Blog

  • Rhapsody Arrives in Android Market

    Rhapsody has taken their music service out of beta and released it into the Android Market.  Starting today, users can install the app and check out favorite songs or listen to the latest releases over their Android phone.   Although the app is free to download, it does require a subscription to the Rhapsody service.  If you are setting up a new account, you can take advantage of the more 9 million songs in a free 14-day trial.  Subscription fees are $9.95 per month for those who wish to sign up.

    Might We Suggest…

    • NARM Releases Android Application
      Scan to download NARM

      The National Association of Recording Merchandisers (NARM) has released their first Android application toda…


  • Newly Independent Rhapsody Gets Price Cut and Android App [Rhapsody]

    Rhapsody’s been spun off from RealNetworks, and now we know what its future holds: the $10 Rhapsody Premier streaming music subscription service, down from $15, and a free app for Android handset users. More »







  • Do you feel the need for speed?

     

    CTIA this year was the coming out party for super-fast mobile broadband and introduced us to handsets that could really take our mobile experience to the next level, the question though is… do we really need the speed? Shouldn’t the carriers just be focusing on giving us universally reliable 3G right now?

    Basically, the answer is “No”. We need Wimax, LTE and all the other ultra high speed networks just as soon as we can get them. 3G is essentially an amped up voice network forced to handle data. We need networks that are built for high speed data for three good reasons; 

    Necessity

    We expect to be always on, always mobile and always able to roam the net and access all our content. This means that essentially there is no such thing as a “mobile” as distinct from a “fixed experience in the “wherever I lay my hat, that’s my home” world we now inhabit. Our networks need to reflect this and the carriers know it. 3G can’t hope to cope with the demands placed on it by this need for “ubiquitous connectivity” and we simply can’t roam through a patch and mend world of “WiFi hotspot”,  to 3G, to “WiFi hotspot” with the huge variations in quality for very long. These new ultra fast mobile standards will supersede 3G as the ”go to” standard for mobile just as surely as the mobile phone superseded the payphone.

     In years to come 3G will be seen as a bridging technology between “fixed” and “mobile”. The more investment the carriers make in this future now, the more likely they are to win the future. It isn’t about speed so much as need. The carriers have to make this play, and they need to make it now. They should stop investing in expanding any 3G footprint that doesn’t have use in a 4G (and more future) just as they did when they moved from analogue to digital.

    Simplicity

    Even if we access networks from a complex variety of devices we need to simplify our life down to one contract and one bill. What sense does it make to have separate data plans for your iPhone, iPad and iMac? (or non-Apple equivalents)? None whatsoever. These new networks have a far broader reach meaning you’ll roam off the network far less while still getting high speed quality. This will enable the carriers to simplify your billing too, combining a table stakes bill and pay as you go (on the Kindle/Netflix model) into a new revenue model that reflects the user’s behavior rather than the number of his or her devices.

    These networks aren’t only about handling data for the user, they make a lot of sense for the carriers’ future business models too.

    Possibility

    Your mobile handset really is the center of your world now and is going to become more so. The evidence is everywhere, whether it be the Samsung Galaxy being able to wirelessly download films and stream them onto your WiFi enabled TV or whether it be Verizon now selling the Palm Pre Plus as a mobile broadband dongle. The “phone” sits in the middle of all your active and passive communication.  First the phone did voice, then email and the internet (and voice) and soon it’ll do all these and act as the main coordination and streaming device for all of your content, home and life management.  As handsets are being developed to handle the complex demands of taking our life, information and entertainment anywhere, life although ever more complex is being simplified down into one device.

    We need the speed to make this possibility a reality. Whenever I walk around Best Buy I find myself thinking, “That’s cool, but I should be able to do that on my phone”. Internet enabled Blu Ray players, or TV?…what’s the point? The search and browse element is really poor compared to what I can do on my phone. I should be able to search for the movie and stream it through the same device wherever I am, which is always where my phone is. Likewise hooking my lap top up to the TV, should happen wirelessly through my phone, without the phone having to leave my pocket, without the bill burning a hole in that pocket, and without compromising my ability to make a call at the same time.

    The handset technology is just around the corner, we need the network speed, range and capability to bring it all together.


