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  • CardiAQ Captures $6.5M A Round Led by Former CoreValve President

    CardiAQ logo
    Ryan McBride wrote:

    [Updated and clarified—1/12/10, 2:30 pm ET, with timing of potential human study and other details] CardiAQ Valve Technologies, which is developing a catheter-based alternative to open-heart surgery for mitral valve implantation, reports today that it has raised $6.5 million in a Series A round of funding. The funding is expected to support R&D needed to advance the firm’s main product to human studies.

    Rob Michiels, the former president and COO of CoreValve (now Medtronic CoreValve) and a board member at CardiAQ, led the round, which included angel investors that backed CoreValve in 2002, according to CardiAQ. Previous investor Broadview Ventures also contributed to the financing. The financing includes the conversion of $1.5 million in debt to equity in CardiAQ, meaning that there was a total of $5 million in new capital raised in the deal, said CEO J. Brent Ratz, in an interview. CoreValve, a California provider of a catheter-based system for aortic valve replacement, was acquired by Minneapolis-based medical devices giant Medtronic (NYSE:MDT) in April 2009 for an impressive $700 million. The deal was one of the largest M&A transactions in the medical devices industry last year. [The above paragraph was updated to add information about the firm’s debt-to-equity conversion in its latest round of financing.]

    CardiAQ has garnered high praise from Michiels for its approach to treating mitral regurgitation, a heart disease in which the mitral valve fails to close and allows blood to leak backward between the two left chambers of the heart. The standard treatment for this problem is open-heart surgery, which poses health risks to patients such as heart attacks and infections. CardiAQ and other medtech startups such as Stoughton, MA-based CardioSolutions are developing techniques to avoid open-heart surgeries by either replacing or repairing failed mitral valves with catheter-based approaches.

    “[CardiAQ’s] success in raising this over-subscribed round in record time is a dramatic endorsement of the strength of our transcatheter mitral valve implantation concept for patients who suffer from functional mitral regurgitation and are often too sick to have [open-heart] surgery,” said CEO Ratz, in a statement. “Our valve replacement technology will facilitate a non-surgical alternative that could be more effective than transcatheter repair and just as effective as surgical replacement in a mitral market that is estimated to be $1.2 billion by 2014.”

    Ratz said that the company is aiming to begin human studies of its mitral valve-implantation system in 2011. Arshad Quadri, a cardiac surgeon at St. Francis Hospital in Hartford, CT, is the founder and chief medical officer of the company. [This paragraph was changed to add information on when the firm expects to begin human studies.]







  • Goldstone Resources Inc: Premier provides 2010 exploration update – 5 major drill programs totalling 100,000 metres drilling PG.to, GRC.to

    With Gold signalling a Short term Buy now, US Dollar Christmas party could be over and Job report has brought Hangover. Winter blues will take the green fellow over. There is only one medication left from economic malaise: print new money, buy its own debt and let’s pray that some of it will go for the right cause and not only to Wall Street bonus payments.”

    We are interested in Hardrock property shaping into a gold deposit with very impressive intersections. We wish our Lithium plays have a partner like Premier Gold. 43-101 resource estimation was promised before by the end 2009, now we have another indication of Q1 2010. We are expecting deposit to be larger then 2 mil OZ Gold inferred resources. Any surprise to the upside will provide further revaluation in Goldstone Resources Inc. GRC.to holding 30% of the property.

    This Canadian Gold play – one of our Top Picks for 2009, is getting better and better with new high grade intersections. Roxmark Mines became a part of the new company Goldstone Resources GRC.to after merger with Ontex Resources. We have considered it as Canadian Gold M&A Play with premier buying out 30% of Hardrock project at some point.”

    Premier provides 2010 exploration update – 5 major drill programs totalling approximately 100,000 metres drilling

    THUNDER BAY, ON, Jan. 12 /CNW/ – PREMIER GOLD MINES LIMITED (TSX:PGNews) provided today an update of the Company’s major 2010 exploration plans for its Northwestern Ontario projects. Drill programs are planned for the Hardrock, Rahill-Bonanza, Lennie, East Bay and PQ-North Properties. Highlights for the upcoming year include:
    – Actively drilling on 5 properties (Q1), establishing Premier as one
    of Canada’s most active gold explorers
    – Some 100,000 metres of diamond drilling.
    NI43-101 resource estimate for Hardrock to be released during Q1
    – Red Lake underground initiative will open up huge exploration
    potential
    – Follow-up drilling at PQ North gold discovery zones

