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  • Qual o prédio mais alto da sua cidade??

    Qual o prédio mais alto da sua cidade???

    Aqui em Sertãozinho o prédio mais alto é o Via Condotti, com 26 andares…ele será inagurado em 2012…:D

    POR ENQUANTO o prédio mais alto é o São Francisco com seus 19 andares…

    1 – Residencial Via Condotti (Construtora Habiarte Barc)

    2 – Residencial São Francisco (Construtora Stefani Nogueira)

    :tiasd:

    _________________________________________________________________

    E NA SUA CIDADE…QUAL É O PRÉDIO MAIS ALTO??

    😆

  • AT&T goes head to head with Verizon, drops prices on its unlimited plans

    new-att-logo2

    You knew it was coming but, wow, that was fast. The same day Verizon Wireless announced its new unlimited plans (and a day after we leaked it), AT&T also announced that it is dropping its Unlimited Talk plan to $69.99 monthly for individuals and $119 for Family Talk customers (two lines), matching Verizon’s latest unlimited offerings to a tee. Unlimited Talk & Text plans for its Quick Messaging devices will also match Verizon’s offering, coming in at a competitive $89.99 monthly for individuals and $149.99 for two lines on a Family Talk plan. Last but not least, AT&T will offer its Unlimited Voice and Data plan for smartphone customers, including iPhone owners, at a monthly cost of $99 for individuals and  $179.99 for two lines on a Family Talk plan. Unlimited texting plans remain the same at $20 per month for individuals and $30 per month for Family Talk customers. All prices go into effect Monday, January 18th. Press release after the jump.

    Thanks, Rich!

    AT&T Announces New Unlimited Plans

    Smartphone Leader Increases Value of Nation’s Fastest 3G Network and Wide Selection of Industry-Leading Devices

    DALLAS, Jan. 15 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ — AT&T* today announced new unlimited plans across all devices –including its industry-leading lineup of smartphones — to provide more value and choice for customers who want to talk, text and surf on the nation’s fastest 3G network.

    “With more than twice the number of smartphone customers as our nearest competitor, we are committed to offering great value and choice for customers who want to talk, text and surf on the nation’s fastest 3G network,” said Ralph de la Vega, president and CEO, AT&T Mobility and Consumer Markets. “Our new plans reflect customers’ continuing desire to do more with their phones – including talking and browsing the Web at the same time.  Plus these new plans make it even more attractive to choose AT&T which already offers customers the best 3G experience and the industry’s most popular and innovative devices.”

    The new plans, which will be available beginning Monday, Jan. 18, can be ordered at AT&T’s 2,200 company-owned retail stores and kiosks, through convenient online service at www.att.com, or at one of the thousands of authorized AT&T retail locations.

    • Feature Phone customers may choose unlimited talk for $69.99. Family Talk customers (prices assume two lines) may choose unlimited talk for $119.99 per month.  Texting plans remain unchanged at $20 for unlimited plans for individuals and $30 for Family Talk plans.
    • Quick Messaging Device customers may choose unlimited talk and text for $89.99 per month. Quick Messaging Device customers with Family Talk plans may choose unlimited talk and text for $149.99 per month (for two lines). These prices include a required minimum of $20 per month for individual plans and $30 per month for Family Talk plans in texting and/or Web browsing plans for new and upgrading customers.
    • All smartphone customers, including iPhone customers, may now buy unlimited voice and data for $99.99.  For smartphone customers with Family Talk plans (prices assume 2 smartphones), unlimited voice and data is now available for $179.99. Texting plans remain unchanged at $20 for unlimited plans for individuals, $30 for Family Talk Plans.

    Beginning Monday, existing AT&T customers can change to any of the new plans without penalty or contract extension with the online account management tool at www.att.com/wireless.

    AT&T customers enjoy the ability to talk and browse the Web at the same time on AT&T’s 3G network, the nation’s fastest, which covers more than 230 million people across the nation.

    For customers who do not choose an unlimited voice plan, AT&T offers Rollover, which lets customers keep the minutes they don’t use.  In addition, AT&T offers A-List, which offers unlimited calling to up to 10 domestic phone numbers.