  • Washington OSAA unit’s ‘blood runs’ save lives

    Because time is of the essence when dealing with viable blood products, having air transportation available can make a real difference in a blood center’s ability to provide a better-quality
    product…

  • Wyoming Soldiers receive “warm welcome”

    A group of special support staff joined a Wyoming contingent of personnel recently at Fort Hood, Texas, to welcome Wyoming Army National Guard Soldiers back to the United States…

  • Guardsman honors friend through service

    Spc. Joseph Carter’s military life began when another’s tragically ended…

  • Senators visit U.S. KFOR troops in Kosovo

    Five U.S. senators paid a visit to KFOR (Kosovo Forces) Soldiers stationed here on a NATO peacekeeping mission on Easter Sunday…

  • Alabama Guard helps Iraqi highway patrol

    A blue police truck rolls up to the scene. With sirens blazing and an Iraqi flag displayed prominently on the doors, the vehicle comes to a screeching halt…

  • Looking for life beyond Earth

    Could life exist beyond our own blue planet? According to scientist Carolyn Porco, it’s certainly possible.

    Porco is the director of flight operations and imaging team leader for the Cassini spacecraft in orbit around Saturn. Her work involves taking detailed pictures in space, shots that offer insights into the nature of the universe, and signs of life elsewhere in the solar system.

    “Gorgeous” was how she described the Cassini images to a crowd at the Radcliffe Gymnasium in a talk on April 1. Her listeners agreed.

    There was a collective gasp from the student-filled audience as she showed a photo of Saturn taken during an eclipse of the sun. The negative-looking image revealed a sharp outline of the planet and its surrounding rings.

    Porco spoke as part of the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study Dean’s Lecture Series. The lectures are part of the institute’s Academic Engagement Programs (AEP), which sponsor projects with Harvard faculty, Radcliffe Institute fellows, and Harvard students in scholarly and research endeavors.

    The Cassini mission, which began in 1997, has been studying Saturn and its diverse system of moons, sending back stunning images and even evidence that life could exist 932 million miles from Earth.

    Some of the mission’s highlights involve analysis of Saturn’s rings, their makeup, the gaps between them, and little “moonlettes.” The study of such moonlettes and the gaps they influence provides a “giant touchstone” for understanding how planets are formed, noted the scientist, who also discussed two of the planet’s moons in detail, Titan and its much smaller counterpart, Enceladus.

    With Titan having an atmosphere vaguely similar to the Earth’s, including the presence of molecular nitrogen, as well as a troposphere and stratosphere, researchers were eager to get a closer look at the large moon in orbit around Saturn. They did, with the help of Huygens, a European-designed probe that landed on Titan’s surface in 2005. The event was worthy of a ticker tape parade, said an emotional Porco, who recalled seeing grown men brought to tears when the probe landed.

    “This was like a Jules Verne adventure come true,” said Porco. “It was the day humanity landed a device of our making in the outer solar system.”

    The images sent back from the probe were “outrageously easy to interpret,” said Porco, and included shots of a branching “dendritic drainage pattern” on the moon’s surface, one that only could have been formed by the flow of liquids. There also were photos of mountainous regions and a series of dunes.

    The data revealed that Titan “was alien and exotic and yet strangely Earth-like” in its geological and geographical complexity.

    On the small, icy moon Enceladus, “the mother lode of all discoveries was discovered at the South Pole,” said Porco. She described Cassini’s findings of elevated temperatures in the moon’s polar region, as well as an enormous plume of icy particles shooting tens of thousands of kilometers into space.

    Analysis of the icy trail, which includes water vapor and trace amounts of organic materials such as methane, carbon dioxide, and propane, suggests it is fueled by geysers erupting from a pocket of salt water within the moon.

    The findings, noted Porco, point to the possibility of  “an environment where life itself might be stirring.”

    “Should we ever discover that a second genesis had occurred in our solar system, independently outside the Earth,” she added, “then I think at that point the spell is broken. The existence theorem has been proven, and we could safely infer from it that life was not a bug but a feature of the universe in which we live, that it’s commonplace and has occurred a staggering number of times.”

  • Brake Override Systems Coming for GM in 2012.