    Ewan Downie, President and CEO of Premier said, “Premier had spectacular exploration success during 2009. Multiple new high-grade gold discoveries demand aggressive follow-up, resulting in what will be one of the industry’s largest exploration and development budgets in 2010. In particular, our success at the Hardrock Project has led to the delineation of what is possibly one of Canada’s most exciting new gold projects.”
    Hardrock Project – Building on 2009 Successes
    ———————————————
    The Hardrock Project, operated under a joint venture with Goldstone Resources Inc. (TSX:GRCNews; Premier holds a 70% interest), will remain the Company’s most active project with more than 70,000 metres of drilling planned. In 2009, more than 90,000 metres of drilling was completed at Hardrock, successfully identifying multiple open pit and underground style gold zones with the following highlights:
    – Discovery of the High Grade North Zone: 1,141.5 g/t Au across
    2.0 metres (33.3 oz/ton across 6.6 feet).
    – The EP (open pit) Zone was defined over a strike length of more than
    1 kilometre and remains open for expansion.
    – Discovery of the NN Zone (open pit) along strike from EP – recent
    drill intersections that define this zone include 6.91 g/t Au across
    18.7 m (0.20 oz/ton across 61.3 feet), 5.69 g/t Au across 24.2 m
    (0.17 oz/ton across 79.4 feet) and 52.90 g/t Au across 7.9 m
    (1.54 oz/ton across 25.9 feet).
    – Late in 2009, initial drilling in a new target area returned
    high-grade results including 121.00 g/t Au across 1.5 m (3.53 oz/ton
    across 4.9 feet).
    The Hardrock Project is host to several past-producing mines which collectively produced more than 3.0 million ounces of gold, primarily from shallow depths within 2,000 feet (600 metres) of surface. The mined zones remained wide open at depth at the time mining ceased and resources were left in place within the existing mine workings.
    In 2009, drilling focused on confirming both open pit and underground mineralization with the goal of identifying a potentially multi-million ounce gold resource that can be moved quickly towards development. The Project offers development advantages with the Trans-Canada Highway, Trans-Canada Pipeline, and major power lines running through the centre of the property. Significant potential for developing resources has been identified in several areas including: 1) Open pit-style mineralization proximal to the main zones previously mined by underground methods; 2) Discoveries including bonanza-style gold zones; 3) Down-plunge of historically mined zones including the SP and North Zones; and, 4) Mineralization along strike from historically mined zones in the NN and North Zone areas.”
  • “Bachelor Pad,” “The Bachelor” All-Stars Spinoff, Picked Up By ABC

    There were whispers about this last fall, but now it’s official: The Alphabet Network is forging ahead with plans to premiere The Bachelor All-Stars.

    ABC has ordered a six-episode spinoff of its wildly-popular Bachelor series that will see 20 former contestants from the past 13 seasons of The Bachelor and past 5 of the Bachelorette residing under one roof for an “all-star” reunion series, The Hollywood Reporter said Tuesday.

    Members of the house will compete in challenges with one contestant being eliminated at the conclusion of each show.

    “All these people have been friends, been enemies, they date each other and bring all this great backstory to the show,” says Bachelor executive producer Martin Hilton. “It seemed like there was an opportunity to combine that world with a new competitive reality show.”

    Bachelor Pad, hosted by The Bachelor’s Chris Harrison, is expected to premiere on ABC in the Summer of 2010.


  • Winter cold no match for spicy kimchi stew

    by April McGreger

    Kimchi: king of condiments. Photo: April McGreger

    I love how my cooking business binds me to the seasons. The seasons change, and I fall in line. August provides me more work than I can complete in a day; late January cuts me some slack. Every year I seem to overdo it as the busy harvest season runs right into the busy holiday season, and I end the year utterly exhausted and frazzled. And then, at last, January brings the cold and darkness t that I have come to crave.

    Winter is also the season for comfort food, but all too often our favorite comforts foods leave us feeling sluggish and, well, uncomfortable. It can be a struggle to find foods that are deeply satisfying as well as nourishing. As we are experiencing record-breaking low temperatures in the North Carolina piedmont this week, I find myself turning again and again to foods that warm me from the inside out—garlic, ginger, spices, and steaming bowls of noodle soups and stews. No meal answers the call better than kimchi stew.

    In Quite a Pickle
    If this is the first you’ve heard of kimchi, you’re in for a treat. Kimchi at its simplest is a Korean fermented vegetable pickle, in the same family with sauerkraut. It is most well known as a red, spicy Nappa cabbage pickle seasoned with garlic, ginger, onion, Korean red pepper flakes, and fish sauce. Kimchi can be made, however, from a wide variety of vegetables, such as Korean radishes, cucumbers, scallions, or even fruits like Asian pears.

    Kimchi has been around since ancient times, as long as 3000 years ago, and is still eaten daily in most every Korean home and increasingly, in non-Korean homes as well. Kimchi was originally a way to preserve vegetables for consumption during cold winter months and still wintertime produces the widest varieties of kimchi in Korea. Many continue to put up large quantities of kimchi for winter consumption, but the traditional method of storing the kimchi underground in a huge stone pot has given way to modern kimchi refrigerators.

    The health benefits of eating kimchi have been widely heralded. Delivering a jolt of immune-boosting and circulation-increasing garlic, onions, and ginger, kimchi is a raw, fermented food full of beneficial enzymes and probiotics, which make for a happy and healthy digestive tract. It is also high in fiber and contains lots of vitamin C and vitamin A, which have traditionally been scarce in winter.

    Kimchi is available at many Asian markets and health food stores, but it’s not too difficult to make your own. The process requires a fair amount of time, but the payoff is considerable. With its bracingly tart, spicy crunch, kimchi can transform a simple plate of rice and beans into an extraordinary meal—and work the same magic on everything from eggs to pizza.