    For the complete array of AT&T offerings, visit www.att.com.

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  • Harvard mobilizes relief fund

    Harvard University will create a relief fund for faculty and staff who have been directly affected by the devastating earthquake in Haiti.

    The University’s executive vice president, Katherine N. Lapp, announced the fund Friday (Jan. 15), broadening Harvard’s on-campus response to the crisis in the beleaguered Caribbean nation. Members of the Harvard community will be encouraged to contribute to the fund, and any employee struggling with a personal loss from the disaster can apply for financial assistance.

    “We want to be sure that we are responding to this catastrophe on a personal level as well as at an institutional level,” Lapp said. “Many members of the Harvard community are coping with this tragedy, and we want to make sure that we are supportive of them.”

    Details about eligibility and administration of the fund were being worked out by a Central Administration team.

    Additionally, Harvard Human Resources was reviewing paid leave policies to provide affected staff members with more scheduling flexibility and financial support. An early census of Harvard employees revealed there are at least four dozen with direct ties to Haiti.

    In addition, Harvard College Dean Evelynn M. Hammonds posted a letter to students on the Faculty of Arts and Sciences Web site, expressing sadness for the people of Haiti, while acknowledging that undergraduates are eager to help.

    But for the time being, she wrote, students are better off helping at home rather than heading for the Caribbean.

    “The most effective thing that Harvard students can do in the immediate term is to support relief efforts through fundraising and other activities,” said Hammonds, who is also the Barbara Gutmann Rosenkrantz Professor of the History of Science and of African and African American Studies.

    In the letter, she mentioned three ways that students can help: Harvard’s Office for the Arts, which is exploring the idea of a benefit event or concert; the Phillips Brooks House Association, which will help to coordinate public service aid for Boston-area Haitian communities; and Harvard’s dedicated Web site for Haitian financial help.

    The situation in Haiti remains dire, said Arrietta Chakos, director of the Acting in Time Advance Recovery Project at the Harvard Kennedy School.

    In an e-mail Friday, she outlined the first priorities for a ravaged Haiti: water, communications, fuel, and power. All are lifelines that must be in place for relief operations to work in the crucial next several days.

    “The humanitarian response now has to be swift, decisive, and coordinated,” wrote Chakos. “The incoming responders must be self-sufficient, collaborative, and focused on immediate need because the Haitian authorities are not yet able to manage the situation.”

    She called the aftermath of the 7.0-magnitude earthquake a “landscape-scale” disaster that only magnified Haiti’s “pre-event systemic vulnerabilities.”

    Haiti is one of the poorest nations in the world. Even before the quake, few homes had reliable power, sewage disposal, or safe drinking water.

    After water, fuel, and other basics, other needs “must follow close on,” said Chakos, including medical services, emergency housing, and a continuity of Haitian governance.

    In the long term, “strengthening the social connections among people is crucial to rebuilding hope and purpose,” said Chakos.  “The disaster literature shows that typically 10 years is the period for a region to recover from catastrophe. Haiti will likely follow this trajectory.”

    Longer-term recovery “will emerge with support from responding nations,” she said, “in the form of governance guidelines, social institution building, and development of safe building practices.”

    Meanwhile, a common Haitian phrase tells the story:  ”kenbe fem,” which means “hold on” – as in, “Keep the faith, don’t despair, help is on the way.”

    Help has raced toward earthquake-shaken Haiti from many nations this week, as well as from groups of experts and medical personnel affiliated with Harvard University, which has several institutional ties to the country. A 7.0-magnitude earthquake struck the island nation Tuesday (Jan. 12), radiating shock waves from an epicenter 10 miles southwest of Haiti’s crowded capital of Port-au-Prince.

    Harvard President Drew Faust announced today (Jan. 14) a dedicated Web page to make it easier for members of the Harvard community to respond to the crisis.

    “Scenes of such suffering remind us of our own humanity, and our natural reflex is to reach out to help,” she said. “The destruction in Haiti has shocked and saddened us all. Our thoughts and prayers are with the Haitian people, the men and women who are working to help them recover from the earthquake that has devastated their nation, and the members of the Harvard community who are anxious for word from friends and loved ones living on the island.”

