics, wind, biomass, and storage)
    • Advanced Materials (with an emphasis on advanced polymers, carbon nanocomposites, and bioproducts)
    • Advanced Propulsion (aerospace)
    • Biomedical (with an emphasis on biomedical imaging, cardiovascular, regenerative medicine and orthopedics)
    • Instruments, Controls, Electronics (with an emphasis on sensors)

    http://ohiothirdfrontier.com/Documents/ResearchDevelopmentCenterAttractionProgram/2010RFP/RDCAP_FY10_81909.pdf

  • Win7codecs 2.4.6

    Win7codecs 2.4.6

    Codecs have been a problem for most users at one time or another.

    The installer will automatically remove most other popular codec releases from your computer before installing this concise yet comprehensive package. You won´t need to make any adjustments or tweaks to enjoy your media content immediately. Windows Media Player and Media Center will instantly recognize all your files as playable.

    It does not contain a media player and it does not associate file-types. With this package installed you will be able to use any media player, limited only by the players´ capabilities, to play all movies and video clips. Streaming video is supported in several formats in all popular web browsers. Users of the Win7codecs have the ability to choose what is installed and where to install it using the public redistributable. After installation you can select to remove specific portions without removing the entire package. You can also re-add the removed items at any time.

    The Win7codecs package supports 18 localizations. The default is English and the installer includes support for the following other languages; Chinese Simplified/Traditional, Japanese, Czech, Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Italian, Norwegian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Polish, Swedish and Turkish. Languages can be added upon request.

    What’s New in version 2.4.6:

    • update gabests filters 1774
    • update ffdshow 3343
    • update Haali 1.10.120.15
    • fix high CPU usage
    • fix MKV thumbnails

    Homepage: http://shark007.net/
    Download: Win7codecs_v246.exe
    File Size: 25.15MB


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    Best Freeware Blog | Buy Laptop | Business Software Reviews | astaga.com lifestyle on the net

  • With SearchBoost, XMarks Gets a Business Model

    image001.png About six months ago, I wrote about Augmented Search, a new way of enhancing search results. It was developed by Xmarks, a San Francisco-based company that started life as Foxmarks, a Firefox plugin that backed up browser bookmarks on its servers and allowed consumers to sync browsers on different machines. (You can read how Augmented Search works here.)

    Based on that concept, Xmarks is launching a new product called SearchBoost. “As I hinted earlier, this is our business model,” said James Joaquin, the chief executive officer of Xmarks. “The paid service overlays ratings and reviews onto their pay-per-click )PPC)ads across the 450 million searches performed by Xmarks users each month.” The company currently has 4.5 million active add-on users and has a billion bookmarks in its database. Joaquin says that the company ran “an extensive 30-day test across 200K users and found that, on average, SearchBoost increases PPC click-through rates by 15 percent.”

    Well now all they have to do is find customers and convince them to pay for this service.

  • LAX security beefed up after suspected fire incident on Denver flight

    Security at Los Angeles International Airport was increased Wednesday night after authorities apprehended a diplomat on a Washington, D.C.,-to-Denver flight who was suspected of trying to light a small fire — or perhaps smoke.



    The number of uniformed officers patrolling LAX terminals was increased and units were beefed up around the airport perimeter, Los Angeles Airport Police Chief George R. Centeno said in a statement.



    He said airport police would be working with federal authorities as they continue to investigate the incident that occurred Wednesday night on United Airlines Flight 663.



    The suspect, the third secretary vice counsel at the Qatar Embassy in Washington, was apprehended by federal air marshals who were riding undercover on the flight that took off from Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport, law enforcement sources told The Times.



    The man told authorities that he went to the lavatory and tried to light a cigarette. He made a joke about lighting a shoe bomb, according to the sources, who asked not to be named because of the ongoing investigation.



    The diplomat was subdued by the federal agents as F-16 fighters scrambled to escort the flight to Denver International Airport. The plane landed at 6:54 local time.



    Authorities are investigating whether the man’s diplomatic status allowed him to bypass security, the sources said.