    Kimchi 101
    Kimchi is endlessly versatile, so when you make it yourself, you can have it just the way you like it. If you are vegetarian, leave out the fish sauce or replace it with about 2 Tablespoons light soy sauce. You can leave the sweetener out as well if you prefer, but your fermentation might be a bit slower since sugar feeds the process. There is no rule that kimchi has to be spicy either.

    White kimchi, or kimchi without any red pepper at all, is very popular and one of my favorites. In fact, the popular addition of red peppers to kimchi is thought to be a relatively recent (circa 1500) development since chili peppers are a New World ingredient and would have been introduced sometime after European contact with the Americas.

    This recipe is the kimchi that I make most often and is the best-selling variety at my farmer’s market stand. Here I call for making a rice paste or slurry from sweet rice flour and water that you mix your spices into. A lot of recipes, even traditional recipes, leave that paste out so feel free to skip it if sweet rice flour is hard to find. The paste is especially helpful, however, when making stuffed-cabbage kimchi because it sticks well between the leaves of the cabbage. I also like that the rice flour acts as a thickener when used in kimchi stew.

    There are several ingredients, like the Korean red pepper powder and the glutinous rice flour, that are difficult to find unless you visit an Asian, preferably Korean, market. Most metropolitan areas have one. I seek them out in every city and suburb I can find them in because they are full of delicious ingredients and provide endless hours of education and entertainment. If you cannot find an Asian market near you, no need to fret. You can simply skip those ingredients and you will still be able to make delicious kimchi. Just be careful when substituting chili or red pepper flakes found in most supermarkets. They are generally made from the much hotter arbol chiles, so add sparingly.

    Basic Kimchi

    Ingredients
    Vegetables for Brining
    1 large head Nappa cabbage (about 4 pounds) OR you can substitute 3 pounds of Daikon or Korean radish OR 3 pounds of Apples or Asian Pears OR use your imagination
    Sea salt (about 1/2 cup)

    Paste
    1 cup water
    2 tablespoons sweet (or glutinous) rice flour (not the same as regular rice flour)
    Seasonings (to be added to the Paste)
    4 tablespoons fish sauce
    1 cup Korean hot red pepper powder; or 2 teaspoons crushed red pepper; or to taste
    1/4 cup sugar, honey, or agave nectar
    1 tablespoon Lemon juice or rice vinegar
    1 heaping tablespoon grated ginger
    4 cloves garlic, smashed and finely chopped
    1/4 cup grated white onion (or ½ onion ground up in food processor)
    1 cup finely julienned Daikon radish
    1 cup finely julienned Carrots
    1 generous bunch of scallions, thinly sliced on a diagonal

    Other Possible Additions:
    Apples or asian pears, optional, julienned                       
    Greens—watercress, mustards, or collards, thinly sliced
    Seaweed, chopped or crumbled into small pieces
    Peppers—red, green, sweet, or hot, sliced
    Chestnuts, Walnuts, or Pine nuts, chopped
    Raw Ooysters, chopped
    Chinese chives or leeks

    To make Nappa cabbage kimchi, you have the option of chopping the leaves into bite size pieces or cutting the cabbage in half and stuffing the filling between the leaves of the cabbage. The latter, called whole cabbage kimchi is considered superior, but requires a bit more time, and means that you will have to cut your kimchi later before serving. You decide.

    For whole cabbage kimchi, cut the cabbages in half. Rinse the cabbage halves in cold water, then sprinkle them all over with salt. Be sure to salt between each leaf and to salt the thicker core of the cabbage more heavily than the leaves. It should take about ½ cup of salt. That may seem like a lot, but you will rinse the cabbages before combining them with the seasoning paste.

    Sit the cabbage aside in a large bowl for two hours. After two hours, turn the cabbage and let it sit for two hours more for a total of four hours.

    For chopped cabbage or any other vegetable, cut into bite size pieces. For the cabbage, cut the head in half. Then cut each half into thirds. Then cut those thirds into 2-inch slices. For radish or apple kimchi, 1-inch cubes are best. Toss the pieces with ½ cup of salt and set aside for two hours. Toss again, then set aside for two hours more.

    While your vegetables are brining, prepare your other ingredients. First, in a medium sized saucepan, whisk the sweet rice flour into 1 cup of water until dissolved. Bring to a boil over medium high heat, whisking constantly. When thickened and translucent, remove from heat and pour into a large mixing bowl. Set aside to cool.

    Peel your radish and carrot for your seasoning vegetables. Julienne the vegetables by cutting them into thin vertical slices, then stacking those slices and cutting them into matchsticks. Next, rinse your scallions and cut them into thin slices on the diagonal. Combine these vegetables and set aside.

    Next prepare you finely chopped garlic, ginger, and grated onion. If you have a food processor, it will save time by using it to grind these ingredients together. Set aside.

    Now that your rice paste has cooled, mix in your Korean red pepper powder. If you are sensitive to spice, place it safe. You can skip the spice altogether, or you can add more later. If you were not able to find Koran chili powder, use your chili flake very sparingly. It is generally MUCH hotter than Korean chili powder.

    To you rice-pepper paste, stir in the fish sauce, sugar or other sweetener (you can skip that altogether if you insist), lemon juice, garlic, ginger, and onion paste. Next, stir in your radish, carrot, scallions, and any other vegetable seasoning that you wish. Your seasoning paste is now complete. Set aside.

