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  • Fact of the Day: Chrome Runs on Goats [Chrome]

    It’s a well known fact that Safari’s CSS engine runs on rainbows, unicorns, and sugar, or that Internet Explorer 7 HTML renderer uses copious amount of babies’ blood. However, very few people know that Chrome runs on goats.

    Exactly, 12,000 goats are teleported every second after a fresh reboot. TWELVE THOUSAND GOATS, people. That’s a lot of greek yogurt. Like, at least five thousand yogurts per second. Or ten. I’m not sure. Depends on the goat being african or european. Or if they are about to be roasted. So leave those poor goats, alone, Google, they have enough problems on their own.







  • Michel Berger Hotel – Berlin, Germany

    the-michelberger-hotel-berlin

    The group of 30-something friends behind the Michel Berger Hotel aims to draw a young, artsy clientele by targeting visitors to Berlin’s art and cultural fairs. Set in an old factory building, each of the 100 rooms features loftlike ceilings and oversize windows. The rooms are configurable, with the largest able to accommodate six people. Hand-built wooden furniture in each room is juxtaposed with a hodgepodge of mismatched flea-market finds in the public spaces—a look also evident in most of Berlin’s cafés and coffeehouses. Amenities include flat-screen TVs built into reclaimed industrial boxes and free Wi-Fi, as well as a spa, a beer garden, a restaurant and a bar with a small stage. It’s intended for the new generation of sophisticated but laid-back travelers who want to have a high-design hotel experience at the price of a hostel (from $75 per night; www.michelbergerhotel.com). See different images of the spaces offered to guests after the jump.

    Continue reading for more images.















    Source: Trend Land


  • Afternoon Crunch Bites: Mark Gastineau Brigitte Nielsen Secret Son; Cybill Shepherd’s Son Arrested; Tom Hanks Joins Twitter

    -Everyone has an opinion on NBC’s late night debacle….

    -Former Jets star Mark Gastineau fathered a son with Flavor Flav’s “FoFo,” Brigitte Nielsen…..

    -The son of actress Cybill Shepherd was arrested Tuesday after he allegedly tried to rob passengers on a plane bound for Philadelphia International Airport……

    -Tom Hanks has joined Twitter!

    -Gisele Bundchen is the world’s highest-paid supermodel….

    -Not only has Spider-Man 4 been scrapped, the franchise’s upcoming Broadway musical has also been delayed…..

    -Usher’s been robbed!

    Happy Birthday, Kirstie Alley!

    Avatar’s Zoe Saldana is the new face of Avon…..


  • Healthy living tips from Dr. Oz

    Dr. Oz started the new year by advising viewers on his “seven deadly sins,” habits he says everyone needs to break because they can potentially take years off your life.

    Start the day a healthy way

    First thing in the morning he says people should stretch after getting out of bed. He does a seven-minute routine, which looks like a sun salutation. He says it’s good to start the day breathing and centered and reminding yourself that you’re in control.

    The next big sin is skipping breakfast. Dr. Oz says his wife doesn’t eat breakfast and they fight about it “all the time.” He says it is important because you’ll eat more when you finally do start eating if you fast for too long while you’re awake.

    Staying healthy through the day

    Being late for appointments is another big problem because it’s a source of stress and makes us no longer in control of our days. Chronic stress leads to chronic inflammation, which can lead to heart attacks. Oz advises setting your watch five minutes early so you make sure you’re on time.

    The biggest sin in the afternoon is mindless eating. Often visiting the vending machine at three in the afternoon, eating junk food in particular, can increase belly fat. Oz says pre-packaging healthy snacks in bags will make it easy to make better choices when you get hungry in the afternoon.

    Have a healthy evening

    Sitting on the couch watching TV is another big sin, Oz says, because he should be getting at least half an hour of movement in the evening. Just doing squats while watching TV can help.

    Ignoring calls from friends in the evening is another problem because you’re not paying attention to important social connections. He advises writing notes to important people in your life.

    Finally, having a bedtime ritual is important. Think back seven and a half hours from when you get up to know when you need to go to bed. It’s important to have a nighttime routine, and to do it on the weekend as well as during the week.

