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  • Honda Supports Haiti Relief Efforts

    More and more industry giants are showing their support for the Haiti victims. Honda today announced a donation to the Red Cross of more than $300,000, as well as portable generators, water pumps, and other Honda products for use during humanitarian relief and recovery efforts.

    "We want to help address the dire human need that Haiti is experiencing as a result of this disaster," said Tetsuo Iwamura, president & chief executive officer of American Honda Motor and chief operating offi… (read more)

  • Thermo-Sensitive ‘Love Handles’ Sofa Shows Your Thigh Imprints in Beautiful Oily Colors [Furniture]

    Remember those Thermochromatic t-shirts from the early ’90s? Unsurprisingly, American Apparel started selling them last year. Now there’s a sofa version from NunoErin, which is coated in a thermo-sensitive finish that changes color where your body touches it.

    It’s the “Love Handles” chair, and for obvious reasons—each oversized thigh will be imprinted on the chair for minutes later. If ever there was a chair that encouraged you to diet, it’s this. [NunoErin via DesignBoom]






  • Obama Plans Combative Response

    Obama Plans Combative Response
    President Obama “plans a combative response if, as White House aides fear, Democrats lose Tuesday’s special Senate election in Massachusetts,” reports Politico.

    Said one senior administration official: “This is not a moment that causes the president or anybody who works for him to express any doubt. It more reinforces the conviction to fight hard.”

    “Whatever words Obama chooses, however, will have trouble masking the substantive reality: A Massachusetts embarrassment would strongly increase the pressure Obama was already facing to retreat or slow down the ‘big bang’ agenda he laid out a year ago.”

  • San Diego Biotechs Seem Poised to Start Hiring, But Chemists Will Face a Tough Time

    JobMarket_Newspaper
    Denise Gellene wrote:

    Indications are that employment in San Diego’s life sciences industry appears to be stabilizing, good news after a tumultuous year in which hundreds of experienced scientists and business professionals lost their jobs.

    Recruiter Meredith Dow says layoffs appear to have slowed and some startups, for the first time in months, are beginning to talk about hiring. “There is increased optimism about getting funding during the first half of this year that will allow these startups to hire additional people,” says Dow, a senior partner at the staff recruitment firm Proven Inc. in San Diego.

    A recent report from BayBio, the industry group in the San Francisco area, found that the life sciences industry in California, including San Diego, came through the worst of the recession in relatively good shape. Life sciences employment was flat, according to the report, quite an accomplishment in a state that experienced massive job losses overall.

    New jobless data for December is expected any day. In November, overall unemployment was at 12.3 percent in California and at 10.3 percent in San Diego County. The BayBio report didn’t analyze employment by sector or break out the numbers for San Diego.

    The tight job market meant startups with positions to fill had a remarkable number of qualified candidates to choose from. “The economic situation is difficult and it is terrible if you are out of work, but from the other side of it, we are seeing a very rich pool of candidates that might not be available otherwise,” Rich Noffsinger, CEO of Anvita Health, a San Diego-based health care analytics company, told me last month.

    Dow says it is clear some industry sectors in San Diego weathered last year’s funding drought better than others. For example, she says, the past year was hard on early-stage drug research. Cash-staved biotechs slashed drug discovery operations in order to finance clinical trails of their most advanced drug candidates. Large numbers of veteran scientists were let go, resulting in one of the worst employment markets Dow has ever witnessed for medicinal chemists.

    “In normal times, chemists never sat on the market for more than a week or two,” she tells me. “Now, some really great analytic chemists and organic chemists have been out for work for six or seven months. That is going to be the norm, unfortunately.”

    Mary Canady, a marketing consultant with Comprendia and founder of the San Diego Biotechnology Network, says the research scientists she networks with haven’t seen signs of job recovery. “I see people who are really struggling,” she says. “I can’t say things are getting better.”

    The intense focus on drug develoment is benefiting other types of workers, however. People with experience in clinical development, regulatory affairs and quality assurance are in demand, says Dow, who in some cases has had to look outside San Diego to fill positions.