    Camaro Burnout

    Well it looks like the days of power braking your rear tires into oblivion are almost over, at least for GM cars anyway. It was announced that GM is installing brake override systems on all cars with automatic transmissions in 2012. This comes in the wake of Toyota’s unintended premature acceleration debacle, whereby they recalled just about every car in their current fleet. The main goal here is this: In the event that the car accelerates without warning, you, the driver, will be able to depress the brake thus bringing your car to a safe and controlled stop without tagging the car, tree or house in front of you. Keep in mind that this is terrible news for teenagers everywhere as those visions of roasting the rear tires on Dad’s 2012 Camaro SS just went up in smoke.

    Source: GM.com


  • Scotiabank strategist reduces exposure to stocks

    Stocks will outperform bonds by a smaller margin in 2010, as the risk trade that fuelled the rally in 2009 loses momentum, says Vincent Delisle, strategist, Scotia Capital Markets.

    On Monday, Mr. Delisle reduced his equity exposure to 63% of his total portfolio, down from 68% previously. He increased his bond exposure by 3% to 29% and added 2% to his cash position that now stands at 8%.

    "Equity weightings should be gradually reduced this year and cash levels gradually increased," the strategist said in a note to clients.

    Although his confidence regarding stocks is waning, he said equities should continue to flourish in the first half of the year. After that, however, monetary policy shifts toward higher interest rates combined with the timing of exit strategies by governments around the world will prove more challenging, he said.

    Mr. Delisle said equity indexes could post a total return of between 5%-7% over the next 12 months. By comparison, he expects corporate bonds to gain between 2% and 4% and government bond returns to remain flat to slightly negative. 

    David Pett

  • How Tim Geithner Successfully Paved The Way For A Yuan Hike

    Geithner

    Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, while visiting India, has said that a change to China’s yuan-dollar peg is ‘China’s choice‘.

    “As I said before and I’ll say it again, but I want to make sure I am repeating myself, I am confident that China will decide it’s in their interest to resume the move to a more flexible exchange rate that they began some years ago and suspended in the midst of the crisis,” he explained.

    Congratulations.

    This is a far more productive approach to the issue than trying to bully China into adjusting the yuan.

    As we’ve said before, a hike is coming, but American complaining only makes it harder for the Chinese government to implement it without looking like they’ve sold their citizens out due to U.S. pressure. This is because there will be some short-term pain within China when a hike happens even though it is in China’s long-term interest.

    The Chinese government has already hiked the yuan in the past. Recently, Wen Jiabao explained that future flexibility was still in the cards, despite appearing to present a sharp rebuke of America’s escalating yuan criticism.

    While telling China it’s their choice to hike the yuan might not play too well within the U.S. right now, the reality is that this tactic is in the most likely to make a hike happen. Explain why it’s in China’s interest and then leave it for them to connect the dots.

    Thus here Geithner gets it right. He’s actually paving the way for a hike to happen.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Scientific models predict continued decline in Washington Post circulation if they keep publishing dreadful climate articles

    Washington Post circulation

    Okay, the Washington Post’s circulation will probably keep declining even in the unlikely event their coverage of global warming improves.  But my headline is at least as scientific as the WP’s latest climate piece “Scientists’ use of computer models to predict climate change is under attack.”

    Memo to WashPost:  Scientists use of computer models to predict climate change has been under attack for a long, long time by the anti-scientific disinformers.  That ain’t news.  The real news, which you almost completely ignore, are:

    1. The models have made accurate predictions (see NASA:  “We conclude that global temperature continued to rise rapidly in the past decade” and “that there has been no reduction in the global warming trend of 0.15-0.20°C/decade that began in the late 1970s“).
    2. When the models have gone awry, it is primarily in underestimating how fast the climate would change.
    3. Staying anywhere near our current emissions path — i.e. listening to the disinformers and doing nothing significant to restrict emissions — removes most uncertainty about the future climate impacts.

    But what do you expect from an article that begins this way:

    The Washington Nationals will win 74 games this year. The Democrats will lose five Senate seats in November. The high Tuesday will be 86 degrees, but it will feel like 84.

    And, depending on how much greenhouse gas emissions increase, the world’s average temperature will rise between 2 and 11.5 degrees by 2100.

    The computer models used to predict climate change are far more sophisticated than the ones that forecast the weather, elections or sporting results.

    Uhh, it’s not really that the models are more sophisticated.  It’s that the long-time climate has always been easier to predict than the near-term weather:  We know with incredibly high certainty that July of this year (or any year) will be hotter than January of this year (or any year) , but it is basically a coin toss as to whether July 15, 2010 will be hotter than July 15, 2009.  As NASA notes, “When we talk about climate change, we talk about changes in long-term averages of daily weather.”  Long-term averages simply don’t change as rapidly as the weather and are inherently easier to predict.