    During these seven things can help you take a decade off your Real Age, a calculation of how old your body feels.

    (By Sarah E. White for CalorieLab Calorie Counter News)

    From the RSS feed of CalorieLab News (REF3076322B7)

    Healthy living tips from Dr. Oz

  • Copenhagen revealed a new dynamic between the U.S. and China

    by David Roberts

    This week, Seed magazine hosted a discussion on the Copenhagen climate talks—the outcome and the lessons learned—called Good Cop, Bad Cop. Contributing were
      K.C. Golden, environmental non-profit policy director, Mike Hulme, climate change scientist, Michael Levi, energy security expert, and yours truly. Click over to Seed to see all the contributions. Here’s mine, focused on the new dynamic between the U.S. and China.

    ———

    The US and China Pursue Inverse Strategies

    The heart of the Copenhagen climate talks was a clumsy pas de deux between the U.S. and China, part of an ongoing dance with enormous consequences for the battle against climate change. From where I’m sitting, it looks like the US is getting badly out-performed.

    The UN climate process is currently governed by the Kyoto Protocol,  which contains a sharp distinction between developed and developing countries; it calls on the former to reduce their greenhouse gas emissions but requires nothing of the latter.

    China is classified under Kyoto as developing, but the designation is increasingly ridiculous: China’s economy is expected to overtake Japan’s this year, making it the world’s second largest, and it recently passed the U.S. to become the world’s top emitter. The central dilemma of international climate politics, which has the leaders of rich nations chewing their nails, is how to draw China (along with “developing”  countries Brazil, South Africa, and India) into the international effort in a serious way.

    It’s not clear how to do so. The Chinese Communist Party is overwhelmingly focused on maintaining the country’s rapid economic growth, which for now is largely powered by coal. Unlike poor and small island nations, it doesn’t particularly need monetary aid; it has said publicly that it won’t try to tap into any adaptation financing from industrialized countries. In short, as long as China is protected by Kyoto, it seems to have no incentive whatsoever to commit to anything beyond what it plans to do for purely internal reasons.

    And that’s more or less what came out of Copenhagen. China agreed to what it was already planning: a 45 percent reduction in “carbon intensity” that would leave its emissions rising for at least 20 years.  The one concession it made is to report on those efforts to the international community every two years (which isn’t nothing, as we’ll see below).

    The way it’s usually presented, the US and China are using each other as an excuse not to act. But that’s not exactly true; in fact,  the countries’ strategies are the inverse of one another.

    The US is talking big talk in international negotiations but doing very little back home. Obama is achieving what he can via executive branch actions, such as boosting fuel-efficiency standards, but serious action awaits legislation. As it happens, a climate bill has finally reached the US Senate. China’s intensity pledge and concession on reporting may be enough to goad that sclerotic, dysfunctional body into passing it, but given the bruising experience with healthcare reform,  it must be considered unlikely. Even if it does pass, it’s a fairly weak bill, with a tepid short-term target (putting carbon emissions 4 percent below 1990 levels by 2020), a plethora of loopholes, and in all likelihood a boatload of subsidies for oil and coal.

    China, by contrast, is a determined minimalist in international negotiations, as Copenhagen demonstrated, but it’s taking extensive action back home. It has invested hundreds of billions of dollars in advanced research, clean-energy industries, and low-carbon infrastructure from smart grids to high-speed trains. It is striking bilateral deals with the US that would allow it to benefit from American energy research and learn from the EPA about how to track emissions. Reports from inside China say the government expects to easily exceed its 45 percent intensity target.

    In short, the US is over-promising and under-delivering; China is doing the opposite. The US can look forward to being vilified as a destroyer of hope, while China can look forward to eating America’s lunch on the most important growth industry of the 21st century.

    By now, members of the international community should have learned two things. One is that targets, timelines, and declarations don’t mean much in the absence of national commitment to real action on the ground. The other is that national efforts to combat climate change are an economic and political advantage, not something to be accepted grudgingly at the end of a protracted game of You Go First.