    Assistance was en route in other ways as well.

    Massachusetts General Hospital has deployed the International Medical Surgical Response Team (IMSuRT). It will go to Haiti within days.

    The Harvard Humanitarian Initiative (HHI) is coordinating a roster of medical, surgical, and public health personnel within the Partners HealthCare System who are available for deployment to Haiti.  (Interested volunteers can contact Brian Daly at [email protected].)

    Harvard’s Joia Mukherjee left for Haiti Wednesday (Jan. 13). She is chief medical officer of the Harvard-affiliated Partners In Health (PIH), a not-for-profit aid group with community-based clinics in Haiti and eight other countries.

    Going to Haiti also is David Walton, an internist at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston who is associated with PIH and is an instructor in medicine at Harvard Medical School. In 2008, he helped to set up a 54-bed hospital in La Colline in Haiti’s rugged Central Plateau.

    Mukherjee and Walton are the vanguard of Harvard-affiliated assistance. Their reports will help focus future relief efforts in the form of supplies and personnel.

    Already laboring in a temporary Port-au-Prince field hospital is physician Louise Ivers, an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School. She sent a pleading e-mail Wednesday. “Port-au-Prince is devastated,” it said, “lots of deaths. SOS, SOS. … Temporary field hospital … needs supplies, pain meds, bandages. Please help us.”

    Ivers is clinical director in Haiti for PIH, which opened its first clinic in rural Haiti in 1985 and has since opened eight more that are run by PIH’s sister organization Zanmi Lasante, which means “Partners In Health” in Haitian Creole.

    PIH also has community-based medical operations in Peru, Russia, Lesotho, Malawi, Rwanda, Mexico, Guatemala, and the United States. The clinics are staffed by local medical personnel as well as by Harvard faculty and students.

    The group’s main hospital is L’Hôpital Bon Sauveur in Cange, about 20 rugged miles outside Port-au-Prince. It “experienced a strong shock” from the quake, according to the PIH Web site, “but no major damage or injuries.”

    Zanmi Lasante and its satellite clinics already can call on more than 120 doctors and nearly 500 nurses, impressive numbers that are being used to leverage efficient and rapid medical relief for what already was the Western Hemisphere’s poorest nation.

    PIH issued a call yesterday for more experienced medical personnel to help in Haiti, especially surgeons who specialize in trauma and orthopedics. Also needed are emergency room doctors and nurses, and full surgical teams, including anesthesiologists, scrub and post-op nurses, and nurse anesthetists.

    PIH is employing a two-part strategy to speed medical care to devastated Port-au-Prince, where thousands are believed dead and thousands more hurt. Field hospital sites in the capital city, linked to a supply chain from the Dominican Republic, which shares the island with Haiti, are being used for triage and immediate care. PIH sites in the Central Plateau — two hours from the wrecked capital of 2 million people — are being readied to serve a flow of patients from the capital.

    A church in Cange has been converted into a large triage site. There and in Hinche, another PIH medical location, a “steady flow” of injured people from the capital are receiving medical care.

    In the capital alone, “tens of thousands” will need medical care, according to the PIH Web site, a situation that makes financial assistance a high priority as well.

    “Haiti is facing a crisis worse than it has seen in years, and it is a country that has faced years of crisis, both natural disaster and otherwise,” according to a post earlier this week by PIH executive director Ophelia Dahl. “The country is in need of millions of dollars right now to meet the needs of the communities hardest hit by the earthquake.”

    Jeffrey S. Flier, dean of the Faculty of Medicine at HMS, said that all faculty and students involved with PIH in Haiti are reported safe. But the situation on the ground in Haiti is an “overwhelming tragedy,” he said. “We all share in the shock and grief over yesterday’s devastating earthquake in Port-au-Prince. Our hearts go out to the millions who have been affected, both in Haiti and closer to home.”

    Flier also expressed concern that some members of the Harvard community “may be experiencing personal losses, and we want to offer them our compassion and to provide them with the support they may need.” Members of the Harvard community who would like counseling services or referrals are asked to call Harvard’s Employee Assistance Program at 877.327.4278 or to contact their Human Resources representatives.

