Blog

  • Tasting Arizona Wine at the Public Market

    By random accident I discovered my latest passion: Arizona wine. If you’re thinking that Arizona cannot grow grapes or produce wine, then you are doing what experts call “making a mistake.” Imagine for a moment that you are part of a small wine producing community making great wine but that the wine drinkers of the world, people concerned with only names and regions, brush your product aside with a grimace. Of course I’m describing the early days of Napa Valley, which is today a well respected wine producing region. Arizona wine is still fairly new and unknown in the wine world, but is receiving positive attention and acclaim from those daring to venture into new wine territories.

    Urban Grocery evening 11-11-09I’m not a wine connoisseur by any means (I prefer Miller Lite or a bottle of whiskey) but I know what I don’t like, and I generally do not prefer red wine. But while shopping in the Phoenix Public Market, I noticed a pretty extensive wine collection and started asking questions: “Where are the Arizona vineyards?”, “What wine does Maynard [the lead singer of the band Tool] make?”, “Does Arizona make white wines?”, “How much does a bottle cost?”, and “Can I try some?”

    I was treated to a wine tasting, during which I transformed into a wine snob because I’ll only drink wine made in Arizona from now on. The flavor was rugged and rustic and bold and tasted like everything I love about this state: wide open spaces, the blue sky, extreme temperatures of cold and hot, breathtaking terrain, and an overwhelming variety of beauty and color. I really liked the Arizona Stronghold and bought two bottles of red wine, one called Magnus and the called Nachise.

    Arizona has so much potential in so many ways, and the future of wine production in this state is looking good. This spring I’m going to check out a few of the wineries up north and down south to support and explore this local industry. Before you dismiss Arizona wines as some quaint little experiment in futility, stop by the Public Market and have a little taste test. You’ll be surprised and discover something new and exciting.

  • Aloqa – you must get this app

    We just noticed this application in the Marketplace showcase.  Aloqa, previously on the iPhone and Android, is a geo-location app that lets you know what’s happening around you. 

    What’s particularly great about the software is the breadth of services the software integrates with, including movie listings, live music and even Wikipedia.

    The software is free in Marketplace and is definitely worth the download and is available here.

    Share/Bookmark

  • Motorist killed by freight train in downtown Wheaton

    A motorist who tried to beat a freight train by going around downed railroad gates in downtown Wheaton was struck and killed this morning, police said.

    The accident, which happened about 10:35 a.m., continued to disrupt traffic in the area some two hours later, said Deputy Police Chief Thomas Maloney.

    He said a half-dozen crossings were blocked by the stopped freight train as an investigation was conducted.

    The President Street crossing where the accident occurred will be closed for several days to allow Union Pacific to replace a switching box that was damaged, he said.

    The identity of the driver, a man and the sole occupant of a red Toyota, was not disclosed pending notification of family members.

    He was alive when taken away by paramedics, but died at Central DuPage Hospital in Winfield, Maloney said.

    The car was going south on President when it was struck by the eastbound freight train.

    Metra trains on the Union Pacific West line are experiencing significant delays, according to Metra’s Web site.

    Staff report

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • California EPA’s LEED platinum HQ

    I’m usually quick to point out the limitations of technology for reducing environmental and other problems. But that doesn’t mean it’s not important. Yesterday I took a tour that hilighted how big the opportunities can be when technology and slight lifestyle changes team up. The tour was of CalEPA’s LEED platinum skyscraper – evidently the first of its kind, but now a few years old. Interestingly, it was initially designed as an ordinary building, and design changes were introduced late in the game, which gives hope that most of the same innovations could be implemented as retrofits on older buildings.

    When you walk up to the building, there’s no indication that there’s anything unusual about it. If anything, it’s massive (salvaged) stone decorative features lead one to think it could easily be an extravagant energy hog. That impression continues on the inside, with elegant and tasteful lighting and finishes. No hairy unwashed treehuggers freezing in the dark here.

    Yet, the building uses a third the energy (per sq ft) of its peers nearby, even with a big datacenter on one floor that consumes a third of the energy in the 25-story structure. The big heroes are an efficient skin, with low-e windows and detailing to reduce solar gain on the south and west sides, coupled with an advanced HVAC system. Climate control combines 10,000 sensors with three different sizes of chiller unit and variable-speed motor controls. That way, equipment always operates near its optimum load. Soon, a retrofit will use groundwater (which has to be pumped out anyway) to aid cooling. Heating and cooling costs are lower, yet comfort is improved by the advanced controls.

    The occupants certainly contribute a lot to efficiency. Over 80% use bikes or transit to commute, aided by a beautiful bicycle parking garage in the basement (complete with air compressor and lockers). Most prefer motion-sensitive task lights, so area lighting stays off. They adopted double-side network printers to reduce paper waste, and recycle assiduously. Worm-bin composting is a popular office activity. As a result the building managers have to haul trash only twice a month instead of the typical twice a week. Because staff don’t have to spend as much time with regular garbage, they have more energy to figure out how to recycle used computers and other unusual materials.