    There are increasing indications that behind its placid, implacable,  and often maddening facade, China has learned those lessons. I’m not sure the US has.

    Related Links:

    Developing nations continue to lead post-Copenhagen

    India, Italy, Brazil can fill America’s blanks

    Climate success in 2009 should inspire the new year






  • Carnivillain | Bad Astronomy

    I’ve been bad: I haven’t linked to the Carnival of Space for two weeks, so now you get two for the post of one! Carnival #135 is at Steve’s AstroCorner, and 136 is at Simostronomy. Go there, and spend a few hours reading up on the latest in the astronomy blogospherule!


  • Indiana Man Sentenced for Role in Mortgage Fraud Scheme

    Mark Roth, 55, Indianapolis, was sentenced today to 43 months in federal prison by Circuit Judge David F. Hamilton following Roth’s guilty pleas to one count of wire fraud and one count of money laundering.

    This sentencing concerned Roth’s role in a multi-million dollar mortgage fraud scheme operated by Robert Penn. Roth was found responsible for 25 fraudulent loans, including the first 11 Windsor Village loans, amounting to more than $5 million.

    Today’s sentencing follows a lengthy investigation conducted by Special Agents of the Internal Revenue Service – Criminal Investigation Division, with the assistance of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

    Eight other individuals have been charged in the scheme. The remaining three cases are currently set for sentencing before Circuit Judge Hamilton on Feb. 2, 2010.

    The investigation is continuing as to other individuals who were involved in the mortgage fraud schemes.

    Previously sentenced in this investigation were:

    • Robert Penn – 84 months’ imprisonment;
    • Timothy Brown – 37 months’ imprisonment;
    • Stephen Scott Brown – 37 months’ imprisonment;
    • Jerry Jaquess – 30 months’ imprisonment;
    • Tamara Scott – 24 months’ imprisonment.

    Mark Roth was involved in the mortgage brokerage business and assisted in brokering numerous loans through Argent Mortgage Company and The MoneyStation Inc.

    Through his years of experience in the business, Roth had developed relationships with Argent Mortgage Company employees.

    Roth prepared the Argent mortgage broker application packages for Web Mortgage Company LLC and American Funding Solutions Inc., to assist these companies in being able to broker loans through Argent. Roth also opened and ran the Indianapolis branch office of 1st Start Mortgage.

    Roth, alone and with the assistance of others, prepared and submitted to the lenders false and fraudulent loan applications along with false supporting documentation for the loans, knowing that the documents were false when he submitted them.

    On some occasions, Roth also requested other individuals to “front” down payment checks for the investors. Roth received money from the fraudulent loan proceeds. He opened an entity and bank account in the name WJP Roth Investments Inc., and used this bank account to deposit the fraudulent loan proceeds which he received.

    Roth was also partners with Jaquess in Homevestors LLC, a company involved in the purchase of the first 11 Windsor Village properties, located near Arlington Avenue and 21st Street, on the east side of Indianapolis. These properties were purchased for $50,000.00 each, and then “sold” to straw purchasers for $120,000.00 each.

    All of the loans involved in the schemes went into default, and the lenders either foreclosed on the homes or took other action, including granting deeds in lieu of foreclosure or allowing short sales of the properties.

    Many of the duplexes in Windsor Village later re-sold in 2007 and 2008, generally for amounts between $3,500.00 and $15,000.00.

    According to Assistant United States Attorney Susan Heckard Dowd, who prosecuted the case for the government, Circuit Judge Hamilton ordered Roth to serve three years on supervised release following his 43 months of incarceration and also ordered him to pay a total of $1,459,025.97 in restitution to Argent Mortgage Company and Homecomings Financial.


  • Best Buy Is Epically Botching This TV Repair [Best Buy]

    I once had to wait an extra four weeks for a couch. I was furious. All I can say is that I’m glad I’m not this dude on the Best Buy repair forums trying to get his TV fixed.

    Just in case this post “mysteriously” disappears from the Best Buy site, here is the full story. We hope Best Buy can help get this guy taken care of:

    It seems to take along time to get Best Buy to repair a tv!!!