    Other Harvard-related relief efforts are also rolling out. The HHI, a University group of disaster-relief specialists, is working with nongovernmental organizations to assess immediate medical needs and other required assistance, according to spokesman Vincenzo Bollettino. HHI will offer regular updates on its Web site and on Twitter concerning Harvard’s relief partners and affiliated programs and hospitals, he said.

    Brigham and Women’s Hospital has dispatched an emergency response team, including HHI’s director of education, Hilarie Cranmer, who is a physician and clinical instructor. The team will work with United Nations and Dominican officials to address the immediate needs of displaced people.

    HHI fellow and physician Miriam Aschkenasy, a public health specialist at Oxfam America, is also working on Haitian relief. HHI is in touch with Alejandro Baez, a physician and former faculty member at Brigham and Women’s who now runs disaster services in the nearby Dominican Republic. They will assess the needs for further disaster response.

    Zanmi Lasante is one of the largest nongovernmental health care providers in Haiti and the only provider of comprehensive primary care.

    It has a 104-bed hospital with two operating rooms, adult and pediatric inpatient wards, an infectious-disease center, an outpatient clinic, a women’s health clinic, ophthalmology and general medicine clinics, a laboratory, a pharmaceutical warehouse, a Red Cross blood bank, radiographic services, and a dozen schools.

    Zanmi Lasante employs about 90 community Haitian health workers and serves an estimated 500,000 people in the Central Plateau.

  • Paul Sorvino Pasta Sauce

    Goodfellas actor Paul Sorvino is cooking up a treat for fans — he’s launching his own line of pasta sauces using an old family recipe.

    The 70-year-old celeb came up with the idea after sampling some of the bland sauces available on supermarket shelves. He decided to launch his own product with the help of Paul Sorvino Foods and his mother Angelina’s Neopolitan cuisine secrets.


    “I have had a life long passion for food and have enjoyed cooking since I was twelve years old. I am really excited about creating food that consumers will be able to enjoy and share with family and friends,” he tells The New York Daily News. “I have a box full of family recipes waiting to be developed. I want Paul Sorvino Foods to be a ground breaking company that produces great tasting food that will be affordable to consumers. Our company’s trademarked slogan is ‘Simply the finest.’”

    Paul, who is the father of actress Mira Sorvino, says: “I get my tomatoes from Naples. I get the olive oil from Puglia. The spices I use are fresh, like the basil and in the marinara, a touch of oregano. No fillers, syrups or preservatives.”

    Paul’s sauces are expected to go on sale later this month.


  • CES: Samsung’s TV/Phone connection software shown off

    At CES Samsung has recently shown off their smart TV’s which features the ability to to play games on your TV by using your phone as a controller.

    In this video it shows the phone being used to display the cards being held by each person in a game of Blackjack.

    Unfortunately they do not show the user interface closely, but it is certainly a nifty feature which may predispose a Samsung TV owner to buy a Samsung phone or vice versa.

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  • Audi apresenta A4 Sport no Brasil por R$185.721

    A Audi está desembarcando no país mais uma versão do seu sedã médio A4, que no caso chega na versão Sport.
    O A4 Sport passa a ser oferecido por R$185.721 e traz acabamento S-Line, além de itens de fábrica como faróis com LED e partida remota sem a chave.
    Seu motor é o 2.0 TFSI de 214 cv, capaz de levá-lo a 250 km/h e ir de 0 a 100 km/h em 6,9 segundos. A transmissão é automática Multitronic.  

  • Prosecutors Still Want To Charge Girl Who Sent Naked Photo Of Herself For Child Porn

    You may recall last year that prosecutors in Pennsylvania wanted to charge some girls who had taken either nude or partially unclothed photos of themselves, and then sent them via their mobile phones, with “child porn” charges. This seems pretty ridiculous no matter how you look at it, and it was good that a judge temporarily blocked the prosecutor from moving forward. You would hope that this would give the prosecutor a chance to rethink this idea, and perhaps realize that it’s beyond extreme.