    The analogies to sporting events and elections are simply inane.  They involve human behavior and thus aren’t model-able with the same basic laws of physics.  They are apparently included simply to amuse and confuse.

    The article is a long litany of mostly irrelevant information and disinformer talking points:

    Climate scientists admit that some models overestimated how much the Earth would warm in the past decade. But they say this might just be natural variation in weather, not a disproof of their methods.

    Uhh, “some models”?  So some unnamed models may not have gotten it right.  Or maybe it was just that some of the groups doing the measuring lowballed actually warming.  The UK’s Met Office — which many scientists have said has underestimated recent warming — posted an analysis in December which concluded, “The global temperature rise calculated by the Met Office’s HadCRUT record is at the lower end of likely warming.”

    In fact, NASA’s analysis makes clear that warming continues just as the models had projected.  Indeed, the WashPost buries at the end this central point, which by itself renders the entire article mostly moot:

    Put in the conditions on Earth more than 20,000 years ago: they produce an Ice Age, NASA’s Schmidt said. Put in the conditions from 1991, when a volcanic eruption filled the earth’s atmosphere with a sun-shade of dust. The models produce cooling temperatures and shifts in wind patterns, Schmidt said, just like the real world did.

    If the models are as flawed as critics say, Schmidt said, “You have to ask yourself, ‘How come they work?’ “

    Indeed, the models were actually used to accurately predict of the cooling from the Pinatubo eruption.

    The Washington Post entirely misses the even more important point that the models used for the 2007 IPCC report consistently underestimated current climate change and emissions:

    Needless to say, the Post never talks about the paleoclimate record, which provides both support for the climate models — and more evidence that they lowball likely future impacts (see Science: CO2 levels haven’t been this high for 15 million years, when it was 5° to 10°F warmer and seas were 75 to 120 feet higher — “We have shown that this dramatic rise in sea level is associated with an increase in CO2 levels of about 100 ppm”).

    The models’ biggest flaws concern their ignoring most major amplifying carbon-cycle feedbacks (see “An illustrated guide to the latest climate science“).

    But rather than explaining even once that the necessarily imperfect models almost certainly underestimate future impacts, the Post chooses to repeat without crucial explanation this misleading point:

    All the major climate models seem to show that greenhouse gases are causing warming, climate scientists say, although they don’t agree about how much. A 2007 United Nations report cited a range of estimates from 2 to 11.5 degrees over the next century.

    Now this appears to willfully conflate two very different issues.  That paragraph seem to imply that the climate model don’t agree on how much warming we’ll see by a factor of nearly 6!  But in fact much of that disparity is due to the use of the very different scenarios of how much emissions will grow this century.

    As I’ve noted many times, the IPCC wastes a huge amount of time and effort modeling countless low emissions scenarios that have no basis in reality.  Now if you take a low climate sensitivity (warming caused by a doubling of CO2 concentrations) and multiply it by a low emissions scenario, you get a low total warming.  The anti-science crowd then gloms onto that low number as evidence global warming won’t have serious consequences.  And the media gloms onto that number and compares it to the high emissions, high sensitivity case  as evidence the IPCC modelers “don’t agree” by a wide amount.

    But the IPCC has never clearly explained that all of the low emissions scenarios presuppose we ignore the anti-science crowd’s plea to do nothing and instead take very strong action to reduce emissions.  The IPCC has explained it is far more likely that the climate sensitivity is quite high than it is quite low — but very few people in the media realize that.

    And so what the scientific literature and climate models tells us today with increasingly certainty is that if we take no serious action, catastrophic change might best be considered business as usual = highly likely (see M.I.T. doubles its 2095 warming projection to 10°F — with 866 ppm and Arctic warming of 20°F and Our hellish future: Definitive NOAA-led report on U.S. climate impacts warns of scorching 9 to 11°F warming over most of inland U.S. by 2090 with Kansas above 90°F some 120 days a year — and that isn’t the worst case, it’s business as usual!”).

    But the media and opinionmakers and most economists have been led to believe those scenarios are the extreme worst case and very unlikely, when in fact they are simply what is projected to happen if we keep doing nothing.