    Sometimes the benefits are unexpected. To reduce nighttime lighting loads, most of the leaning in the building happens during the day. Side effects include greatly reduced reports of theft and workers’ comp claims, better cooperation on cleaning and recycling (aided by the low waste flow), and greater occupant satisfaction. It turns out that it’s easier to like someone you see on a daily basis. Materials have side benefits too. Zero-VOC paints mean that occasional repairs don’t stink up the place and needn’t be confined to weekends. Low-volatile, recyclable carpet tiles turn out to be extremely durable and repairable, and permit creative design.

    The amazing thing is that most of the features paid for themselves in under two years, with correspondingly huge ROIs. None takes a radical change in workstyle, but there’s lots of synergy among them. It wasn’t easy to pull this off, in the sense that it took a lot of thinking, but if you think thinking is fun, then you wouldn’t call it hard either.

  • Palm Press: Mobile Hotspot Reviewed; App Catalog Keeps Growing

    It’s Thursday, which means it’s time for another Palm Press, our weekly look at the world of Palm. The new Palm Pre Plus and Pixi Plus are already getting the review treatment, and the most interesting one is this one I found of the new Mobile Hotspot feature. Palm was justifiably proud when they announced the Mobile Hotspot capability, which basically lets you use the Verizon 3G connection with up to 5 devices at the same time. It basically turns the Pre / Pixi into a MiFi router, connecting to the 3G network and slinging the web to those 5 devices over Wi-Fi. Verizon charges $40 per month to use the Mobile Hotspot, so you’ll want to make sure you really need it to pay that price. This service has the same 5 GB monthly data cap on Verizon as other data plans so you won’t want to regularly feed 5 devices with data. Check out the review to see what they thought of the Hotspot, especially how it drains the battery. Really quickly.

    There are now over 1,150 apps in the Palm App Catalog, so if you haven’t checked it in a while you may want to do so. It’s good to see apps continually to flow in, although trickle is probably a more apt way to put it.

  • Baby beluga at Shedd to make public debut Sunday

    A six-week-old male beluga whale will be introduced to the public at the Shedd Aquarium on Sunday.

    The calf was born Dec. 14 head first, rather than tale first, which caused complications including an unnatural curve in his rear flippers.

    That curve is now gone and he is swimming fine, said Ken Ramirez, the Shedd’s chief trainer.

    The baby beluga feeds every 30 minutes and is gaining an average of 10 pounds a week. He now weighs 185 pounds.

    To feed him, 23-year-old Puiji is eating an average of 75 pounds of fish a day — about twice as much as she usually eats.

    “He’s independent, he’s social, curious, playful,” Ramirez said of the calf who doesn’t yet have a name. He is one of two beluga whales born in December, though the second one did not survive.

    –Staff report

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • Flechas y Pedradas: Thanks, Massachusetts!—Not…

    In Spain, listening to people prattle on about politics was an interesting diversion. O.K., maybe not just a diversion; more like a case study, an alternate universe where history had run a different course and now a different set of factors controlled the political reality. Not unintelligible, just not the same. The PP, former party of Bush’s pal José María Aznar, could gain seats on Zapatero’s PSOE? Interesting, but I’ve got no horse in that race. José Montilla, a non-native speaker of Catalán, managed to lead the PSC to victory and helm the Generalitat, the governing body of Catluña? Even more complicated and less to do with me. Another soup of abbreviations and another axis of political alignment to worry about–so much to learn before I could even enter into an educated debate, let alone have an informed opinion.

    Eventually I did, and I won’t say it wasn’t rewarding, but, in the back of my mind, I always knew I’d be leaving, and the results of elections couldn’t hurt me much. I said I was a Barça fan while I was there too, but if they lose the Liga I won’t lose sleep. While I was away, reading the political coverage on The New York Times Web site was like receiving dispatches from, well, a foreign land. It was oddly comforting. I could check in on the faltering “progress” of Obama’s health care initiative like a basketball fan checking in on his alma mater’s team: hoping there would be good news, but not passionately upset by repeatedly unmet expectations.

    That distance can be healthy. The older brother of a high school friend of mine stopped watching his beloved Indiana Hoosiers a few years after he graduated. He’d punched too many walls over missed free throws to be much fun to hang out with on game day. Now, though, he’s a CPA, has a girlfriend and lives in Zurich. To my knowledge, he’s avoided an ulcer.

    Trouble is sports and politics are different. Sure, those trying to predict the outcomes of either one struggle with an overwhelming amount of statistical information and a propensity to fetishize personal narrative. More than that, talking about politics involves so many sports terms it’s easy to forget that’s where they came from. Calling elections “races” or “contests,” talking about the final push in a campaign as a “fourth quarter drive,” or calling an out-of-nowhere prospect a “dark horse” candidate–all that comes from sports. Dark horse. That’s what’s came up this Tuesday and it’s what reminded me just how different these two areas of American life really are.

    As a transplanted native of Indianapolis, I’ll be upset if the Indianapolis Colts don’t win the AFC Championship game this weekend. I’ve made an emotional investment in the team’s success, something that lets me feel a sense of belonging and in return offers elation with victory and despair with defeat. I’d wager that there’re folks in Vegas who might be upset as well–owing to, well, “other” kinds of investments. But that’s it. Emotional pain and frustration for people like me, some dollars down the drain for the gamblers. Elections are different. Elections change lives.