    After a total of four hours, you will notice your cabbage or other vegetable looks soft and shrunken. It will also have produced a fair amount of brine. Rinse the salted cabbage, radish, or other vegetable with cold water 3 times to remove the salt and place in a colander to drain off the excess water.

    Now it is time to either stuff your cabbage, or simply toss your vegetables with your seasoning paste.

    To stuff the cabbage, spread the kimchi paste thinly onto each leaf of the cabbage individually, and a little extra on the outside of the cabbage. Work gently to keep the cabbage whole and in tact. Place the seasoned cabbage into an air-tight glass jar. Sit the kimchi out on the countertop at least overnight and up to 4 days depending on how sour you want it, then refrigerate it. I like it best after about two days. It will continue to ferment slowly in your refrigerator. Most kimchi will keep for months in the refrigerator. Saltier and sourer versions keep longest.

    You can use your kimchi to make kimchi stew at any time, but traditionally it is made with kimchi that is older, a little too sour or that has lost its crunch.

    Kimchi stew: defeats even the coldest of winter nights.Photo: April McGregerKimchi Stew
    Kimchi stew can be simply kimchi cooked with a flavorful stock seasoned with a bit a sesame oil and a pinch of sugar. Here I have called for a few additions that I really like—pork and Korean rice cakes, which seem to perfectly complement the spicy and acidic kimchi. This is my husband’s all time favorite meal, and one of my favorites as well. We always serve it with a side of rice and a cold beer. You can adapt it to suite your taste as well as to what ingredients you have on hand. Look for rice cakes in the freezer or refrigerator section of Korean markets. They are shaped like flat footballs and often labeled “rice ovalettes.” The Korean word for them is ddeok, which is pronounced sort of like “dock,” but asking for rice cakes for soup should get you pointed in the right direction.

    Ingredients
    4 cups rich pork stock or chicken stock, mushroom stock, seafood stock, or beef stock
    1/2 pound of not-too-lean pork, cut into 2 inch chunks; or, equivalent amount of chicken, seafood, beef, or a few handfuls of mushrooms
    Salt and pepper
    2 cups kimchi, chopped with juice
    1 white sweet potato, optional, peeled and cut into 1-inch cubes
    1 large handful Korean rice cake ovalettes (ddeok), optional but delicious!
    1 teaspoon Soy sauce
    1 tablespoon sugar, honey, or agave nectar
    1 cup sliced green onion
    3 tablespoons sesame oil
    1/2 package cubed soft organic tofu

    In a medium saucepan, heat 2 tablespoons sesame oil over medium heat. Lightly salt and pepper your pork or other addition, and add to the sesame oil. Cook for about 5 minutes, until brown all over, then add your stock and chopped kimchi (both cabbage kimchi and radish kimchi make wonderful soup). Cover and simmer for 30 minutes. Add the sweet potato cubes, if using and simmer until tender. Then add rice cakes that have been softened first in cold water (according to package directions), soy sauce and sugar. Simmer another 3-5 minutes until rice cakes are tender, then add diced tofu, green onion, and sesame oil just before serving. Serve with a side of rice, which can be added to the soup to temper the spiciness. 

     

    Related Links:

    Can delicious crepes create a buckwheat revival?

    Turn your turkey carcass into a spectacular gumbo

    This Halloween, have your pumpkin—and eat it, too






  • Venture Richmond Advertising Internship

    Venture Richmond Advertising Internship
    School of Mass Communications, Virginia Commonwealth University

    Venture Richmond engages business and community leaders in partnering with the City to enhance the vitality of the community, particularly Downtown, through economic development, marketing, promotion, advocacy and events. Our focus as a public private partner is to support the strategic direction of the City of Richmond while providing enhanced services downtown including sidewalk cleaning and safety Ambassadors.

    Venture Richmond is responsible for managing the Canal Walk and Brown’s Island under a lease agreement with the City, including operation of canal boats as well as landscaping and beautification of the area. In addition, Venture Richmond produces festivals and events in downtown Richmond such as Easter on Parade, Friday Cheers, the 2nd Street Festival, the Richmond Folk Festival and Celebrate Illuminate.

    Intern Responsibilities

    The intern will gain practical experience in creative and strategic advertising on a professional level during their 15-week spring semester while working with Venture Richmond. Their supervisor will provide them with duties that include, but are not limited to:

    • Creation and management of the canal cruise mailing list prior to distribution
    • Assist with the distribution of marketing materials for both canal cruises and river district
    • Assist with online marketing, i.e. Twitter, Facebook, e-newsletters, etc.
    • Online management of downtown events on regional and statewide calendars
    • Distribution of marketing materials throughout Downtown Richmond and via Virginia tourism distribution networks
    • On-site assistance with event related activities when needed
    • General office and project support for the marketing and events departments

    Intern Qualifications

    Year: Junior or Senior
    Two credit hours (100 hours in 15 weeks, approx. 6.6 hours/week)
    Skills: Microsoft Word, Outlook, Excel, PowerPoint, Publisher, Picture Manager, Adobe Illustrator
    Offered: spring (preferred) and summer
    Unpaid internship
    ½ mile – 1 mile from campus

    Contact

    Erika Gay
    200 S. 3rd Street
    Richmond, VA 23219
    804-788-6459
    [email protected]
    www.venturerichmond.com

    Please e-mail your resume and cover letter before February 1, 2010.