    I placed my first call back at the end of november. Complaint was green bloches and a green line in the middle of the screen. First date available is a week later. Before they get here the tv does snap crackle pop, smoke comes out the back and then no picture. Called BB and they say no problem, the tech has to see it anyway.

    Tech looks at it and say he needs to order some parts. Writes down the serial number, model number and says will call after he knows parts have been delivered. One box with one part and second box will have three parts.

    Week later a different tech calls to say he is coming and I tell him only one box is here. He says it shows both boxes have been delivered. Shows up and of course doesn’t have needed parts. Says he will reorder. Writes down serial number and model number again. Another week later the tech arrives and opens the boxes. Wrong parts!! Writes down the serial number and model number again to reorder parts.

    Another week later…..again……arrives and opens the boxes. Surprise….wrong parts…..again. Tech tries to solder part onto old board to get tv working. After about 2 hours says he can’t fix the tv, will have to order parts. Writes down the serial number and model number….again. Say he will call me to confirm he ordered parts. Never received phone call.

    I call the following week to check up on parts order only to find out no parts have been ordered. No reason why or when they will order parts. Geeks says they are having problem ordering parts. I ask how long they have had the problem. Two days he tells me. I tell him that parts were suppose to be ordered before then. He then tells me it has been longer than two days. I’m starting to get the feeling I’m running in circles.

    Tech says he will order 6 parts and install them all in a effort to keep from coming back out again if there are still problems. They tell me they will contact and the tech and make sure someone calls me when the parts are ordered. No phone call…again.

    Call back next week to find out when they are ordering parts. I was told they were ordered and delivered to my house already. Strange, I don’t have any parts here. Geek says maybe the tech has them. I ask if we could actually confirm that or if he was just guessing. He says to call back tomorrow. Parts show up a couple days later.

    Tech comes out to install the parts. Install two out of six parts and tells me it’s fixed. Well……I can at least see the picture again. Remind tech that the original problem was never looked at because the tv blew before a tech arrived. He assures me this will fix that problem too. Told the tech it needs to run about a half hour before the green lines and blobs show up. I’m told to call back if there are any more problems.

    I’m handed something like a ticket that says they have already spent over $1500.00 to try and fix this tv. It originally cost me $3000.00. What a surprise, half hour later the green blob is showing back up. I call BB and ask them to get the tech back. I am told he is now to far away. Have to schedule another day. I ask them to make sure the tech does not return the new parts he did not install. Was told they can always reorder them!!

    So far it has been about six weeks of a dead tv. Then 30 mins of watching the tv to see the same problem I originally called about show up. Now I will sit home again and wait. Let them try and fix the problem. This is getting crazy!!!! How many times am I suppose to sit around and wait for people to come to try and fix this?? My time is actually worth something too. Even if no one else thinks so.

    If the couch had me furious, this situation would have me on the verge of Geek Squad genocide. [Best Buy via Consumerist]







  • Kołomyja

    Kołomyja


    Kołomyja (ukr. Коломия) – miasto w południowo-zachodniej części Ukrainy nad Prutem (obwód iwanofrankowski), stolica Pokucia, w okresie międzywojennym największe miasto województwa stanisławowskiego. W Kołomyi znajduje się muzeum etnograficzne oraz jedyne na świecie muzeum pisanek.
    More in wiki

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by _Hawk_
    (Post 22142826)


  • A Good Argument for the Bank Tax

    Obama is now contemplating a bank tax to recoup some bailout money — and some populist approval, one expects. I think Megan makes an interesting point: If the bank bailout was actually profitable and the real TARP losses were all in AIG and General Motors, why are we taxing all the other banks?

    I guess I see the bank tax ideally as something more than the UK’s one-off bonus tax, which is designed to fill state coffers in 2010 and disappear forever. If the ideal Bank Tax is something designed to last, something designed to change bankers’ incentives, then I guess it doesn’t really matter to me that the tax will, in the short term, have the visible effect of helping to pay down our bailout bill.