    Hiring in the medical device sector “seems really strong right now,” Dow tells me. The regulatory path to market tends to be shorter for medical devices than for drugs.

    Dow expects at best slight gains in life sciences employment in San Diego this year. Although the worst may be over, she says it will be a while before lost research jobs come back.







  • Relief for Haiti

    My lack of Haiti blogging does not denote a lack of interest or concern… It’s just so horrific -and like 9/11 you can’t seem to escape the images…

    Presidents Bush and Clinton have already raised $8 million dollars. I can’t believe how old Bushy looks. When I walked into the room while this press conference was on, I thought it was his father at first. I don’t know who would ever want to be President –it sucks the life blood from you.

    Friends of mine are in the middle of adopting a little boy from Haiti. The two year old survived the quake, but only today were the children of his orphanage given a tent. They have had to go through so much red tape to adopt this little one –and for as long as they’ve been going through the motions, he should have never even have been there for this. He should have been here…safe and sound. Why do other countries stall the American adoptions?! I hate that pride comes before the well-being of their orphaned children.

    Speaking of the unspeakable, I NEVER want to hear anyone complain about their job again. Haitians are being paid $1.50 A DAY to pull dead, rotting bodies from the rubble–and it’s not all relative.

    Look through the Red Cross pictures

    DONATE TO THE AMERICAN RED CROSS

  • Bill Moyers & Thomas Frank: How America’s Demented Politics Let the GOP Off the Hook for Their Giant Mess

    Bill Moyers & Thomas Frank: How America’s Demented Politics Let the GOP Off the Hook for Their Giant Mess
    Bill Moyers interviews Thomas Frank on how our short attention span has allowed conservatives to escape blame for their role in the economic meltdown.

    Bill Moyers interviews Thomas Frank on how our short attention span has allowed conservatives to escape blame for their role in the economic meltdown.

    Sex Addiction: A B.S. Excuse for Not Thinking
    Sexual compulsions are real and they harm the person in their grip as well as others. But treating them like a problem — something to be ‘fixed’ — isn’t working.

    Sexual compulsions are real and they harm the person in their grip as well as others. But treating them like a problem — something to be 'fixed' — isn't working.

    How Carbon Polluters Have Hijacked Part of California’s "Green" Business Movement
    the AB 32 Implementation Group, supposedly an environmentally-friendly coalition, is working to change the state’s global warming laws.

    the AB 32 Implementation Group, supposedly an environmentally-friendly coalition, is working to change the state's global warming laws.

    9 Things the U.S. Could and Should Do for Haiti
    The unfathomable tragedy in Haiti demands that we do things differently.

    The unfathomable tragedy in Haiti demands that we do things differently.

    Should You Stay Together for the Kids? Hell No!
    Choose the pursuit of happiness instead. For yourself, and for your child.

    Choose the pursuit of happiness instead. For yourself, and for your child.

  • Brown stands by supporting a tax-subsidized golf course over 9/11 rescue workers.

    Brown stands by supporting a tax-subsidized golf course over 9/11 rescue workers.
    State Sen. Scott Brown (R-MA), the Republican candidate for the U.S. Senate special election on Tuesday, voted on Oct. 17, 2001 to deny financial aid to Red Cross rescue workers who had volunteered with 9/11 recovery efforts. As a state representative at the time, Brown was one out of only three legislators who had opposed […]

    State Sen. Scott Brown (R-MA), the Republican candidate for the U.S. Senate special election on Tuesday, voted on Oct. 17, 2001 to deny financial aid to Red Cross rescue workers who had volunteered with 9/11 recovery efforts. As a state representative at the time, Brown was one out of only three legislators who had opposed the overwhelmingly bipartisan measure. As ThinkProgress reported on Saturday, at the same time Brown was voting against the 9/11 rescue workers bill, he sponsored House Bill 4423, a measure to provide a tax-subsidized bond to build a golf course in Newport, a town in his district. Brown, earlier this weekend, told ThinkProgress that he opposed the rescue worker money because of the state’s fiscal condition and because he had his own “priorities.” Given the revelation that Brown fought for a golf course over the rescue worker aid, ThinkProgress again approached Brown for comment today:

    TP: Mr. Brown, in 2001 when you voted against financial aid for 9/11 rescue workers, you were pushing a bill for a tax subsidized golf course in your district. Can you explain that?