    –Andrew Blankstein and Robert J. Lopez

  • Electronic Noses Can Smell If You Have Asthma [Health]

    Asthma affects about 300 million people around the world, but can be difficult to diagnose. That’s why scientists designed an electronic nose which can sniff the air exhaled by a patient to determine whether he or she has asthma. More »







  • Making Content Relevant Pays Off; NBC Signs Up The Filter

    Recommending relevant content can be dramatically effective. After The Filter, a white-label content recommendation system, was implemented on the video site Dailymotion in March, the site experienced a 40 percent increase in time spent and a 25 percent increase in video streams per visit.

    Now, after successful trials, The Filter has secured its biggest media partner to date, NBC. The company will power recommendations for short-form videos on NBC.com such as clips from shows such as “Saturday Night Live.” At a time when the video experience is fragmented and competitive, getting a user who actually visits your site to stick around for more than a couple minutes is huge. It’s something folks like YouTube think about a ton.

    I was on a panel with The Filter CEO David Maher Roberts at SXSW where he talked about the fascinating array of signals for making recommendations. During a prep session he told me, “We remember but we also forget. Tastes change. What you’re listening to right now is much more important than what you listened to in the last few weeks.” The Filter, which is backed by Peter Gabriel with $8.5 million in funding and initially tried to be a destination site, says it has 95 million uniques across its partners.


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

    Social Advertising Models Go Back to the Future

  • Federal judge dismisses charges against 5 former San Diego pension board members

    A federal judge Wednesday threw out the criminal case against five former members of the San Diego city pension board who were charged with conspiring to boost their own pensions with a risky financial plan.

    U.S. District Judge Roger Benitez noted that the law governing pension boards at the time exempted public employees serving on such boards from conflict-of-interest allegations. The federal indictment said the five violated a federal statute meant to ensure that public employees provide "honest services."

    Benitez said the indictment, which had been sought by the U.S. attorney, stretched the law — now being reviewed by the U.S. Supreme Court in other cases — to the breaking point.

    "Fortunately, due process forbids turning citizens into criminals through the application of novel, untested applications of a criminal statute," he wrote.

    The ruling marked the second time that a criminal case stemming from the city’s pension deficit controversy had been tossed out.

    In January, the state Supreme Court dismissed similar charges filed by the district attorney against six people who were on the board when it boosted pensions and allowed the City Council to decrease its payments into the pension fund.

    — Tony Perry in San Diego 

  • Fate Therapeutics Expands its Stem Cell Empire Into Canada

    Fate Therapeutics logo
    Luke Timmerman wrote:

    The Fate Therapeutics mini-empire already extends from coast to coast, and now it’s expanding northward. The San Diego-based developer of stem cell technologies has agreed to acquire Ottawa, Canada-based Verio Therapeutics to grab a few more bright minds, and some clever techniques for developing drugs that spark the body to regenerate damaged tissue.

    Financial terms of the deal aren’t being disclosed, but it’s safe to say this won’t break the bank at Fate, which raised $30 million in a Series B venture round last November. The acquisition means that Fate will now have its headquarters in San Diego, a new operation in Ottawa, and research labs that it sponsors in Seattle and Boston, says spokeswoman Jessica Yingling. The combined company will have 40 employees, and enough cash to operate for two years, she says.

    So if this deal doesn’t really amount to much money, why does it matter? Fate, as avid readers know quite well, took a big step forward last fall, when one of its founders showed that he could coax ordinary adult cells to morph into an embryonic-like state with a combination of cheap and readily available small-molecule drugs. This is important because it could be useful for generating human tissues in the lab for use in drug discovery—and it could make it practical for the first time for Big Pharma companies to do so at an “industrialized” scale.