    I don’t know how Scott Brown’s win in the special election to replace the late Ted Kennedy as Senator from Massachusetts will impact America. As a Democrat, I suppose I should feel like my team lost. Add to that, the loss to Scott Brown, a candidate who managed, with his straightforward name, pickup truck and general propensity for being shirtless, to win “the people’s seat,” as he calls it. When he takes his oath of office, he’ll also be doing away with the Democrat’s filibuster-proof majority in the Senate. Populist rage, a rejection of the Democratic agenda–that’s how this will be characterized in the media and, I imagine, by those who would see health care reform shelved for another 15 years, those who would be content with sitting around and thumbing their nose at the nation’s problems.

    That can’t happen.

    Maybe I don’t need to trouble myself with the minutiae that constitute a political blogger’s bread and butter. No need to punch walls, no need to give myself an ulcer, but I have to pay attention. I can’t enact the annual coping mechanism of a Raiders fan and self-impose a blackout of ESPN until next season. I can’t look away, because that means avoiding the front page of every major newspaper. That means looking away from the reality of this country in which we live. And I can’t do that.

    So thanks, Massachusetts. Thanks for reminding me to pay attention, for reminding me to stay involved. Thanks for all that, but you can keep Scott Brown.

  • Special Edition Z06 Corvette to be auctioned at Barret-Jackson, proceeds earmarked for Haiti relief

    Filed under: , , ,

    2008 Corvette Z06 Special Edition – Click above for high-res image gallery

    The horrible tragedy in Haiti has hit the world like a sledge hammer, and relief efforts and charitable donations have been flooding into the grief-stricken island. Car companies have been quick to donate money in the wake of the earthquake, and now special edition vehicles are hitting the auction block to provide still more assistance. Chrysler announced that it was donating a 300C with 300 signatures from A-list celebs like Tom Hanks and Merryl Streep (full story coming soon), and now General Motors is following up on its $100,000 cash donation with a special edition Corvette.

    The Vette in question is one of 427 Special Edition 2008 Corvette Z06 models with former Corvette Plant Manager Will Cooksey’s signature and vehicle number on the center console. The Special Edition Z06 is also the only 2008 model that sports Crystal Red Metallic Tint Coat paint, a Stinger-style stripe on the front hood and fascia and a painted Z06 spoiler. This Vette becomes more prestigious due to the fact that it is the 427th and last copy of the limited series. The Z06 will be auctioned off at the 39th annual Barret-Jackson event on January 23. Hit the jump to read over The General’s press release.

    [Source: General Motors]

    Continue reading Special Edition Z06 Corvette to be auctioned at Barret-Jackson, proceeds earmarked for Haiti relief

    Special Edition Z06 Corvette to be auctioned at Barret-Jackson, proceeds earmarked for Haiti relief originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 21 Jan 2010 14:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Twingo CC/Wind: Révélée par sa miniature !

    On n’arrête pas le progrès sur internet… voici que Renault, qui gardait jalousement le secret sur sa future petite découvrable, à tel point qu’on finissait par l’appeler l’Arlésienne, se fait doubler par une miniature.

     –> Retrouvez toute l’information du Losange en continu sur le Fil News Renault.

    –> Dernier article concernant Renault: les 16 pires voitures de la décennie selon Autocar; une liste très critiquable…

    –> On en parle depuis des années, sans jamais l’avoir vu, le petit roadster Renault va enfin se montrer à Genève en mars, pour une commercialisation à suivre.

    -Cette voiture, malgré de nombreux spyshots récents bien bâchés, est restée un mystère pendant longtemps. Il y a quelques semaines, et nous avions relayé l’information, voici ce qui se retrouvait sur la toile:

     Renault Twingo CC schéma001

    -Un premier mystère est alors tombé; celui du système de toit. Si le coulissant tenait la corde ces derniers mois dans les pronostics, c’est en fait bien un toit pivotant qui a été retenu, en une seule partie, mais revenant sous le capot de coffre comme sur n’importe quelle CC. C’est ce que montre le schéma ci-dessus, provenant de chez Renault et « échappé » sur le net depuis quelques temps. Voici donc ce que ça donne concrêtement:

    Renault Twingo CC schéma002 

    -Restent toujours les mêmes questions sur le nom de la voiture. Pour ce qui est du nom, ce sera Wind (en référence au concept car de 2004), ou W’air. La décision ne semble pas encore prise. Wind a les faveurs des pronostics…

    -Côté moteurs et tarifs, pas de grosses surprises à attendre en principe; un prix de base autour de 15000€, les 1.2 Tce 100 et 1.6 133cv. seraient au programme, mais pas de diesel. En tous cas pas avant que Renault ne change éventuellement d’avis sur la question. La « Twingo CC » est une stricte 2 places, c’est également acquis.

    –> Malgré tout, s’il restait quelques doutes sur l’aspect définitif de la voiture et la validité des rendus publiés, les voici levés grâce à cette fuite d’un fabriquant… de miniatures! Ce n’est pas une première (voir C4 Picasso), mais ça surprend toujours.

    Twingo CC miniature 001

    Twingo CC miniature 002 

    -Donc, il ne reste plus grand chose du mystère de la Twingo CC / Wind / W’air, un meilleur rendu que celui ci-dessous peut-être, mais là, ça ne saurait tarder…

     Renault Twingo CC rendu001

     

    Nouveau: pour profiter facilement et rapidement des notifications de nouveautés sur le site,pensez à vous abonner via Twitter. Chaque modification,nouvel article ou nouvelle vidéo sur notre chaîne Youtube, fait l’objet d’un Tweet immédiat!