    Instead? The prosecutor is appealing the ruling and still wants to charge at least one girl with child porn charges. The ACLU is fighting back, not just for this particular girl, but apparently over the threats of felony charges on 16-girls, who were then forced to participate in a “re-education” class to avoid charges. I have no problem with children being educated about why such things are really bad ideas, but to threaten them with felony charges, especially when even the mothers of one of the girls says that photos were just some girls goofing around, and in most cases no worse than what you’d find it a typical Victoria’s Secret catalog? That seems like a prosecutor going too far.

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  • Carling Cup semi Final Special: 34 Years That Rocked Manchester

    The time is fast approaching when one team from Manchester and another team from Gtr Manchester lock horns in the semi final first leg of the Carling Cup.(what’s that?)

    Obviously this is a ‘Massive’ game for both clubs and their fans. More so for the United followers as they require passports and at least a 4 hour journey to get to the City of Manchester Stadium. City fans won’t have to worry too much as the roads and traffic to and from Stockport should be pretty free, up to and around Middle Eastlands.

    Quickly on to the teams.

    Bacon Face brings his wounded team and cash strapped club to God’s own at a low ebb. Having been recently knocked out of the FA Cup by the still mighty Leeds United from the Unibond League, Taggart will be determined to emulate the famous ‘7 added minutes of extra time’ victory over City earlier on this season. It’s not clear if Tiny Tim will be playing as Whiskey Nose has promised to stick with his aging youth team.

    Bobby Manc has no such problems. High on confidence, pasta and red wine, the Manc as he’s now called, has to make the difficult choice of what scarf to wear and which knot to use. Apart from that, the only other problem Bobby faces is which Italian restaurant to use in the city centre.

    Obviously with games only happening like this once in a lifetime, the fans of both clubs have geared themselves up accordingly.

    The MIBs and the Rats will be out in force dodging Rent A Kill. The normal Cock-knee Reds, Norwegians and South East Asians will be coming down a day early as usual and booking into Mary D’s, so they can take in the stunning architecture of East Manchester and mix with the friendly locals at Grey Mare Lane Police Station.

    The City fans will once again come in fancy dress, dressed as blue plastic seats and take their positions in the ground 24 hours before kick off as usual. Many will be carrying out of date yellow plastic bananas that last saw the light of day in the mid 80’s. Being a superstitious lot, each and everyone one of them will be carrying a tin of Duraglit and a 34 year old millstone around their necks.

    However, a big lovin is expected before and after the game. MB games have asked if they can sponsor Uniteds firm and both events. The eventual winner will pick up a free game of Twister and get a free ride to the MRI in the back of an ambulance.

    On to the serious stuff and may the best team win. (feel free to add your own snippets)

  • Intel makes progress with Classmate PC for the world’s kids

    intel classmate pc Intel’s effort to get computers in the hands of the world’s school kids is making good progress, based on the latest information from the chip maker.

    In 2006, the world’s biggest chip maker started the program of creating low-cost laptops that could be used in classrooms, and Intel has outlasted some of its rivals in pushing the program forward. Now it has shipped more than 2 million units through local distributors in more than 30 countries, said Agnes Kwan, a spokeswoman at the Santa Clara, Calif.-based company.

    By comparison, One Laptop Per Child says it has 1.5 million units shipped and another million on order. Kwan acknowledged it is hard work. The company has to work with governments, local industry providers, and software companies. But resistance to the idea of putting computers in the classroom has melted away and there are more countries participating now.

    Three new ones include Argentina, which will provide 250,000 Intel-powered Classmate PCs starting this spring in secondary schools. It is targeting 16-year-old to 18-year-old students in 1,500 schools across 24 states in Argentina. The Argentine government is funding the program, which is being administered by the United Nations.

    Brazil’s Ministry of Education is providoing 150,000 Classmate PCs in a pilot program in 300 primary schools in 27 states. The rollout begins in the next two months. And in Turkey, the local government of Kocaeli will distribute 26,000 Classmate PCs to all fifth graders by the end of the school year. Intel is providing teacher training in all of the city’s 369 public schools.

    Intel has three models that are operating system agnostic, and they include Microsoft’s Windows 7 software. The competition still includes rivals such as NComputing, which makes thin clients that attach to a master PC. With NComputing’s solution, one computer can power the monitors and computing for 10 or so students.