    BROWN: I’m not sure what you’re referring to. […]

    TP: Are you going to explain that vote?

    BROWN: Number two, we were in a financial difficulty and we couldn’t afford it unfortunately.

    TP: But you could afford a tax-subsidized bond for a golf course?

    BROWN: We had to obviously take care of the people of Massachusetts who needed to stay employed.

    Watch it:

    Brown’s golf course bill passed on November 30, 2001, a few weeks after he voted to kill the 9/11 rescue worker financial aid. While the golf course construction certainly kept people employed, Brown’s self-professed interest in protecting the American homeland doesn’t extend to the rescue workers who rushed to the site of the twin towers after the attacks of 9/11.

    Kerry: ?The only thing Republicans say yes to are Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, tea partiers, and Fox News.?
    Campaigning for Massachusetts Democratic Senate candidate Martha Coakley on Friday, Sen. John Kerry (D-MA) took a shot the “party of no.” Kerry argued that while Democrats in Congress and the Obama administration focused on governing for the past year, “the Republicans did nothing but say no.” After ticking off a list of items the Republicans […]

    Campaigning for Massachusetts Democratic Senate candidate Martha Coakley on Friday, Sen. John Kerry (D-MA) took a shot the “party of no.” Kerry argued that while Democrats in Congress and the Obama administration focused on governing for the past year, “the Republicans did nothing but say no.” After ticking off a list of items the Republicans have opposed, Kerry concluded:

    They made a calculated political decision that they would say no to governance, create anger, and then let the anger fall on those who are struggling to make the choices and these tough decisions. And now, they have the gall to want to receive a bonus for doing it.

    Well my friends, the only things the Republicans say yes to are Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, tea partiers, and Fox News.

    Watch it:

  • FBI broke law for years in phone record searches

    FBI broke law for years in phone record searches
    The FBI illegally collected more than 2,000 U.S. telephone call records between 2002 and 2006 by invoking terrorism emergencies that did not exist or simply persuading phone companies to provide records, according to internal bureau memos and interviews. FBI officials issued approvals after the fact…

    Health-care debate delayed action on other big issues
    For Congress, December procrastination could turn into Valentine’s Day blues.

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  • Sauber confirma el fichaje de Pedro de la Rosa

    Feliz noticia la que nos llega para todos los aficionados españoles de la Fórmula 1. El equipo Sauber acaba de confirmar a Pedro de la Rosa como piloto oficial para la temporada 2010. Ha sido realmente una sorpresa y después de lo que publicamos en el día de ayer “Giancarlo Fisichella principal candidato para pilotar en Sauber“.

    Pedro Martínez de la Rosa

    Finalmente y tras muchas temporadas de lucha, el piloto catalán ha conseguido su sueño de volver a ser piloto titular en la máxima categoría del motor. Su fichaje ha sido emparte gracias al dueño de la escudería Peter Sauber quién ya anunció que buscaba a un piloto con mucha experiencia.

    A continuación os dejo con unas palabras de Pedro de la Rosa:

    Nosotros, como equipo, queremos aprovecharnos de su experiencia, al igual que nos gustaría que hiciese Kamui. La combinación de un piloto experimentado con la de una joven promesa suele dar muy buenos resultados y, en este caso, estoy seguro de que es lo que sucederá en la próxima temporada. Por supuesto, es crucial que les podamos dar un buen coche y tengo una visión muy optimista sobre la evolución que podemos obtener en nuestra fábrica. Somos capaces de continuar nuestro trabajo en el coche de 2010 tal y como teníamos programado a pesar del reciente periodo de incertidumbre.