    This
    argument from Ryan Avent strikes me as extremely reasonable, especially
    since I don’t think the government’s implicit backing of large banks is
    going to disappear any time soon, or ever:

    The larger a bank gets, the less likely the government is to allow
    it to fail, and the more shielded it is from potential losses. Size
    therefore generates some significant social costs, particularly since
    the negative externality encourages firms to take on too much risk. A
    tax on bank size would get firms to internalise the social cost.

    And
    if banks were to pass the cost of the tax on to customers, that might
    not be such a bad thing, given that it would give a relative price
    boost to smaller banks. Consumers are notoriously reluctant to change
    banks, a fact which reduces the beneficial effect of competition. But
    as with a carbon tax, the effect of the levy would be to reduce bank
    size, regardless of who bears the cost of the tax. Even though size and
    connectedness aren’t the be all and end all of systemic risk–leverage
    is key, as well–this kind of measure would be a positive step toward
    limiting systemic risk and moral hazard in the American banking system.
    And it would be another step toward a balanced budget. That’s a lot to
    like.





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  • CT&T goes amphibious

    CT&T goes amphibious

    Korean Electric Vehicle specialist CT&T has been out in force at all the major shows recently, each time showing more and more capability and ever more alluring product. The company, founded by a former Hyundai Executive, now has more EV manufacturing capacity than any company globally, with plants in Korea and China and a new facility planned fior the United States and hence claims the title, “the world’s largest electric vehicle manufacturer” At Detroit, it showed three really interesting vehicles including its C2 two-seater open-top sports car with a top speed of 93 mph, a tiny electric city car with a top speed of 65 mph (range 70 miles) and an amphibious electric vehicle with 40 mph top speed on land, and 10 mph on water…

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  • Lavenham – Quilted Jackets for Fall/Winter 2010

    lavenham-quilted-jackets-ma

    The quilted jacket is a major player in casual menswear with storied brands from Brooks Brothers to Ralph Lauren crafting fine examples along side more contemporary streetwear lines. One of the pioneers of this piece, Lavenham, is garnering more exposure on the web by putting out images from their upcoming Fall and Winter campaign for 2010. It began for them in 1969, having made the first nylon quilted horse rug, closely followed by matching jackets and waistcoats for the riders. The images we’ve collected feature the jackets in an assortment of neutral colors with different textured collars and sheen. See the collection after the jump.

    Continue reading for more images.







    Source: Selectism


  • Cutting it Short: Divorce in an Era of Declining Home Values, Foreclosures, and Short Sales

    In terms of divorce, the State of Connecticut is often referred to as an all property equitable distribution state.  This designation means that the Court presiding over a divorce has the power to assign, to either spouse, any portion of the property of the parties, as there is no statutory exemption for the separate property of either spouse. In divorce lingo Connecticut is also considered a no-fault divorce state. A state which allows no-fault divorce does not require either spouse to demonstrate wrong-doing by the other spouse in order to file for a divorce.

    Despite the fact that fault need not be proven to file for divorce in Connecticut, it can still play a crucial role in the distribution of marital property and allocation of financial assistance under Conn. Gen. Stat. Section 46b-81. Factors considered by the court include:

    • The length of the marriage,
    • The causes for the annulment, dissolution of the marriage, or legal separation,
    • The age of the parties,
    • The health of the parties,
    • The station of the parties,
    • The occupation of the parties,
    • The amount and sources of income,
    • The vocational skills and employability of the parties,
    • The marital estate, liabilities, and needs of each of the parties and the opportunity of each for future acquisition of capital assets and income,
    • The contribution of each of the parties in the acquisition, preservation or appreciation in value the marital estate.

    So, inquiring minds may ask, where in this complex equation does the current economic situation fit in, including the realities of foreclosure and short sale? In most divorces the marital home is the family’s most valuable asset. Usually upon divorce, couples are faced with several options in the apportionment of the marital home.  These options often include sale and division of the proceeds, the purchase-out by one spouse of the other spouse’s equity in the home, or maintenance of the current status-quo by allowing one spouse to remain in the marital home in the case of existing juvenile children of the marriage. Oftentimes, in today’s economy, these options are severely hindered by the financial status of the divorcing couple.