    The true plausible worst case — when you combine keeping on our current high level of emissions trend with what I would consider a more accurate attempt to model the carbon cycle — is far, far worse:  UK Met Office: Catastrophic climate change, 13-18°F over most of U.S. and 27°F in the Arctic, could happen in 50 years, but “we do have time to stop it if we cut greenhouse gas emissions soon.”

    But you won’t learn any of that crucial information from the Washington Post.  So why not join hundreds of thousands of others and stop reading it entirely!

  • Renewables Engineer – Solar Thermal

    Glasgow, 2M Careers Ltd

    Renewables Engineer – Solar Thermal

    Our client is one of the top firms globally delivering management, engineering and development solutions for public and private sector customers.

    They are a global firm working in all sectors from transport, energy, buildings, water and the environment to health and education, industry and communications.

    Our global client provides engineering consultancy services to a range of clients from large utilities to small project developers, across a variety of disciplines worldwide.

    The Renewables/Low Carbon team in the Renewables & Environment Division requires a new technical specialist to play a prominent role in the growth of the renewable business. The new staff member will have project management responsibilities as well as assist in business development. They will also provide technical strength in solar technologies including resourcing analysis.

    We are particularly interested in candidates from a research and development or consultancy background. A background working with solar thermal technologies will be essential.

    Skills and experience required

    Experience in resourcing analysis is essential
    Experience in solar thermal technologies
    Minimum MSc, preferably in a renewables discipline
    A good understanding of consultancy services is desirable

    Location – Glasgow or Brighton

    Our client offers a competitive basic salary and benefits package.

  • Pasen Android MID5

    Android is continuing is assault in the MID/Tablet market. This one comes from a company that is known for (knockoffs) MP4’s. But, this thing looks really good and I would imagine there are a few people that would love to get their hands on it.

    # PRODUCT FEATURES 5″ 16:9 touchscreen WVGA TFT 800*480 .
    # Can expand its functionality by installing any Android application .
    # Support for MP3 WMA WAV AAC OGG APE FLAC(8Kbps ~ 320Kbps).
    # Support for AVI MOV DIVX MPEG1 MPEG2 MPEG4 VCD DVD RM RMVB FLV H.264 XVID MKV up to 720p.
    # Support for images in JPEG,BMP,PNG and GIF format.
    # micro SDHC expansion slot(up to 32GB).
    # 7 Equalized curves (Natural, Rock, Pop, Classic, Soft, Jazz, DBB)
    # Multi-tasking.
    # HDMI video out.
    # USB OTG.
    # Long battery life : 4.5 hours of video,10 hours of music,4 hours of internet browsing .
    # E-book reader .
    # Firmware upgradable.
    # Built in speaker
    # File browser.

    TECHNICAL SPECIFICATION:
    # CPU Rockchip RK2808
    # Dimensions : 128*84*13.3
    # 2300Mah battery.

    INCLUDED ACCESSORY:
    # USB Cable
    # 220v charger
    # High quality earphones
    # Remote.
    # Manual

    Are you tempted yet? Maybe the 10 hours of music or 4.5 hours of video playback will do it for you. If that doesn’t do it for maybe the 4 hours of web browsing will or the $200 or less expected price tag will. There is no word of which version of Android will be loaded on this, my guess is 1.6.

    [via engadget, pansen]

  • Even Sodium Sulfur Batteries Are Bigger in Texas [Batteries]

    Sorry, did I say bigger? I meant biggest. The town of Presidio, Texas has built the biggest NaS battery in the US, capable of storing up to four megawatts of power for up to eight hours. They even nicknamed it. More »