     

  • Chicago shelter takes in Haitians

    The refugees arrived on two CTA buses, Mulroe said. Firefighters from a nearby fire station helped them move them and their meager belongings inside.

    Despite the arduous process of having workers from the American Red Cross and other agencies at O’Hare assess their medical and travel needs, the refugees “were very patient,” Mulroe said.

    He also said the Red Cross provided interpreters for them, many of whom speak French and Creole.

    “You could tell they were tired…When [the processing] was wrapping up and they were getting ready to move, they said ‘thank you,’” Mulroe said. “They were glad to be safe.”

    He said the foundation, which has just under 400 beds at its Roosevelt Road location, will provide the refugees with beds, showers and food. At some point, Mulroe said, various city, state and federal agencies will help find the refugees places for extended stays.

    He couldn’t say how long the refugees would remain at the shelter. But another official at the foundation said a good portion of the refugees may eventually be flown to the Miami area to be with relatives. About a dozen were to fly today to New York.

    “This was a Herculean effort just to get them here,” Mulroe said, adding that grief counselors will be made available to them later today.

    The United Airlines flight that brought them to Chicago landed about 9:30 p.m.

    Earlier in the day, the same plane dropped off several dozen relief workers and supplies in the earthquake-ravenged country.On arrival, they were greeted by Red Cross volunteers with wool blankets. McDonalds employees handed out Happy Meals to the kids, and bottled water, cookies and “apple” dippers to adults.

    The group walked into a roped-off area out of the airport to a nearby Hilton hotel, where they were meeting with officials and care workers. Most of the survivors did not speak with reporters.

    Gov. Pat Quinn was at the airport to greet them.

    “We want to make sure that everyone who comes from Haiti feels at home and welcome,” said Quinn. “We want to extend our hearts to everyone in Haiti.”

    Quoting a French expression, Quinn then said, “It means we shall go to the end, and that’s what the people of Illinois will do for the people of Haiti.”

    One of the survivors, Anastazie Abraham, told reporters that she was ecstatic to be in Chicago after spending the last week sleeping in a Haitian field. Abraham, a U.S. citizen, was visiting her husband in Haiti when the earthquake hit.

    After hearing that an airline was flying American citizens home, she had her husband take her to the airport. Asked what her immediate plans were, Abraham said a “good meal and a nice shower, and then have a nice little drink and then go to bed.”

    She planned to return to her home in New York Thursday.

    Ernest Lebrun, who traveled with his 14-year-old daughter on the plane to Chicago, said he was happy to be out of Haiti.

    Lebrun said that he has dual citizenship, and had been running a hotel in Haiti when the earthquake hit. He said he did not think he would go back to Haiti any time soon.

    “I’m very scared about Haiti now,” he said.

    Rosemene Charlesarlet, 82, said that she was visiting a cousin in Haiti.

    “It makes me so sick,” said Charlesarlet, who said she was headed to New York Thursday. “It’s like I have something in my leg each day” from the earth shaking.

    Anne Clara Desrosier said that she lost five cousins in the quake. She was also headed to New York to stay with family.

    “No one can help,” said Desrosier, her eyes welling with tears. “Too many people have died.”

    The captain of Wednesday night’s flight, Terry Doran, who volunteered to make the trip, said the survivors were generally in good spirits during the flight.

    But Doran described a moment as the survivors left the plane when an elderly passenger, realizing that her entire family had been killed in the 7.0 magnitude quake, fell back into her seat when the cold night air hit her face.

    “I don’t know what she is going to do,” Doran said.

    The Illinois Department of Children and Family Services said it will help with any needed care for children who arrived, but the children will not officially be placed in state custody, spokesman Kendall Marlowe said.

    The Red Cross and its volunteers will provide all the Haitian evacuees with help including medical care, translation services, computer and phone access and support reconnecting with their families, according to a release from the Red Cross.

    The United plane that left Chicago for Haiti Wednesday morning carried 15,000 pounds of water donated by Walgreens, nearly 400 tents from Feed the Children and communications equipment from Airline Ambassadors.

    United plans up to 30 more relief flights to Haiti.

    Several charter flights have arrived in the U.S. in the last 36 hours to bring in children along with adults who need medical care.

    Oscar Avila, Cynthia Dizikes and Jeremy Gorner

    Photo: Red Cross volunteer and UIC Psychotherapist Sharon Steckler (right) welcomes young passengers arriving from Haiti at O’Hare on Wednesday. (Tribune / Nuccio DiNuzzo)

    Read the original article from Tribune News Services.


  • Hotel(nieuw)s

    In Amsterdam zijn er vele plannen voor nieuwe hotels en uitbreidingen. Daarnaast is er van tijd tot tijd interessant hotelnieuws.

    Men heeft tot 2015 9000 extra hotelbedden gepland op het moment dat er ongeveer 19000 hotelkamers in Amsterdam aanwezig waren. Aangezien er veelfout aan plannen voor kamers zijn ingediend denkt de hotelloods in Amsterdam dat dit aantal wordt gehaald.