    Due to declining home values, many couples are left with properties valued at less than what is owed on the mortgage. This frequently results in an inability to sell the property and the question of what steps should be taken in division of the marital assets. In addition to the problem of selling the marital home, many divorcing couples also face the prospect of foreclosure as income is diverted away from the home to other separate ventures. For both the couples facing the problem of dwindling home values and those starring at the face of foreclosure, a short sale may offer the best solution and compromise for all involved.

    A short sale is the sale of real estate in which the sale proceeds equal less than the amount owed towards the mortgage or mortgages on the property. A short sale requires that the lender, or holder of the lien on the marital property, agree to a discounted or reduced repayment of the loan. Frequently, in today’s fiscal climate, lenders will approve the discounted repayment based on the financial hardship of the borrower, as a loss mitigation mechanism. For couples considering short sale as a solution to their economic woes, it is important that they act quickly, as the short sale process is often long and burdensome.

    The first step in initiating a short sale is to contact the couple’s lender and explain the problematic financial position. Next, the couple should seek the assistance of a qualified realtor experienced in short sale and foreclosure situations to list and market the property to potential buyers. During these first two steps, it is also wise to seek out the assistance of a real estate attorney who may guide you through the often complex and frustrating short-sale process.  A qualified attorney will be able to provide answers to all of your questions regarding the short-sale process, as well as review your agreement with the lender and realtor in order to ensure that all potential ramifications of the short sale are accounted for. Important considerations may include tax consequences, credit score and reporting activities on behalf of the lender, and the potential for a deficiency judgment (an amount that may be owed to the lender representing the difference between the loan balance and the proceeds of a short sale). It is important to have a knowledgeable and qualified attorney protect the interests of all parties involved in a short sale as well as to advise on the potential pros and cons of the transaction.

    Please stay tuned for Part 2 of this Article- Splitting After a Split: Divorce and the Consequences of a Short Sale.

  • Helping others is what blogging is all about

    Do you know what blogging is all about? It’s about sharing. Sharing your thoughts, sharing your opinion, sharing your knowledge. It’s about helping others, getting others to straighten out their thoughts by comparing them to yours, forming their opinion by reading yours, filling their gaps of knowledge, by soaking up yours.

    If that is what you do with your blog, sharing, helping others, then you can be sure that this will come back to you. As the saying goes, what you do onto others will come back to you threefold. So you better give good things.
    blogging is all about helping others
    If you build up a loyal readership that knows and appreciates your sharing and helping, then this readership will be ready for you too, to help you, and to share with you. This can be in the form of helping you out if you have problems with something, but also by clicking your ads, commenting on your blog, subscribing to your feed, buying your stuff, or the products that you’re affiliated with.

    Since helping out and sharing should be your first concern, you need to ask your audience: “What do you want?”, “How can I help you?”. Once you know the answer to these questions, you are ready for the game. Find the problems your audience faces, solve them, blog about them, and sit back and enjoy (or find more problems, write more posts, and enjoy more while you’re writing even more :-) ). And, listening to your audience, sharing with them and helping them will only broaden your readership.
    Your readers will start talking about your posts, putting links online, sharing them in social media. All this is word of mouth in the digital age. It is telling to other people that your product, your blog is worth visiting. This creates authority. And as we all know, search engines digg authority. So you will gain more visitors again.

    Same as it is in the real world, it is in the virtual world. Quality always comes on top, and will go viral eventually. Helping people, sharing with people is creating quality content.
    So I hope this post was a bit of a helping hand to you.

    Related posts:

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  • ESPN Mobile Thrives Despite No Ties To Ad Networks Or Android


    ESPN Radio iPhone App

    ESPN’s mobile efforts had a stand-out year in 2009. Its ESPN (NYSE: DIS) ScoreCenter was downloaded more than 4.5 million times and was ranked as the top free sports App in iTunes; ESPN was the 8th most-trafficked mobile website, according to Nielsen; and total minutes spent viewing ESPN Mobile TV increased 186 percent over 2008.