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  • Chinese authorities fingered in Google attack

    120px-Wen_Jiabao_2008Someone finally said it.

    A security consulting firm that Google brought in to investigate an attack last month — the one that compromised the Gmail accounts of two Chinese political activists — told Computerworld today that they “believe the attack code was designed and launched with support from Chinese authorities.”

    This explains the involvement of the U.S. State Department, which met with Chinese diplomats this week. The department is drafting a formal denouncement which will put the heat directly on Premier Wen Jiabao.

    Mandiant, a security incident response and forensics firm based in Washington, D.C., worked with Google to reverse-engineer the attack. Carlos Carrillo, a principal consultant with the firm, spoke to Computerworld’s Gregg Keizer on Friday:

    Carrillo was the project manager for the Google investigation. During an interview Friday, he frequently chose his words carefully, saying that there was much he couldn’t discuss because the work was ongoing.

    “The malware was unique,” Carrillo said. “It had unique characteristics … it was … let’s just say it was unique.”

    When asked if the code quality pointed toward Chinese state support, Carrillo answered, “I would say so.”

    It now appears that for some weeks, Google may have had ample evidence that the Chinese government was behind the break-ins, and that the State Department confronted Chinese authorities with that evidence.


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  • Ssangyong C200 será um dos quatro lançamentos da marca para o Brasil

    O crossover conceitual C200 será o primeiro de quatro lançamentos da coreana Ssangyong no Brasil até 2013. Ou seja, será um a cada ano.
    Além dele, a marca promete trazer uma linha completa de automóveis de passeio, tendo entre eles um compacto Premium com motor 1.6 a gasolina.
    A marca não revelou se o mesmo terá motor flex e não deu detalhes de como ele será.
    Como a Districar, importador da marca no país, tem a intenção de construir uma fábrica aqui, a chance do C200 ou este novo compacto serem feitos aqui passa a ser grande.  

  • Disney renegotiating Starz deal, might pull movies from Netflix streaming

    Netflix Streaming

    Looks like the movie studios are beginning to realize that Netflix is racing away with the streaming market, and things are starting to change fast: hot on the heels of Warner forcing Netflix to accept delayed DVD rentals in exchange for better streaming terms, Disney and Starz are reportedly renegotiating their deal, and blocking Netflix is one of the terms. Most new releases on Netflix right now are part of the StarzPlay package, and the studios don’t get a cut, since they’ve already sold those rights to Starz. As we all know, the studios aren’t big fans of not getting a cut, so what Disney is trying to do is block Netflix from dealing with Starz and force it to license streaming rights directly — not the end of the world and certainly not impossible, but a move that has the potential to disrupt service and raise prices. As of right now, things are status quo and no one’s talking on the record, but we’ve got the feeling there’s a shakeout coming — stay tuned.

    Disney renegotiating Starz deal, might pull movies from Netflix streaming originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 15 Jan 2010 18:04:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • A New Way to Make Useful Chemicals from CO2 ?

    Technology Review has an article about a “copper-based catalyst helps turn the gas into antifreeze and household cleaners” – a useful form of carbon sequestration (on a micro-scale) – A New Way to Make Useful Chemicals from CO2.

    When it’s exposed to the elements, the surface of copper turns green because it reacts with oxygen. But now scientists have discovered a copper-based material with a surprising property: it reacts with carbon dioxide in air rather than oxygen. Though the reaction is not a practical way to remove large quantities of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, it does provide an alternative new route, using a cheap, nonpetroleum feedstock, to make useful chemicals.

    Researchers have been looking for such a material for a long time, taking a cue from plants, which use atmospheric carbon dioxide to produce a wide range of useful materials. But previous approaches have fallen short in a variety of ways. For example, they’ve required large amounts of energy and concentrated streams of carbon dioxide rather than the trace amounts found in air. One of the big challenges is that materials tend to preferentially react with oxygen, which is much more reactive than carbon dioxide and far more abundant. Oxygen makes up over 20 percent of the atmosphere, whereas there are only a few hundred parts per million of carbon dioxide.