    Stand hotels op 01-01-2009 (bron O + S)

    *****
    Aantal 5 sterren hotel: 12
    Aantal 5 sterren kamers: 2809

    ****
    Aantal 4 sterren hotel: 44
    Aantal 4 sterren kamers: 7000

    ***
    Aantal 3 sterren hotel: 95
    Aantal 3 sterren kamers: 6402

    Overige hotels en jeugdherbergen
    Aantal overige hotels: 218
    Aantal overige bedden: 4721

    Totaal hotels: 369
    Totaal bedden: 20932

    Online kaart met hotelplannen in de regio Amsterdam.

  • Omarion “America’s Best Dance Crew” Judge

    America’s Best Dance Crew is going to the Ice Box: R&B singing star and former boy bander Omarion has been tapped to replace accused child rapist Shane Sparks as a judge on the upcoming fifth season of Randy Jackson Presents: America’s Best Dance Crew.

    The move comes after the choreographer was arrested on eight felony counts of suspicion of child molestation in October.

    omarion-dropped-from-young-money

    “Omarion is one of the most accomplished, multi-talented young stars of his generation. His music and music videos have influenced hip-hop dance going back to his B2k days and in more recent years as a platinum-selling solo artist,” Liz Gateley, Senior Vice President of Series Development for MTV, said in a release Thursday. “He is an accomplished dancer, artist and actor who knows what makes a good dance crew performance. We are very excited for him to join Lil Mama and JC Chasez as our third judge.”

    Omarion — who was recently dumped from Lil Wayne’s Young Money set — just seems happy to have a new gig!

    “I’m so excited to be a judge on MTV’s ‘America’s Best Dance Crew,’” says Omarion. “Dancing and performing is what I do and being a judge on this show will allow me to give creative feedback to the newest and hottest dancers on the rise.”

    Omarion takes his seat at the judge’s table when ABDC Season 5 premieress Thursday, Jan. 28 @ 10 PM ET/PT on MTV.


  • Haiti: Water, latrines, work and dignity

    Access to clean water for 80,000 people, latrines to serve 25,000, and cash-for-work. This life-saving work also provides survivors with another important part of recovery – dignity. Louis Belanger describes Oxfam’s mounting aid effort.

    Donate now and find out more about Oxfam’s Haiti Earthquake response

  • Former Detroit Lions Lineman Luther Elliss Faces Foreclosure

    It’s heartbreaking to hear stories of foreclosure, but when it’s a celebrity foreclosure, you wonder how it can happen. Former Detroit Lions lineman Luther Elliss, 36, who was paid almost $11.6 million from 2000-04, already lost his Utah home to foreclosure and now Elliss is prepared to walk away from his Oakland Township home.

    According to The Detroit News, Elliss has filed bankruptcy, his savings are gone and he is relying on area churches and friends to help him land in a safe place. Evidently, Elliss made some poor investment choices and had liabilities that included mortgage debts on two homes (one in Utah and one in the Detroit area), an office building, delinquent taxes, credit card charges, legal fees and tuition at a Christian school. The married father of 11 had this to say about his predicament:

    “The Lions did a good job, they put on financial programs that we had to attend talking about investing and saving money, gave statistics on how many of us would be broke,” Elliss said. “Guys were saying, ‘It’s not going to be me, I’m too smart for that.’ And here I am, one of those guys.”

    Here’s a data point that is shocking: A recent Sports Illustrated article “How (and Why) Athletes Go Broke” reported that 78 percent of former NFL players will either file for bankruptcy or experience financial distress within two year of retirement and within five years of retirement, an estimated 60% of former NBA players are broke.

    > See more celebrity foreclosures.

    > See more Oakland, MI real estate
    > See Oakland, MI home values

  • YouTube Gets a Makeover: Launches New Video Player and Video Pages

    youtube_logo_july07.pngYouTube just launched a streamlined video player and redesigned video pages. The new video pages give YouTube a more minimalist and streamlined look, with a stronger focus on the video. For now, these new features are opt-in only. It is not clear when Google plans to make this new design the default theme for YouTube.

    Sponsor

    You can join the experiment by clicking on this link and you can opt out again by clicking here.

    youtube_minimalist_experiment.jpg

    New Video Pages

    As Google emphasized in the announcement today, the new pages put the video at the center of the experience. The new video pages are very stripped down and somewhat reminiscent of the YouTube “Feather” experiment Google launched last December.

    The description of the currently playing video has moved underneath the video, leaving more space on the sidebar for related videos or a list of other videos in the current playlist. The new pages also put a larger emphasis on related videos.

    If you start a search on YouTube while a video is playing, the results will appear right on the same page without interrupting the video that is currently playing. Search results appear on the right side of the screen, while the video continues to play in a smaller player on the left side of the page.

    Improved Video Player

    The player itself has also been redesigned. You can now switch between different player sizes. Switching between different video qualities (SD, HD or 1080p) is now done through a drop-down menu.

    youtube_player_new.png

    New Ratings System

    YouTube also did away with the old ratings system. Instead of rating a video on a 1 to 5 star scale, YouTube moved to a “Like/Don’t Like” model. According to Google, YouTube’s users only gave 1 and 5 star reviews to videos anyway and skipped over the intermediate ratings.

    What do You Think?

    To us, the new pages are a welcome departure from the crowded old YouTube pages. What do you think? Is this a step forward for YouTube or will it be a failed experiment?