    John Zehr, the SVP and GM of mobile, also told mocoNews at CES that the mobile division, which consists of 50-or-so employees, is bringing in steady revenues and is profitable. The accomplishments mark a significant amount of progress, considering that the company officially pulled the plug on its MVNO service three years ago. “I don’t think we’d be as strong today without the MVNO. The premise was that people will use mobile data, and that still holds true,” he said.

    While ESPN’s mobile efforts today have included the mobile web, mobile TV (via FLO TV and MobiTV) and applications on the iPhone, Zehr says they have not started building apps for other smartphone platforms, such as the BlackBerry and Android. Expect BlackBerry applications in the next couple of months. Zehr: “40 percent of our mobile web traffic is coming from BlackBerry.” As for Android, he’s not jumping on the bandwagon too quickly. He said you search “ESPN” in the Android Market, and you get six to seven copycats. Zehr: “We’ve complained, but it’s a lot like whack-a-mole. They [Google] are not as responsive as I’ve liked. If they won’t police it, it makes the playing field tough.” (Today, only one app is using the ESPN brand in its title.)

    As far as making money, that’s changed a lot too since the MVNO days. Historically, one of ESPN’s biggest revenues streams came from the carriers, which paid ESPN to be on its deck because it encouraged consumers to sign-up for data plans. But now that data plans are required with most smartphones, the carriers aren’t paying as much, he said. Instead, ESPN is mostly relying on revenues from mobile TV partners, app sales and advertising.

    When it comes to advertising, ESPN has avoided working with any of the major mobile ad networks, like AdMob, Quattro or Millennial Media. He said they believe that if they tap into mobile ad networks, the ESPN brand will be a commodity. “Part of the value is being associated with us,” he added. Often times advertisers come from their web properties, but increasingly brands are coming directly to mobile. Without mobile ad networks, however, the ad inventory does not sell out.

    In the near future, he says they will experiment with other types of advertising, and will increasingly target them based on a person’s location or behavior. He said in particular, movies have done well to a sports-oriented audience. If it’s Thursday or Friday night, and people are checking scores from a bar, perhaps they’d like to see a movie next? He also said that push notifications are free today, but that could change. Zehr said recently his responsibilites changed slightly. Previously, he was also in charge of product development. By taking that away, he said that signals that ESPN is serious the business opportunity. “In my role as GM, it’s incumbent on me to make money and invest…Not too far in the future, mobile will be bigger than the web.”

    Related


  • ZuneHD to get XviD support, will Windows Mobile 7 bring it too?

    According to CNET ZuneHD owners, who have been getting many more updates than us humble Windows Mobile users, will be getting support for MPEG-4 part 2 Advanced Simple Profile videos, which means your ZuneHD will be able to play DivX video straight from the net.

    Also in the update will be the Smart DJ feature, which on the ZuneHD means you will have a Pandora-like streaming playlist when on WIFI.

    A Facebook app is also set to show up soon.

    The Zune music service is expected to come to Windows Mobile 7 handsets in some form soon, and hopefully these enhancements will be part of the package.

    Read more at CNET here.

    Via Engadget.com

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  • Michel Daerden : la compil’

    Libération vient d’épingler les dernières frasques de Michel Daerden, le désormais célèbre ministre belge. :drunk:

    Ce qu’il y a de bien avec les Belges, c’est qu’avec eux on ne s’ennuie jamais. 😀

    N’hésitez pas à poster d’autres daerdeneries, le thread est fait pour. Dans la bonne humeur et le respect bien sûr.

    PS : Pour comprendre le côté hilarant de la chose, il faut savoir que Daerden est francophone, mais que là il avait fait l’effort de parler en flamand au Sénat, effort dont il est apparemment très fier dans la vidéo.

    Quote:

    Le ministre belge Michel Daerden au centre d’une nouvelle polémique

    Les nationalistes flamands estiment qu’il était ivre lors d’une intervention devant le Sénat belge et réclament sa démission.