    With the new material, “the energy you need to put in is very low,” says Daniel DuBois, a senior scientist at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory in Richland, WA, who was not involved with the research. “And the fact that it will bind and reduce CO2 directly from the atmosphere is pretty startling. I wouldn’t have thought that you could do that.”


  • T-Mobile Supports Haitian Relief with Free Calling and Wireless Equipment

    Found under: T-Mobile, Haiti, Support,

    The tragedy that has hit Haiti hasnt gone unnoticed. In fact people from all over the world are ready to help the small country recover from the disaster that hit it. One of them is T-Mobile USA which is ready to help if needed.The company is offering free international long distance calls to and from Haiti between January 12 and January 31. If you have friends or family there youll be able to call them for free which is not a bad idea. Given the fact that much of the island in

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  • Two Suspects Arrested in Armed Business Robberies

    Los Angeles: The Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) has arrested a pair of suspects in a string of business robberies.  

    On
    January 13, 2010, Angelo Wingo, 18, and Devon Glover, 21, were both
    arrested after a patrol unit stopped a blue BMW for a traffic
    investigation in the 3900 block of Coco Avenue in South Los Angeles.

    They were both taken to LAPD’s Southwest Division Jail on suspicion of robbery and are being held in lieu of $200,000 bail.  

    Since December 2009, the suspects have hit up to six stores throughout the Los Angeles
    area.  According to detectives, the suspects would enter the store and
    walk around posing as customers. A day later, the suspects would return
    and commit a takeover robbery during which they ordered the employees
    to a back room, tied them up and demanded access to the safe.  The
    suspects then left with an undisclosed amount of money and drove off.  

    During the investigation, Wilshire Division robbery detectives learned
    the suspects’ vehicle description and shared the information with
    neighboring police stations, which lead to the arrest of the robbers.

    Detectives believe the suspects are part of a large robbery ring and
    are asking for the public’s help in recognizing Wingo and Glover to
    link them to additional reported robberies.

    Anyone with information about this crime is urged to call Wilshire
    robbery detectives at 213-473-0514 or 213-922-8205.  During
    non-business hours or on weekends calls should be directed to
    1-877-LAPD-24-7.  Anyone wishing to remain anonymous should call
    Crimestoppers at 800-222-TIPS (800-222-8477).  Tipsters may also
    contact Crimestoppers by texting to phone number 274637 (C-R-I-M-E-S on
    most keypads) with a cell phone. All text messages should begin with
    the letters “LAPD.” Tipsters may also go to LAPDOnline.org, click on
    "webtips" and follow the prompts.

  • The science of sniffer dogs










     

    Karel Navarro / AP
      Rescue dog Duncan peers between the legs of Peruvian firefighter Gustavo Villavisencio as they prepare to leave Lima for Haiti.




    Rescuers from all around the world are converging on Haiti in the wake of this week’s earthquake – and not all of them are human. Finding survivors amid the rubble of Port-au-Prince is a job tailor-made for dogs and devices.


    The search-and-rescue operation “appears to be unprecedented in scale,” Discovery.com reports.


    Many of those teams, such as Virginia Task Force 1 and California Task Force 2, have been in this kind of situation before – for example, after the catastrophic Iranian earthquake of 2003 or the collapse of a Haitian school in 2008. But the magnitude of this week’s disaster is so great that rescue teams who have never before gone into an international operation are being pulled into action.


    “This is an unusual situation,” said Debra Tosch, executive director of the National Disaster Search Dog Foundation.

    …(read more)

  • Ever wondered what an image would sound like?

    rgb-music-fail
    We found an interesting little blub about a software program that converts images into music. Specifically, it “converts the RGB, Red, Green, and Blue, values of every pixel of an image and plays a 3 note harmony based on the RGB values. It reads the pixels from top left to bottom right playing a song a long the way.” According to señor willburns1 on his blog (link), “most of the time it seems like set a child loose on a piano but it is sometimes pretty cool.”

    Intrigued, I thought I’d spice up this Friday afternoon with audio created from some of my favorite images, but alas! it was not to be. It seems there’s a patent on this technology, and Kenji Kojima, the creator of <a href="RGB MusicLab, was told to stop:

    Dear people,
    I was informed that I had to remove RGB MusicLab from the web site from a person who had a patent that enabling the interpretation of color as music. I have never heard it was a patent and believed it belonged to all humankind. However I have to obey the US law.