    Even a few months before Fate co-founder Sheng Ding published his big discovery, Fate noticed an important, and potentially complementary, discovery from its Canadian peers at Verio Therapeutics. A team led by Michael Rudnicki, a Verio co-founder and regenerative medicine researcher at the University of Ottawa, published a paper last year that showed it could identify certain stem cells that act as progenitors for skeletal muscles, as well as the molecular pathways involved in the cells’ transformation into muscle. What’s more, the researches showed that certain biologic molecules could activate those pathways to regenerate muscle tissue. The work was published last June in the journal Cell Stem Cell.

    Michael Rudnicki

    Michael Rudnicki

    That’s important for Fate, because the company is looking for specific molecular pathways that can be activated in the body—particularly with conventional small molecule drugs—to trigger a regenerative effect. That’s thought to be a more efficient, and less risky, way to stimulate regeneration of tissues than the “cell therapies” most people think when they think of stem-cell based treatments. Fate, at least in its early days, isn’t concentrating on creating such therapies, which would involve injecting patients with stem cells that are thought to be able to regenerate damaged cells. Instead, it wants to use the knowledge it gleans from stem-cell science to come up with drugs that can coax the body’s existing cells into repairing or regenerating damaged tissues.

    For its part, Verio already has several biologic drug candidates that might …Next Page »

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  • Could Copyright Hold Back iPad Sales In Canada And Elsewhere?

    As it’s become clear that the iPad is more of a “content delivery vehicle” than an interactive device (and there’s nothing wrong with that), people are quickly discovering how regional licensing issues and copyright may hold the device back in some areas. Apparently, as the device gets ready to launch in Canada, there are concerns that there won’t be very much content available for it. All that content that US companies rushed out to help “save” their businesses? Well, a lot of it isn’t licensed in Canada, and so the store of content available up there is likely to be greatly limited.

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  • Self Service Document Management

    When trying to explain what Document Management is to friends and family curious about my work, I often give ask them to think about the last time they visited the doctor or a hospital

  • The willful ignorance of business users

    One of my favorite parts of my job is the educational aspect – helping people new to content technology understand what it does and how it works.

  • Bank’s Headquarters Are So Big That You Need Robot Guides [Robots]

    Turns out that there’s a financial center in Madrid, Spain which is so damn big and confusing to navigate that you’ll desperately need these multilingual robots to guide you around. Here’s how it works—in-action video and all: More »







  • What is your favorite ROM?

    image

    Costume ROMs have become as popular as Steve Ballmer (okay way more popular than him), so let us know your favorite. Costume ROMs bring the best things to a regular Windows Phones, to better it by improving it’s speed, enhancing the smoothness, and/or include more software. Many have noticed the benefit of costume ROMs and became flashers.

    I for one after purchasing my Touch Pro 1 became a heavy flasher. I used to flash once a week, once a day, sometimes, once every 4 hours. It became a problem because I lost my data every time, and setting up was not that quick since I did not have UC going for me. This heavy flasher life of mine is all gone, and I am lucky if I flash one a week.

    Comment below and tell us how much you flash, what ROM you us, and what device you flash? Hopefully it’s the WMPoweruser ROM that should be updated very soon.


  • DataArt Visualization on BBC Backstage

    bbc_dataart.jpg
    Based on the developer network BBC Backstage, the learning project titled “DataArt” [bbc.co.uk] aims to introduce people to the power of information visualisation as a contemporary media form of increasing importance (somehow sounds familiar?). The project will publish a series of data visualizations, focused principally on BBC data sources but potentially cross-referenced with other publicly available data. In practice, this means the BBC will provide tools, tutorials, example computer code one can download and modify, and access to copyright free data sources.

    BBC Learning recognises that the interpretation of open data is an increasingly important skill for us all and expects the site will appeal to audiences interested in data visualization in general, digital art and design, those interested in the BBC and those looking at data visualization from an educational perspective.

    Four different visualization have been released so far: Flared Music shows relationships between musicians as stored in the BBC Music / Musicbrainz database. 3D Documentary Explorer uses video as its source to experiment with the concept of interactive story telling. SearchWeb allows for the exploration of BBC content by generating a tree of links to relevant pages throughout the site. Lastly, News Globe maps the information from the BBC News & Sport website on 3D globe.