    Libération
    10 janvier 2010

    Le ministre belge des Pensions (retraites) Michel Daerden, surnommé "le Gainsbourg de la politique", est à nouveau au coeur d’une polémique, les nationalistes flamands réclamant sa démission car ils estiment qu’il était ivre lors d’une intervention devant le Sénat.

    La Nouvelle alliance flamande (NVA), parti qui prône l’indépendance de la Flandre (nord de la Belgique), a demandé la démission de M. Daerden, un Wallon souvent critiqué en Flandre, jugeant son comportement au Sénat "inacceptable".

    "Il apparaît avoir trop bu et a vraiment tenu des propos d’ivrogne", a estimé le président de la NVA, Bart De Wever, interrogé samedi par la télévision publique francophone RTBF.

    […]

    http://www.liberation.fr/brut-de-net…michel-daerden


  • Juntos, Grêmio e Inter faturam R$ 241 milhões anuais

    Dupla Gre-Nal foi a que mais cresceu em faturamento nos últimos seis anos

    Desde a implantação do sistema de pontos corridos no Campeonato Brasileiro, em 2003, o futebol nacional ganhou um tempero ainda mais gaúcho. Nos últimos seis anos, Inter e Grêmio foram os que mais cresceram em faturamento, segundo estudo da Crowe Horwath RCS.

    Enquanto a receita geral dos clubes aumentou 115% e chegou a R$ 1,7 bilhão, o Inter saltou 360% – de R$ 30 milhões para R$ 142 milhões. Já o Grêmio registrou avanço de 301%, passando de R$ 24,6 milhões para R$ 99 milhões. Juntos, os dois clubes gaúchos somam R$ 241 milhões.

    – O Inter tem a segunda maior receita do futebol brasileiro, atrás apenas do São Paulo. O Grêmio é o sexto, mas está à frente, por exemplo, dos dois maiores clubes de Minas Gerais e de três dos quatro grandes do Rio de Janeiro – revela Amir Somoggi, diretor da divisão Esporte Total da Crowe Horwath RCS.

    Para Amir, boa parte do sucesso deve-se ao fato de os clubes gaúchos perceberam, antes dos demais, a importância de um programa eficiente de sócio-torcedor. O Inter conta hoje com mais de 100 mil sócios e o Grêmio, 53 mil.

    – É a fidelização do cliente. Com a consolidação do campeonato por pontos corridos, a bilheteria ganhou importância na receita dos clubes. Se em 2003 ela representava 7% do total arrecadado, hoje este número já atinge 11% – ressalta.

    http://www.clicrbs.com.br/esportes/r…es-anuais.html

  • Microsoft Compares Android to an Adorable Puppy [Blockquote]

    At first glance, this quote by Windows Manager James DeBragga doesn’t make much sense. But it’s actually a relatively reasonable metaphor.

    He compares Android to a puppy thusly: sure, you can get a puppy for free, but then you’ve gotta housebreak it, take it for walks and train it. It takes a lot of work to turn that puppy into a properly-behaved dog.

    And really, that seems to be true based on the initial experiences of Nexus One owners. But then again, that’s one specific case. Every mobile platform, including Windows Mobile, has its issues. Are Android’s really worse than most? [Laptop]







  • Fiat 500 BEV

    Fiat acaba de presentar en el Salón de Detroit la versión eléctrica del Fiat 500 que será denominada como Fiat 500 BEV. Será un prototipo eléctrico basado en el famoso pequeño utilitario. Según afirma la propia Fiat, a día de hoy no tienen ningún plan para comercializar este modelo.

    Fiat 500 BEV

    En el interior de este prototipo se ha empleado una tapicería de piel de una alta calidad. En el cuadro de mandos digital y en la consola de central nos encontramos con unos botones con los que podremos seleccionar los diferentes modos de conducción que utilizan los vehículos automáticos.

    Según hemos podido conocer, el motor eléctrico y el transformador que le proporciona energía ha sido instalado en el vano motor en el que habitualmente van alojados los motores de combustión del Fiat 500 normal.

    Related posts:

    1. Fiat 500 con nuevo motor Multijet
    2. Fiat 500 1.3 JTD a 95 CV
    3. Fiat Punto, teaser del restyling