    Discuss


  • If you had to choose between these two tests, which would you choose?

    I would like to test before meals and two hours post prandial for each meal. But right now I don’t have enough test strips to do that and buying additional ones can’t happen right now due to money restrictions. Perhaps in the future but not right now. So which of the two tests would be the more important one to do?
  • These Folks Never Run Out of Bad Ideas

    By Gary Howard

    Today, President Obama has decided that his administration should strengthen its populist bonafides by pretending to get tough on everybody’s favorite bogeyman–big banks.

    From the Wall Street Journal:

    President Barack Obama proposed Thursday new rules designed to restrict the size and activities of the U.S.’s biggest banks, the latest in a series of administration moves to curb Wall Street.

    The White House wants commercial banks that take deposits from customers to be barred from investing on behalf of the bank itself-what’s known as proprietary trading-and said the administration will seek new limits on the size and concentration of financial institutions. Read more…

    According to the President:

    “My resolve to reform the system is only strengthened when I see a return to old practices at some of the very firms fighting reform; and when I see record profits at some of the very firms claiming that they cannot lend more to small business, cannot keep credit card rates low, and cannot refund taxpayers for the bailout,” President Obama said Thursday. “It is exactly this kind of irresponsibility that makes clear reform is necessary.”

    What he fails to mention however, is that many of the banks who are making record profits and record bonuses, and who recieved sweetheart bailout deals (Goldman Sachs), are filled with buddies of his economic team (Summers, Geithner, et al)–who are all former colleagues of one another.

    From the same article:

    Admistration officials said the new rules would force major institutions from J.P. Morgan Chase to Bank of America to decide the direction of their business. Banks shielded from risk through federal-deposit insurance, or aided in financial crises by low-interest loans from the Federal Reserve Board, would no longer be allowed to engage in trading unrelated to their customers’ interests, one senior administration official said.

    So we should trust you guys to further police your friends’ business, when that’s what you’re supposed to  be doing already? No way. And these useless restrictions imposed on banks will inevitably affect consumers negatively.

    This new false populism is just another tactic for the permnanent Obama campaign. Another bad idea, recycled (also known as trash) and repackaged.

    How about untangling the federal government from big business and let them prosper or fail on their own merits–let people decide which banks are worth the risk of putting their money into and deal with the consequences of their decisions.

  • Giz Explains: SSDs and Why You Wish You Had One [Giz Explains]

    Speed. Toughness. Efficiency. Silence. That’s why we want solid-state drives in our computers. But we worry about the zoom-zoom performance degrading over time, and the fact that SSDs might eventually wear out. Here’s what you need to know about ’em.

    Why Solid-State Drives Are Awesome (Or At Least, Better Than Hard Drives)

    To understand what’s great about SSDs, let’s start with HDDs (you know, old-fashioned hard drives). On a basic level, a hard disk drive works thusly: Inside is a magnetized recording surface called a platter that spins around really fast, with a head that zooms across disk to read and write data—think kinda like a record player, except the head never touches the surface, ’cause that would be very, very bad. So, you can see the problem with hard drives: They’re fragile (don’t drop your computer) and they’re slow to access stuff because the head has to physically move to where the data is.


    With an SSD, on the other hand, we’re talking straight silicon. What’s inside is a bunch of flash memory chips and a controller running the show. There are no moving parts, so an SSD doesn’t need to start spinning, doesn’t need to physically hunt data scattered across the drive and doesn’t make a whirrrrr. The result is that it’s crazy faster than a regular hard drive in nearly every way, so you have insanely quick boot times (an old video, but it stands), application launches, random writes and almost every other measure of drive performance (writing large files excepted). For a frame of reference, General Manager of SanDisk’s SSD group, Doron Myersdorf, says an equivalent hard drive would have to spin at almost 40,000rpm to match an SSD. And, you can drop it—at least, a little.

    Secrets of the SSD

    Typically, what you’ve inside an SSD is a bunch of NAND flash memory chips for storage—the same stuff found in memory cards and USB thumb drives—along with a small cache of DRAM, like you’d find on most current hard drives. The DRAM is also flash memory, but the difference between the two is that the storage memory is non-volatile, meaning the data it holds won’t go poof when it loses power, while the faster DRAM is volatile memory, so “poof” is exactly what happens to DRAM data when the power goes out. That’s fine because it’s the faster DRAM is just for caching things, holding them temporarily to make the whole system work faster.

    So, let’s talk a bit about flash memory itself. I’ll try to keep it straightforward and not lose you, because it’s key to the benefits and problems with solid-state storage.

    Flash memory is made up of a bunch of memory cells, which are made up of transistors. There are two basic kinds of memory: With single-level cell (SLC) memory, one bit of data is stored per cell. (Bits, the basic building block of information, if you recall, have two states, 0 or 1.) The SLC type is fast as hell and lasts a long time, but it is too expensive for storing the dense amounts of data you’d want in a personal computer. SLC memory is really only used for enterprise stuff, like servers, where you need it to last for 100,000 write cycles.

    The solution for normal humans is multi-level cell memory. Currently, up to 4 bits can be stored per cell. “Multi-level” refers to the multiple levels of voltage in the cell used to get those extra bits in. MLC SSD drives are much cheaper than SLC but are, as I mentioned, slower, and can wear out faster than their pricier counterpart. Still, for now and going forward into the foreseeable future, all of the SSDs you could come close to owning are of the MLC variety.