    Kenji Kojima

    Some samples are still online, if MIDI is your thing.


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  • Lamborghini Murcielago SuperVeloce chega por R$2,7 milhões

    A Platinuss faz a apresentação oficial de mais um super carro europeu que chega ao Brasil custando uma verdadeira fortuna!
    Agora é a vez do Lamborghini Murcielago SuperVeloce. O bólido italiano do Grupo Volkswagen, chega custando o montante de R$2.700.000!
    Esse valor, como no caso do Pagani Zonda Cinque, significa poder levar para casa (melhor seria um enorme galpão) muitos carros dos mais variados preços e propostas.  
    O Murcielago SuperVeloce tem um motor V12 com 670 cv e muita força para acelerar fundo nas pistas ou (poucas) estradas do país.
  • The Edifier M3-Plus Speaker Is Distantly Related To a Cardboard Tube and a Tennis Ball [Speakers]

    Somewhere on the family tree of the Edifier M3-Plus you are going to find a tennis ball and a cardboard tube. Surprisingly, this design hodgepodge has yielded some interesting portable speakers.

    Designed for travelers, the Edifier M3-Plus consists of two racquetball sized speakers and a 2-inch Neodymium-iron Boron Magnet assembly subwoofer housed inside an aluminum tube. Availability information has not been announced, but the 2.1 system should come in at around $100 when it’s released. [Edifer via Unplggd]







  • Google in China: Unanswered Questions

    It will be a long time before we understand all the ramifications of Google’s decision to cease censoring their Chinese services — and the cyber-attack on their corporate and user data that prompted that change of heart. The story is still confusing in parts (Sky Canaves at the WSJ clarifies some of the more muddled reports). Nonetheless some intriguing new details have emerged since the initial announcement — but they raise as many questions as they answer.

    Reporting by the New York Times has fleshed out the implication in Google’s announcement that the attacks were co-ordinated, or at least conducted with the approval of, Chinese government agencies. And in a detailed analysis, Computer World writes that the security breach included an attack on Google’s internal intercept systems, used to comply with requests from United States law enforcement.

    Security experts have long warned that systems designed to make compliance with lawful interception more convenient can also create security vulnerabilities of their own. By providing an attractive one stop shop for outside attackers, surveillance compliance systems by their very nature often override the secure compartmentalization of data.

    Security breaches that involve lawful interception systems are not new (see the Greek mobile eavesdropping scandal in 2005), and we’re sure it will happen again. When a security conscious company like Google can get hit, it is a wake up call to all corporations about the dangers of hosting systems designed to snoop of their customers. What would the agent of a foreign power do with full access to Sprint Nextel’s convenient live web interface for GPS location data on its fifty million subscribers?

    We know that Google was not the only company targeted by this attack: other names mentioned have included Yahoo, Symantec, Juniper, Northrop Grumman and Dow Chemical. We don’t know whether those attacks obtained proprietary information or personal user data. But users of these companies’ products are rightfully concerned and we’d hope and expect more public statements that clarify this important difference.

    The Obama Administration is also reacting to the Google China news. Secretary Clinton was already booked to make a detailed policy announcement on global Internet freedom next week; the White House has already said it supports Google. But what does government support for a censorship-free Internet look like? Advocacy groups and think-tanks have long suggested that blocking Internet traffic at the border of a country may be a violation of WTO free trade agreements. Foreign Policy runs with the idea, and looks in detail at the idea of “Firewall Protectionism”.

    If China were attempting to block the import of American tires, instead of American Internet media, would Americans applaud Goodyear and Congress for not putting up a fight against blatant WTO violations?

    Reuters also reports that lawmakers are using the Google announcement as impetus for a proposed US law that, among other measures, would require Internet companies to keep records of requests for information from violating countries, and report them to the State department.

    Will more United States government involvement in online free speech issues lead to greater international pressure on censorious countries like China? Or will it serve to aggravate US allies who have their own less visible systems of censorship, which as Rebecca MacKinnon notes, now includes traditional allies like France and Italy?