  • futuro estadio del club olimpia de Paraguay

    Estan en las manos de un movimiento llamado TRI CAMPEON DE AMERICA,aki esta la maqueta un estadio con capacidad para 60.000 personas sentadas.



  • Syclo Positioned in the ‘Leaders’ Quadrant of 2009 Mobile Enterprise Application Platforms Magic Quadrant

    Evaluation Based on Completeness of Vision and Ability to Execute

    Syclo, a market leader in mobile platform technology and applications, announced today it has been positioned by Gartner, Inc. in the “Leaders” Quadrant of its 2009 Magic Quadrant for Mobile Enterprise Application Platforms* report.

    This recognition caps off a banner 2009 for Syclo — already with one of the largest enterprise mobile installed bases, the Chicago-based firm grew much faster than the average market pace by adding 72 new customers that included Fortune 500 companies in oil and gas, life sciences and manufacturing as well as major utilities and government agencies.

    Syclo’s success has also been fueled by an aggressive international expansion and strengthening of its partnership with software giant SAP® AG.

    Earlier in the year, SAP and Syclo signed an agreement centered around co-innovation to deliver mobile extensions of SAP ERP and SAP CRM systems.

    A mobile enterprise application platform (or MEAP) is a framework that lets companies effectively develop, test, deploy and manage multiple mobile solutions across their organization.

    MEAPs address the difficulties of developing mobile software by managing the diversity of devices, networks and user groups at the time of deployment and throughout the mobile solution’s lifecycle.

    In Syclo’s experience, this flexibility can produce costs savings of 15-20% compared to using code-centric approaches. Gartner states, “We believe that more than 95% of organizations will be choosing MEAP or packaged mobile application vendors as their primary mobile development platforms through 2012.”

    “We believe Syclo’s market growth in a year when many companies are slashing costs just to stay competitive shows why we’re a leader. We have the superior vision to help you strategically address the complexities of today and tomorrow — as well as the experience for execution excellence,” said Richard Padula, President and CEO of Syclo.

    “To help customers reliably drive efficiency, cut costs and improve productivity, we continue to invest in our core Agentry mobile platform technology and pre-packaged suite of SMART mobile applications. They’re faster, smarter, more versatile and easier to deploy and use than other comparative offerings, so we can turn these leading-edge advances into greater ROI for our customer base.”

    Syclo’s strategy is twofold: bring the most innovative technology and products to market and deliver world-class services and support to its customers.

    Even in a year of global economic downturn, the privately held company continued to bolster its customer support and professional services organizations, and it’s pushing the technology envelope with the latest release (5.1) of its Agentry mobile platform.

    Key among the platform’s 5.1 enhancements is new Mobile Device Management (MDM) functionality, which centralizes monitoring, tracking and control over your entire population of devices to help control costs and increase security. Agentry is the first enterprise mobile platform to come embedded with MDM. Agentry 5.1 includes this technology at no extra cost to Syclo customers.

    The criteria used by Gartner to evaluate 11 Mobile Enterprise Application Platform vendors were based on their ability to execute and their completeness of vision.

    Gartner places each of the vendors in one of four “quadrants”: Leaders, Challengers, Visionaries or Niche Players.

    *Gartner, Magic Quadrant for Mobile Enterprise Application Platforms, William Clark, Michael J. King, 16 December 2009

    About Syclo

    Since 1995, Syclo has helped over 750 companies streamline workflow and improve productivity with its innovative mobile solutions and first-in-class execution expertise. Syclo delivers quick ROI by offering rapidly deployable mobile software applications built on a 100% configurable mobile Agentry™ platform.

    Syclo’s SMART Mobile Suite includes prepackaged and pre-integrated applications for the fastest path to extend enterprise systems to field workforces.

    Unlike other mobile solutions, Syclo simplifies enterprise wide deployments with a leading strategic architecture for one or more mobile applications, letting you concentrate on business processes. Syclo also sets the standard for adapting to rapid change.

    For more information, visit syclo.com, or email [email protected].

    About the Gartner Magic Quadrant

    The Magic Quadrant is copyrighted Dec. 16, 2009 by Gartner, Inc. and is reused with permission. The Magic Quadrant is a graphical representation of a marketplace at and for a specific time period. It depicts Gartner’s analysis of how certain vendors measure against criteria for that marketplace, as defined by Gartner.

    Gartner does not endorse any vendor, product or service depicted in the Magic Quadrant, and does not advise technology users to select only those vendors placed in the “Leaders” quadrant. The Magic Quadrant is intended solely as a research tool, and is not meant to be a specific guide to action.

    Gartner disclaims all warranties, express or implied, with respect to this research, including any warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose.

    To learn more about MEAPs visit syclo.com/meap or e-mail [email protected]. To access a copy of the report directly from Gartner, subscribers should reference report #G00162969

    Syclo and Agentry are trademarks of Syclo LLC. All other trademarks are property of their respective holders.