    Por último, os animo a que visiteis su página web oficial para poder leer una entrevista en la que responde a varias preguntas sobre su estado actual y rumores pasados.

    Related posts:

    1. Pedro de la Rosa podría estar apunto de firmar con Sauber
    2. Pedro de la Rosa podría fichar con Sauber en cuestión de horas
    3. Pedro de La Rosa y Bruno Senna ya podrían haber confirmado su fichaje por Campos Meta
  • BS Insanity: Beginning of Week 3

    For any newcomers…Bathing Suit Insanity is the culmination of a bunch of us here that decided that whether we needed to lose 5, 25, 60 or 100 lbs (or just tone up), it was better to do it with support and partners in pain. The bravest of the brave will post a picture of their progress…possibly in a bathing suit…on July 26, 2010. We have a little over 6 months.

    There were two days last week I couldn’t do the DVD so I walked with the baby instead (and I had guilt-so that’s a good sign). I’m liking Slim in 6 –the second DVD gets a lot harder than the first one was (there are 3)… I have never used resistance bands before and I have to assume they work as I am sore in places I didn’t know had muscle…

    Because of many of your recommendations (and that of a friend whose Sensei is using it), I decided to order P90X for when I’m done Slim in 6. I found all 13 DVDs for $40.

    The hardest thing for me is always crunches…I ALWAYS hurt my back and neck regardless of who helps me with form. The other thing that sucks is the “nothing 3 hours before bed.”

    The Slim in 6 has a host of supplements that I didn’t order, but now I’m wondering if I should. Do I need them if I am eating well and taking a multi-vitamin?

  • Teary-Eyed Wyclef Jean Defends Embattled Yele Haiti Charity

    Rapper Wyclef Jean continues to deny any improprieties of funds raised by his charity foundation, Yele Haiti. Breaking down in tears, Wyclef denied reports that he has used money donated to the organization for personal gains. Jean gave an impassioned defense of the 12-year-old charity, which has received more than $2 million in donations in just a few days, but is accused of dodging taxes and using donated funds to pay board members.

    “My dad always told me, if you’re a man with a clear conscience, speak with a clear conscience and the world will know,” he said. “Have we made mistakes before? Yes. Did I ever use Yele money for personal benefit? Absolutely not.”

    Jean was born in Haiti but left the island nation for New York as a child. He later formed The Fugees with his cousin Pras and vocalist Lauren Hill. The group is considered one of the most successful of the ’90s.


  • What are the largest wholly British-owned companies?

    Following the news that Cadburys is being bought by Kraft, I’m intrigued to know what are the largest/most well known companies we actually have left, which are wholly owned by Britain. So please list them.
  • Biggest city centres in Uk+Ireland

    using google earth i measured Dublins city centre (from left to right and from top to bottom) and it measured roughly 5.7 km x 4.8 km. after that you get into more residential areas and housing estates so measure your cities city centres (edge of city centre)

  • Skoda Supports 2010 Down Under Cycling Tour

    2010 is the third consecutive year in which Skoda Australia offers support for the country’s cycling stage as premier sponsor and official car partner of the 2010 Tour Down Under, which takes place in and around Adelaide – the tour has started on January 17 and will end on January 24.

    All the team and organization cars at this event will be Skodas, as the manufacturer has provided a fleet of 110 vehicles for the tour: the company’s complete model range will be present, from the helping-hand R… (read more)

  • Another Big Bet on Mobile Payments: Boku Raises $25 Million [MediaMemo]

    bokuIs there big money in mobile payments — systems that let people buy stuff using their phone, and charge the purchase to their wireless bill? Not yet, perhaps. But investors are betting there will be.

    Latest example: Boku, a mobile payment startup that raised $13 million last June, has added another $25 million via a C round led by DAG Ventures. Benchmark Capital, Index Ventures and Khosla Ventures are all re-upping.