    The Bad Stuff

    Structurally, flash memory is divided into blocks, which are broken down further into pages. And now, we get into one of the major problems with flash. While data can be read and written at the individual page level, it can only be erased at the larger block level. In other words, suppose you have a 256k block and a 4k page, and you want to erase just one page worth of data, you have to erase the whole block, and then write all the rest of the data back to the block.

    This is a huge problem, for one, because MLC flash memory wears out after 10,000 write cycles. Two, as the drive fills up, performance significantly degrades. (Anandtech has a pretty great illustration, amidst a massively deep dive on SSDs you should read if you’re interested at all, showing this.) That’s because without free blocks to write to, you’ve gotta go through that intensive erase and rewrite cycle, which, as you’d imagine, entails a lot of overhead. Problem numero three is that, according to SanDisk CEO Eli Harari, there’s “a brick wall” in the near future, when storage at the chip level could stop increasing in the not-too-distant future.

    Mitigating the Bad Stuff

    The thing is, you actually probably still want an SSD in your next computer, to make it run awesomer. Because where there are problems, there are sorta solutions. Remember how I mentioned up above the other major component in an SSD, besides the flash memory, is the controller? They’re a big part of what differentiates one company’s SSD from another’s. The controller is the secret sauce, as SanDisk’s Myersdorf told me. Because the game, for now, is all about managing flash better, both physically and logically. In other words, it’s about algorithms.

    The first standard technique for long flash-memory life is wear leveling, which is simply not writing to the same area of the drive over and over again. Instead, the goal is to fill up the entire drive with stuff before you have to start erasing blocks, knowing that erasing and re-writing will use up precious cycles. The problem of “Write amplification”—say you have a 1MB document that ends up causing 4MB worth of writes to the drive because of the whole block and pages problem described above, where you wind up reading, erasing and re-writing a bunch of extra blocks and pages—that is being lowered, says Myersdorf, because drive management is shifting from being block-based to page-based. More granular algorithms with caching and prediction means there’s less unnecessary erasing and writing.

    The biggest thing is what’s called TRIM. As you probably know, when you delete something from your computer, it isn’t instantly vaporized. Your OS basically just marks the data as “Hey it’s cool to pave over this with new stuff.” Your hard drive has no real idea you deleted anything. With the TRIM function, when you delete something, the OS actually tells the SSD, “Hey you can scrub this crap.” The SSD dumps the block to a cache, wipes the pages with the stuff you want gone, and copies the stuff you want to keep back to a new block, leaving you with clean pages for the next time you want to write something to the disk. This means better performance when you’re saving new stuff, since it handles the read-erase-rewrite dance ahead of time. Windows 7 supports TRIM, and Myersdorf says Windows 8 will be even better for solid-state storage.

    As for busting through the brick wall of limited storage, the number of electrons that can reside in a cell, increasing flash memory storage at a pace faster than Moore’s Law, right now, Toshiba, who invented NAND flash, is currently the chip capacity king. The company just announced a new 64GB NAND flash module that combines 16 4GB NAND chips. This would seem to be closing in on that wall, which we don’t want them to do, because we want the dollar-to-MB ratio to keep dropping. Myersdorf is optimistic (despite his boss’s gloomy pronouncement), “There have been several walls in history of the [flash] industry—there was transition to MLC, then three bits per cell, then four—every time there is some physical wall, that physics doesn’t allow you to pass, there is always a new shift of paradigm as to how we make the next step on the performance curve.”

    Okay, the big question then: When are SSDs gonna get seriously affordable? A 160GB version of one of the one of the most acclaimed SSDs, Intel’s X25, retails for $470. OCZ’s Colossus is a verifiable brick of solid-state storage, and the 1TB model has an MSRP of $2200, though it’s going for much more. By contrast, a 1TB WD old-fashioned hard drive is like a hundred bucks on a bad day. Myersdorf says it’s hard to say when the SSD’s dollar-to-byte ratio is going to go down absolutely, mostly because of supply and demand, but he did predict that a lot of “mainstream” laptops are gonna have 256GB SSDs in the next 18 months. Oh good, I’ll be due for a new laptop right around then.

    Thanks to SanDisk for helping us out! Still something you wanna know? Send questions about solid states, solid snakes, or solid shakes here, with “Giz Explains” in the subject line.






  • USA: Oak Park, Chicago

    Na al die threads over de USA kan er vast nog wel eentje extra van mij bij.
    Vorig jaar tijdens mijn citytrip naar o.a. Chicago stond ook een bezoekje aan Oak Park op de planning.

    Met de CTA Green line vanuit de Loop naar Oak Park gegaan.
    1.

    Dan kom je ook wel door een aantal arme wijken/ghetto’s van Chicago waar je denk ik niet zomaar uit moet stappen en even kris kras door heen moet lopen als toerist. Dat zorgt wel voor een erg groot contrast met de bebouwing die ik dan in Oak Park zag.

    2.

    Bebouwing in de buurt van het CTA station aan Oak Park Avenue.

    3.

    idem.