    For more information, contact [email protected]

    MEDIA CONTACT:

    Joe Granda, 847-230-3800
    [email protected]


  • Quick walkthrough of Glide Engage for BlackBerry

    Remember when people called the Internet the information superhighway? It’s probably been over a decade since I heard that phrase, and for good reason. While information still resides in all corners of the net, the focus has shifted. Today the web is a largely social platform where we can make connections with people we otherwise would never have known. Yes, we share bits of information from this superhighway with our friends, both new and old, but the emphasis lies on the sharing, not on the information itself. Services like Facebook and Twitter embody this social ideal. Today we’ll look at another service that tries to reconcile these social connections. It’s called Glide Engage, and while it’s small beans now it has the potential to enhance the way you connect with others.

    (more…)

  • Do Cloud Users Need Smartphone Data Recovery Services?

    Just how much *is* that smartphone data worth to you? PocketMac thinks it’s priceless, and for some, that could well be true. That’s why the company offers their Recover My Smartphone service — as long as your handset powers up they can get the data from it for you. In the case of a broken screen, inadvertent water introduction or other injurious incident where you can’t pull your data, a service like this is useful. The PocketMac folks will either create a DVD of your data or they can recover the info and move it to another device for you.

    But let’s get back to the original question: how much is your data worth? It had better be worth a bunch because the service fees start at $199 for basic data recovery and DVD creation. Another $50 puts data on a new device and in both cases, return shipping is included. PocketMac says that their process turns around your data within five to seven days, which is pretty speedy. It ought to go quick — the company has over 32,000 hours invested in reverse-engineering and dissecting smartphones to see what makes ‘em tick.

    While the service sounds useful, it’s unlikely that I’d personally use it. “But don’t you value your smartphone data?” you ask? Of course I do — no more and no less than most of you. My situation doesn’t really warrant such a service, however. My gradual move to the cloud over the past few years essentially provides me with a native backup service. Contacts, mail, calendar events, documents, media and more are already backed up on someone’s servers and are easily pulled back down. Even applications specific to devices and platforms can be restored — the Palm Profile on the Pre, for example, keeps track of what webOS software I’ve purchased and it re-downloads the apps in the case of a restore or new device. There’s still a need for PocketMac’s Recover My Smartphone service, but less of one of those who live in the clouds.

  • Nintendo responds to Greenpeace report

    Greenpeace released its Guide to Greener Electronics report last week, and Nintendo happened to be at dead last on the list (qjnet/nintendo-ds/nintendo-still-dead-last-in-greanpeace-guide-to-greener-electronics.html). Rushing to the defense of their hardware, Nintendo issues a statement to debunk the report,

  • This Democrat Is Cruising To Re-Election By Opposing Healthcare Reform

    larry kissell

    In this Year of the Elephant, at least one Democrat is doing fine. That would be North Carolina Rep. Larry Kissell, who is in a conservative district, but is leading in polls by 14-18 points.

    But, as Dave Wiegel notes, he’s an opponent of the current healthcare reform bill, and so his GOP opponent doesn’t have much to run on.

    This is why healthcare reform is no done deal just yet.

    As fellow Democrats watch Kissell and the race in deep blue Massachusetts, it’s easy to see which side to play on if you want re-election.

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • Nissan developing two subcompact cars for U.S. priced under $10,000

    Nissan will be developing two subcompact vehicles for the American market to be based off of the carmaker’s global V platform. The as-of-yet unnamed models will supplant the Versa as the companies smallest vehicle in the U.S., and will sell for an attractive figure; under $10,000.

    To be sourced in Mexico, the V platform will support three cars; two of which will be sol din the U.S., but all three to be sold in Central and South America. There was no mention of the equipment to be available in the cars, but one can make an educated guess; the compact Versa MSRP’s for just under $10,000 and there are no power windows and a radio is optional.

    It is anticipated that the Mexican plant will put out approximately 200,000 vehicles per year; engines and transmissions included. The company forecasts the production of at least 1 million V based vehicles a year throughout its five capable plants.

    – By: Stephen Calogera

    Source: Automotive News (Subscription Required)


  • Gender matters

    Adapted from “Gender Assertiveness and Implicit Sexism,” first published in the Negotiation newsletter.

    Most gender research in negotiation has examined differences between women and men, such as the tendency of women to be more anxious about the process and to set lower aspirations than men. The question of how people react to female negotiators versus male negotiators has been less explored but is now receiving more attention.

    Motivated by Laurie A. Rudman and Peter Glick’s finding that women are penalized to a greater extent than men for engaging in self-promotion, researchers Hannah Riley Bowles of Harvard University and Linda C. Babcock and Lei Lai of Carnegie Mellon University examined reactions to female assertiveness in negotiation. Bowles and her colleagues described a job candidate who was either male or female, and who either did or did not make several assertive requests for benefits in addition to pay, including gym membership and a personal-use computer. When study participants assessed the candidate’s “hireability,” they penalized both male and female applicants for engaging in assertive negotiation behavior. But, strikingly, they penalized women at more than three times the rate that they penalized men.