    Boku and competitors like Zong are focused, for now, on letting people use their phones to buy “virtual goods”, primarily on social games run by the likes of Zynga, Playdom and Electronic Arts’s (ERTS) Playfish.

    But even if you believe that business isn’t going the way of the Pet Rock, it’s going to be somewhat limited — the most obvious user for this stuff would be kids who don’t have their own credits cards — and competition will ratchet up if Facebook decides to finally offer its own payment platform, which seems very likely.

    But the amount of money the startups are raising indicates that they have much bigger ambitions. They want to turn your phone into a payment system for “real” stuff. Easy enough to see how you could extend this to other digital purchases, like music, video, etc., but there’s no reason you couldn’t buy physical goods this way.

    Could happen, too. Though we’ve been hearing about that scenario for more than a decade, and it hasn’t taken off yet.

    One near-term obstacle, at least in the US, are carrier fees — AT&T (T), Sprint (S) et al generally take up to 50 percent of each transaction that happens on their network. If the business is going to go up, those numbers need to come down.

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  • Updated: Amid Apple Patent Fight, Nokia Wins GSM Case, Files For Bendyphone


    Pile of Phones

    Nokia (NYSE: NOK) may still be trading patent blow-for-blows with Apple in the U.S., but in Europe it’s won a patent case that may strengthen its resolve against Cupertino…

    The UK High Court has ruled in its favour, Nokia tells us (and Reuters), declaring invalid patents EP 540 808 (UK) and EP 1 186 189 (UK), held by German intellectual property license holder IPCom. Nokia’s spokesperson tells us…

    —“Patent ‘808 deals with synchronization of the mobile to the network. IPCom alleged that Patent ‘808 was essential to GSM. The court found that it was neither valid nor essential.

    —“Patent ‘189 deals with access to the RACH (that is the Random Access Channel, where the mobile announces to the network that it wants to make a call, and asks for a channel. In case of overload, there is a kind of lottery). IPCom alleged Patent ‘189 was essential to UMTS (3G). The Court found that the patent was not valid, but if it had been, it would have been essential.”

    IPCom originally acquired the patents from Bosch, which created the GSM patents between the 1980s and 2000, when it had interests and ambitions in the mobile industry. According to The Register, IPCom has been trying to get some €12 billion in licensing from Nokia in relation to these patents, a sum that Nokia has been resisting.

    Nokia’s win is wider than just for itself – IPCom has now pledged to the European Commission it will offer its other mobile patents under fair licensing terms. Last year, Nokia had complained to the EC that IPCom was asking for too much money. IPCom had acquired around 160 patent families that are “key to mobile communications standards” and based around GSM technology.

    Just like Apple (NSDQ: AAPL) in the U.S., IPCom had, in a separate case in Germany, sought an injunction on the sale of Nokia handsets in the country, although a court in Mannheim put the request on hold until the European Patent Office decided on those patents’ validity. There is another UK case pending for next week concerning more patents owned by IPCom.

    The patents in question in the IPCom case cover nuts-and-bolts GSM technology, rather than the newer innovations that are at the centre of Nokia’s dispute with Apple – touchscreens and other smartphone functionality. But, as in Nokia’s Qualcomm (NSDQ: QCOM) patent dispute, this case demonstrates Nokia’s tenacity when it comes to IP.

    —Separately, Nokia is also doing some patent work related to future products. Ubergizmo notes that one of the latest filings is for a flexible device that executes different commands depending on how one bends it. A patent for application 20100011291 has still not been issued by the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office.

    Update: Nokia tells us that following Monday’s ruling, IPCom “has conceded defeat in a further case, due to start trial in the UK next week. The case involved three further UK patents that IPCom had asserted against Nokia as being essential to the GSM and/or UMTS standards. IPCom has now accepted that these patents are also invalid.”

    Related


  • Haiti: Update on water distribution efforts

    Louis Belanger reports on how relief efforts are being hampered by fuel shortages and communications problems.

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