  • Art Car Museum

    Image of Art Car Museum located in Houston, Texas, US

    Art Car Museum

    At the “Garage Mahal” in Houston, car culture is about more than just driving

    Some people wash and wax their cars, making sure that the finish is exactly as clean and shiny as the day they bought it. The art car movement goes in the entirely other direction.
    While those who create art cars are still concerned with how their car looks, they approach the car itself as a blank canvas on which to create a masterpiece. Armed with paint, glue, objects, and what ever else will stay stuck on a car that still needs to drive, the creators go to work.
    Often the folks that do this are not trained artists but normal people who still drive their creations (usually done on older or used cars, but not always) to work every day. Among the art car creations a favorite style is where one particular thing has been glued on the entirety of the car exterior such as cameras, corks, cd’s, trophies and so on.
    In Houston this art car culture is a deep part of the city. Growing out of a long Houston tradition of outsider art, in 1986, 11 art cars were exhibited alongside the Fruitmobile (the ‘first’ of the Houston art cars, made to be auctioned) at The Orange Show. By April, 1988 the Houston art car culture and art car parade was in full swing with the first official art car parade in the U.S. took place with a 40 car parade and was seen by over two thousand onlookers.
    The art car museum aims to make this appreciation of this art form year round, and in 1988 opened the same year as the first large scale parade. Known as the “Garage Mahal” the museum was founded by artists James and Ann Harithas. Among their collections are the non-Car based art by Houston’s art car artists, as well as a “collection of cars, bicycles, motorcycles, roller-skaters, and many other types of motorized and human-powered vehicles all decorated in various themes.” Among the best cars in the museum are Rex Rabbit a giant rabbit shaped car clutching a basket of eggs, Faith by David Best complete with water buffalo head in place of longhorns, and the giant roach shaped “Roachster.”

    he art car parade in Houston is still the and largest Art Car Parade in the world.

    Read more about Art Car Museum on Atlas Obscura…

    Category: Outsider Art
    Location: Houston, Texas, US
    Edited by: Alicekh, Dylan

  • Is the Nexus One’s display inferior to the Droid’s?

    Science! Big words! These are two things we like around these parts, even if we don’t really understand them. When I look at the Nexus One’s display, I can’t help but slap my knee and let out some sort of proclamation of joy, like “Gee Wiz!”, or “Well, I’ll be!”, or “Fwaaaaarg.

    Some people, however, aren’t quite as impressed.

    DisplayMate, the same guys who put together a big piece showing why the Nexus One’s display was inferior to that of the iPhone, have just put together a monster of a post on the Nexus One’s display vs the Droid’s. The clear cut winner? The Droid.

    While the Nexus bests the Droid in resolution, black level, and low light contrast ratio, the Droid comes out on top in just about everything else. Power consumption? Check. Color temperature? Check! Color gamut, saturation, intensity, and viewing angle? Checkles McCheckenstein. DisplayMate goes as far as saying that the Nexus One’s display seems like “an unfinished prototype” under the microscope.

    Of course, “under the microscope” is really the key here. The Droid may best the Nexus One on all sorts of crazy technical levels, but I bet if you hand both of them to any random person on the street, they wouldn’t have a single complaint about either. (Though we’d love to hear someone say, “You know, the screen on this Nexus One sure seems about 2000 degrees Kelvin too blue.”)

    Ready for the aforementioned science and big words? Check out the full report here.


  • Massey on Safety

    As Congress vows to investigate possible violations at Massey Energy’s Upper Big Branch Mine — where at least 25 miners were killed in an explosion yesterday — it’s worth noting that Massey has never really had a good track record when it comes to safety in its mines, as this 2003 Forbes piece indicates:

    Over the two years through 2001 Massey was cited by West Virginia officials for violating regulations 501 times. Its three biggest rivals, mining twice as much coal in the state as Massey, were cited a collective 175 times. [CEO Don] Blankenship says Massey is unfairly targeted by regulators.

    “We don’t pay much attention to the violation count,” he says.

    He might start today.

    h/t: Christopher Helman.

  • Chad Ochocinco Presents “DWTS” Partner Cheryl Burke With $10K Diamond Ring

    Things are getting “icy” between Dancing With The Stars pro Cheryl Burke and her Season 10 celebrity partner, NFL star Chad Ochocinco.

    Ochocinco showed his appreciation for the talented dancer’s help on the show with a Jason of Beverly Hills diamond ring that cost more than $10,000! The Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver gave Burke the platinum diamond ring after performing their Paso Doble on Monday’s show.

    “At first I was like, is this even real?” admits two-time series champ Cheryl, 25.

    Ochocinco — one of the league’s most notorious trash talkers — explains that the extravagant gift is his way of thanking Cheryl for putting up with him. We should all be so lucky!

    “She has to deal with me nine hours a day,” he says. “It’s like a marriage, so why not give marriage gifts? I don’t spend time with anyone like this – ever!”

    Chad says he has plenty of gifts for the right woman: 8-5 will be looking for love on a new VH1 reality series premiering on the cable network later this year.