    Many social psychologists would argue that most of this sexism was not intentional. Scholars have noted a societal shift during the past few decades from explicit sexism to implicit sexism. Explicit sexism is quite visible; the sexist actor (typically) is aware of his biased behavior. By contrast, perpetrators of implicit sexism are unaware of the bias in their actions. Even people with a strong desire to be fair engage in sexist behaviors that they’re not aware of.

    Organizations need to address ways in which employees might act unethically without conscious thought. Simply stating that sexism is inappropriate may have limited effect. Training instead should focus on the implicit psychological forces that profoundly affect a variety of behaviors, including negotiation.

  • Salta – Argentina

    Salta – Argentina

  • Fijan lista de empresas electrónicas “verdes”

    WASHINGTON, EFE

    Sony Ericsson y Nokia son las compañías con menos contaminación, según un informe dado a conocer por Greenpeace, que colocó a los fabricantes Nintendo, Microsoft y Lenovo al final de la lista en términos medioambientales.

    La ‘Guía para una electrónica más verde’ de dicha organización, que este año cumple 14 años, también criticó a gigantes del sector como Samsung, Dell y LG Electronics por no cumplir sus promesas de eliminar de forma paulatina productos tóxicos en sus productos.

    Los mejores
    En el otro extremo se sitúan Apple y HP (además de las ya mencionadas Sony Ericsson y Nokia), que según Greenpeace están liderando al sector con la retirada de sustancias peligrosas de sus líneas de producción.
    Por ejemplo, HP presentó en la feria CES que se celebra en Las Vegas (EE.UU.) el ordenador Compaq 8000f Elite, el primer aparato de la compañía que no contiene ni vinilo (plástico PVC) ni retardantes brominatados (BFR).

    Según los ecologistas, la mayoría de los grandes fabricantes de productos electrónicos del planeta se habían comprometido eliminar el PVC de sus aparatos para finales de 2009, pero la realidad es que han retrasado su compromiso por lo menos hasta el 2011, lo que la Organización considera una muestra de su falta de interés.

    Greenpeace dijo que el PVC es “de todos los plásticos el más dañino en términos medioambientales y puede formar dioxinas, un conocido cancerígeno, cuando es quemado”.

    Fuente Bibliográfica

  • Control Your PC With the Puyocon Motion-Sensing Ball [Motion Sensing Input]

    Using a mouse is old-hat, if the recent wave of ball-shaped motion-sensing PC remotes is anything to go by. Straight out of Japan, the Puyocon can be squeezed, thrown around or rolled, controlling actions on the computer.

    The Entertainment Computing Laboratory, at Tsukuba University in Japan, should hook up with Cambridge Consultants, whose Suma controller has been designed especially for PC gaming. Both ideas are very interesting, taking the Wiimote as influence, with 14 pressure sensors, a three-way acceleration sensor and Bluetooth taking up the core parts of the Puyocon. Could these balls wipe out traditional computer mice in the future?

    Check out the video below for a demo of how the Puyocon is used. [Puyocon via Crunchgear]







  • Ola de frío cuestiona al calentamiento global

    BBC

    Dadas las circunstancias climáticas, no es del todo sorprendente que muchos se pregunten, alzando las cejas, “¿qué pasó con el calentamiento global?”.

    La respuesta de los científicos es inequívoca: “es indudable que en los últimos 100 años el mundo se ha calentado”, dijo Rob Varley, investigador de la Oficina Meteorológica del Reino Unido (Met, por sus siglas en inglés), “y está claro que las temperaturas seguirán aumentando. El hecho de que mi jardín esté un poco más nevado en estos días no modifica eso en un ápice”.

    Sin apresurarse
    Si bien las temperaturas heladas pueden inducirnos a creer que lo que está ocurriendo es precisamente lo contrario, los expertos advierten que no hay que confundir el clima con el estado del tiempo.
    El tiempo es la variación climática que ocurre día a día o mes a mes.
    El clima, en cambio, es el estado del tiempo durante un período de 30 años y eso, afirman los expertos, es lo que está cambiando.

    Según le explicó al diario británico ‘Telegraph’ Stephen Dorling, experto en Ciencias Medioambientales de la Universidad de East Anglia, en el Reino Unido, no es correcto sacar conclusiones de un hecho aislado, ya se trate de una ola de frío o de una de calor, ya que estos eventos forman parte de la variabilidad del clima.

    Lo que hay que destacar, señala Dorling, son las tendencias del clima a largo plazo, que son las que ofrecen evidencias más firmes sobre las transformaciones que ocurren en el clima.

    Pronósticos erróneos
    Para agosto de 2009, la Oficina Meteorológica del Reino Unido (Met, por sus siglas en inglés), predijo un verano seco y caluroso, un error que se disipó muy pronto con la llegada de lluvias y un calor que nunca llegó a materializarse. Para diciembre y enero el pronóstico auguraba un invierno templado y lluvioso. Nuevamente, el anuncio fue errado.

    Pero, para los científicos, estos desaciertos no son más que una confirmación de que el clima está cambiando. Según los especialistas, una de las consecuencias del cambio climático es precisamente la imposibilidad de hacer predicciones acertadas de uno a seis meses, debido a que el calentamiento global está interfiriendo con los patrones del clima, que ya no siguen su curso habitual.