    Vanaf dat station beetje kriskras rondgelopen door de wijk en uiteindelijk op Forest Avenue uitgekomen. Elk huis wat hier staat is prachtig op zichzelf. En dan her en der tussendoor kom je FLW (Frank Lloyd Wright) werk tegen. Naast de soms kolossale huizen ook veel groen in de straten zelf.

    4.

    5.

    Peter A. Beachy House uit 1906 aan de hand van de meester zelf.

    6.

    7.

    Laura Gale House, 1906, Frank Lloyd Wright

    8.

    9.

    Typisch amerikaans! Lekker groot, veel hout en dito veranda’s! Wat een prachthuis! 😎

    10.

    Dit huis kwam ook terug in de audiotour, maar is niet van FLW. Het AB Melville House is aan de hand van de architect E.E. Roberts en stamt uit 1904.

    11.

    nogmaals.

    12.

    detail in de gevel bij het voormalige Frank Lloyd Wright Home and Studio.
    het huis zelf stamt uit 1889 en de studio is erbij gebouwd in 1898. Het is ook een National Historic Landmark (sinds 1976)

    13.

    nog meer prachtige details in het pand.

    14.

    Het huis zelf, kan je trouwens ook een rondleiding in krijgen, niet gedaan ik heb dus alleen de audiotour (met mini mp3 speler en boekje) gedaan.

    15.

    Moore Dugal Residence, ook van FLW, orgineel uit 1895, in lagere vorm na een grote brand herbouwd in 1923.

    16.

    Dit complex heeft engelse details/looks maar in de kleine details in de muren kom je ook nog veel referenties tegen naar de Maya architectuur/cultuur.

    16a

    17.

    de buurman is ook aan de hand van FLW en stamt uit 1896 met uitbreiding in 1906.

    18.

    19.

    de familie Gale huizen, deze van Thomas H Gale, is dus van het vroegere werk van FLW (1892)

    20.

    De buurman is van Walter H Gale, ook FLW maar dan uit 1893.

    21.

    Tja FLW genoeg te vinden hier: het Arthur B Heurtley House (1902) wat al wat meer herkenbare kenmerken heeft die wij associeren met FLW.

    22.

    Natuurlijk gaan we vrolijk verder met nog een huis van FLW; Frank Thoma House, 1901. Hier was men deels aan het verbouwen/restaureren met hoop plastic zeil (links van de foto, niet zichtbaar)

    23.

    The bekende Unity Temple, FLW, gebouwd tussen 1905-1908.

    24.

    Woonhuis gebouwd in de Queen Anne stijl, medio 1890.

    25.

    Classic revival stijl, 1905.

    26.

    Toch nog 1 van FLW, Harris P Young House (Remodeling), 1895.

    27.

    Voordeurpartij bij een huis (niet vermeld in de tour btw)

    28.

    doe er mij maar 1 van deze hoor! Prachthuizen in een prachtig kenmerkende architectuurstijl. 😎

    29.

    geboortehuis van Ernest Hemingway aan Oak Park Avenue.

    30.

    overige bebouwing in delen van Oak Park

    31.

    idem.

    32.

  • Gov. Quinn fails Illinois citizens with intellectual, developmental disabilities

    Lawmakers cannot continue to push their own political agendas and make backroom deals. Illinois parents of adults with special needs said so in an October NO union election.

    It’s wrong for the government to interfere with people’s lives.

    Here in Illinois, Gov. Quinn made a policy decision simply to advance his own political agenda.

    It seems to us Mr. Quinn made a deal. Pat Quinn signed Executive Order 09-15 and made his own deal with SEIU – here’s a few thousand more people to add to your union, thanks for your endorsement and support and million dollars.

    As soon as the order was signed, the SEIU received the names and addresses of personal support workers in Illinois’ Home-Based Support Services Program from the Illinois Department of Human Services.

    SEIU organizers showed up at our doors, trying to convince us to sign their card, promising more money, vacation time and better services for our sons and daughters, adults with an intellectual/developmental disability.

    There was an election. An overwhelming 66% voted NO UNION REPRESENTATION.  Personal support workers have first hand experience about how the Illinois Home-Based Support Services Program works. There are valid reasons why we voted for no union representation.

    Pat Quinn will not listen. He refuses to rescind the order. Quinn pushed his own political agenda, likely made a deal with SEIU and is failing thousands of Illinois citizens with intellectual/developmental disabilities, their families and the people who provide their supports and services. 

    It’s wrong for the government to interfere with people’s lives.

    Several of us have dedicated countless hours since the election trying to share this information, contacting policymakers, legislators and media. The union is going to continue to organize until they are successful.

    Every Gubernatorial candidate has been contacted numerous times for support.

    Our legislators in the General Assembly who sit on Disability-related committees have been contacted.

    Attached are a single page Fact Sheet and a List of Champions who agree that Pat Quinn must rescind Executive Order 09-15.  Look at the list. The families involved as well as the disability community believe the order needs to be rescinded. Several Illinois legislators as well as Gubernatorial candidates agree as well.

    Look at who isn’t on the list. This is Illinois and it’s less than two weeks before the primary. You would think more people would listen. It’s wrong for the government to interfere with people’s lives.

    We are available to answer any questions.

    MEDIA CONTACT:

    Pam Harris, 708-246-3880
    [email protected]

    Gordon Stiefel, 708-246-5151
    [email protected]