    Fuente Bibliográfica

  • 2011 BMW 740i prices start at $71,025, $10 grand cheaper than the 750i

    2011 BMW 740i

    Just yesterday, we brought you live images of the 2011 BMW 74oi from the 2010 Detroit Auto Show. BMW has now announced pricing on the new 2011 740i and the 740Li, both which are powered by a twin-turbocharged inline-6 engine.

    Pricing will start at $71,025 for the 740i and $75,425 for the long wheelbase 740Li. That’s $10,795 less than the current entry-level model 750i, which starts at $82,000. Sales of the 74o models will begin in Spring 2010.

    Both models will be available with the full complement of well-known 7 Series options and packages, including the M Sport Package, Driver Assistance Package, Luxury Seating Packages, Rear Entertainment Package, and even the BMW Individual Composition Package.

    Refresher: The 2011 BMW 740i and 740Li are powered by a 3.0L twin-turbocharged inline 6-cylinder unit making 315-hp and 330 lb-ft of torque. The engine is mated to a 6-speed automatic transmission.

    Click here for our post on the BMW 740i from the 2010 Detroit Auto Show.

    2010 Detroit: 2011 BMW 740i:

    2010 Detroit: 2011 BMW 740i 2010 Detroit: 2011 BMW 740i 2010 Detroit: 2011 BMW 740i 2010 Detroit: 2011 BMW 740i

    All Photos Copyright © 2009 Stephen Calogera – egmCarTech.

    Press Release:

    The 2011 BMW 740i and 740Li Sedans Pricing Announced

    Woodcliff Lake, NJ – January 11, 2010 … As an exciting example of its EfficientDynamics engineering philosophy, BMW announced the North American debut of the 7 Series with a twin-turbocharged inline-6 engine. Featuring BMW’s award-winning inline-6 engine that produces V-8 power on six-cylinder fuel consumption, the new BMW 740i and BMW 740Li achieve a remarkable balance of power, efficiency, and sporty driving dynamics. Both models will go on sale in the United States as 2011 models in Spring 2010. The M.S.R.P. of the 740i is $71,025 and the long wheelbase 740Li will retail for $75,425 (prices Include $875 Destination and Handling charge).

    In 1977, the original BMW 7 Series was launched exclusively with inline-6 propulsion. The United States first met the BMW 7 Series in the 1978 model year as the 733i Sedan. The 733i featured a 3.2-liter inline-6 engine rated at 197 horsepower. The 733i remained on sale in America until it was replaced in 1985 by the BMW 735i Sedan. The 735i, which featured an updated inline-6 engine producing 218 horsepower from 3.4 liters, enjoyed a production run that lasted through the end of the 1992 model year. The 735i was joined by the extended-wheelbase 735iL in May of 1988.

    A keystone of BMW’s EfficientDynamics philosophy is “virtual displacement,” the notion that BMW’s modern engines of smaller displacement can equal or exceed the outputs of traditional engines of larger displacement and more cylinders. This principle is already seen in the BMW 750i model, which features a twin-turbocharged V-8 engine performing at the level of BMW’s previous-generation V12 engine. Virtual displacement provides the power of a larger engine with the fuel efficiency and low CO2 emissions signature of a smaller engine. The 2011 BMW 740i and 740Li feature BMW’s internationally acclaimed twin-turbocharged inline-6 engine with up-rated output of 315 horsepower at 5800 rpm and 330 lb-ft of torque from 1600-4500 rpm. All-aluminum construction, High Precision direct fuel injection, Double-VANOS variable camshaft technology, and Brake Energy Regeneration are a few of the technologies used under the BMW EfficientDynamics philosophy to place the 740i and 740Li among the most powerful six-cylinder luxury sedans in the world. Delivering power to the rear wheels is BMW’s 6-speed automatic transmission, well-known for fast, smooth gearshifts and an ability to intelligently adapt to the driver’s style.

    – By: Kap Shah


  • Google May Insert Real-Time Ads Onto Old Billboards in Street View [Google]

    All those outdated billboards in Google Street View aren’t just an eyesore; they’re a waste of a money-making opportunity for the big G, apparently. But not for long.

    Google’s filed a patent entitled “Claiming Real Estate in Panoramic or 3D Mapping Environments for Advertising,” and it should allow them to automagically cut out billboards shown in Street View and replace them with their own current ads.

    In theory, this would be done in concert with whoever owns the space, so a theater owner could keep the posters out front up to date at all times. This seems to be the only way for Google to get away with doing this, as if they suddenly started sticking ads on other people’s property without their permission, things could get ugly fast. [Telegraph]







  • Mark Wahlberg Rhea Durham Welcome Baby No. 4 Margaret Grace

    Marky Mark is a dad — again. Nineties rapper-turned-screen star Mark Wahlberg is celebrating the birth of his fourth child with wife Rhea Durham.

    Rhea gave birth a healthy baby girl named Margaret Grace at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles Monday afternoon, a hospital source blabbed to Star Magazine this morning.

    “Mark was in the delivery room with Rhea. And he cheered her on all the way.”

    Margaret joins older siblings Ella, six, Michael, four, and Brendan, 16 months. Mark and Rhea married in August after eight years of dating.