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  • Tearing Down Russia’s Prisons

    Reforms that took effect on Sunday could lead to a reduction of more than 10% in Russia’s prison population — currently at more than 1 million.

    Activists and observers say the conditions in Russia’s prisons are deplorable, and even President Dmitry Medvedev said in a live television interview that Russia’s “system of the execution of punishment has not changed for decades” and needs reform.

    Medvedev fired top prison officials and pushed for systemic changes after a prominent 37-year-old attorney died of heart failure in a detention facility in November, after complaining repeatedly that he was being denied access to health care.

    It’s a shame that it takes the death of a wealthy prisoner to get the establishment to take notice of unacceptable prison conditions, but that’s the way it is. The rules that took effect this week include alternatives to incarceration like house arrest for non-violent crimes.

    (more…)

  • Speck’s Stylish Fitted Cases Now available for BlackBerry

    BB9630 FTD PINBK 1 300x300 Specks Stylish Fitted Cases Now available for BlackBerryPoor BlackBerry, it may be a super popular phone but it doesn’t have nearly enough pretty cases available for it like the iPhone does. Fortunately, Speck has come out with their stylish fitted cases for the BlackBerry Tour 9630, BlackBerry Storm 2, BlackBerry Bold 9700 and the BlackBerry Curve 8520. These form fitting cases feature a two-piece snap together design made up of an interior soft-touch polycarbonate hard-shell lining and a dapper pattern on the outside in the form of a Tartan Plaid Gray, Black and White Plaid, or Black Pinstripe. The Speck Fitted cases for BlackBerry retail for $29.95.BB9630 FTD PLDWH 2b 300x136 Specks Stylish Fitted Cases Now available for BlackBerry

     Specks Stylish Fitted Cases Now available for BlackBerry


  • Digital start-ups fly higher under Peacock Fund’s wings

    One of the most innovative projects underway at GE Capital is the $250 million fund it launched two years ago with NBC Universal. As we described in our video yesterday, the Peacock Equity fund invests in digital media companies in the venture capital space — such as in video game developer Trion World Network, which has teamed with NBCU’s Syfy for a breakthrough TV and game collaboration. Today, we take a closer look at the fund, which invests in four primary sectors: advertising, content, gaming, and technology. Lauren Zalaznick, head of NBCU’s Women and Lifestyle Entertainment Networks, explains in the video below that when it comes to investment choices, the fund assesses the growth potential of each company and then comes to NBCU to “see if there’s a direct fit — a direct value — into one of our businesses, and in that way, have a mutual co-creation of value.” Adds Michael Chen, President and CEO of Media, Communications & Entertainment for GE Capital: “The question has always been: Are you trading analog dollars for digital dimes? We’re trying to figure out how do you break the mold? How do you invest in digital media and make money in that space?”

    In case you missed the first installment, below is our look at Peacock’s work with Syfy and Trion.

    * Read “Peacock Fund fuels Syfy & game guru Trion venture” on GE Reports
    * Read about the Peacock Fund’s investment in BlogHer
    * Read about Peacock’s investment in EveryZing
    * Read “What’s On? A new Comcast/NBCU media venture” on GE Reports
    * Read updates about the recently announced deal between NBCU and Comcast
    * Learn more about GE Capital in our recent GE Reports stories

  • Book Discussion: Michael Scharf and “Shaping Foreign Policy in Times of Crisis: The Role of International Law and the State Department Legal Adviser”

    scharfbook.jpg

    Michael Scharf, professor of law and director of the Frederick K. Cox International Law Center at Case Western Reserve University, will lead a discussion about his new book, “Shaping Foreign Policy in Times of Crisis: The Role of International Law and the State Department Legal Adviser,” at 7 p.m., Wednesday, Jan. 13, at Joseph Beth Booksellers in Lyndhurst at Legacy Village.

    According to publisher Cambridge University Press, the book, which was co-authored by Paul R. Williams, grew out of a series of meetings that Scharf convened with all 10 former U.S. State Department legal advisers – from the Carter Administration to that of George W. Bush.

    C-SPAN Book TV is scheduled to cover this event.

    Based on insider accounts of the role that international law actually has played during times of crisis, the book explores whether international law is real law or just a form of politics that policymakers are free to ignore whenever they perceive it to be in their interest to do so.

    The Cambridge catalog description further states : “Written in a style that will appeal to the casual reader and serious scholar alike, the book includes a foreword by the Obama administration’s State Department legal adviser, Harold Koh; background on the theoretical underpinnings of the compliance debate; an in-depth case study of the treatment of detainees in the war on terror, and a comprehensive glossary of the terms, names, places and events that are discussed in the book.”

    In 2004-05, Scharf served as a member of the international team of experts that provided training to the judges of the Iraqi High Tribunal. In 2006 he led the first training session for the investigative judges and prosecutors of the newly established U.N. Cambodia Genocide Tribunal, and in November 2008 he served as Special Assistant to the Prosecutor of the Cambodia Tribunal.

    He and co-author Michael A. Newton wrote “Enemy of the State: The Trial and Execution of Saddam Hussein” published in 2008 by St. Martin’s Press.

    Scharf is currently co-leader of a USAID-funded project to assist the government of Uganda in establishing a special war crimes chamber and truth commission.

  • VigLink Finds a New Way to Make Blogging Pay

    VigLink is launching today a service to help publishers take advantage of affiliate marketing offerings for sites they already link to in their normal course of writing. While many site owners may be aware that Amazon will send them a cut of revenue when they refer purchasers, just about every other e-commerce and subscription service from The Gap to The Wall Street Journal does too. VigLink estimates that less than half of links that could be monetized are hooked up to affiliate programs.

    The San Francisco-based company raised $800,000 in June in a (previously reported) round led by First Round Capital and Google Ventures and including Reid Hoffman, Deep Nishar, Niel Robertson, Hadi Partovi, Ali Partovi, Carlos Cashman and Micah Adler.

    The thought behind VigLink is that in the course of regular writing, web publishers link to sites that they don’t know have affiliate programs. Rather than requiring bloggers to sign up for each program individually, VigLink serves as the middleman. The content creators receive payments after they reach a $25 minimum for all the affiliate programs combined (a much lower barrier to entry than if they had joined all of them individually). VigLink also maintains publishers’ links to make sure they hook up to current offerings.

    Meanwhile, merchants are given the ability to track participating publishers and reject those whose content or audience they don’t feel is appropriate. Visitors probably won’t notice anything out of the ordinary as they read and click on links, unless they look very closely at the URL, said Viglink CEO Oliver Roup. His company, of course, takes a cut of any CPA revenue (and later may expand to CPC).

    VigLink (which has a UK equivalent startup, Skimlinks) sent me a sample report that shows Gizmodo leaves approximately $4,400 per month on the table in unrealized income. That’s not based on a relationship with the site, but an estimate from crawling its outbound links, using public traffic estimates and applying a model of how many click-throughs the site is likely to get (see screenshot). VigLink says it does already have relationships with sites that have a combined 100 million page views per month, but it’s not specifying which ones. It does not require a minimum amount of traffic to join the program.

    My concern with VigLink would be that a taste of the revenue from linking to The Gap, for instance, might lead a normally interesting blogger to write about nothing but sweaters and khakis. We don’t really need any more link farms in the world. Roup said that VigLink will encourage participants to follow the FTC guidelines about paid blogging. He also noted that as compared to something like the double-underlined links from Kontera (which I personally find way too obtrusive), VigLink’s monetized links blend in with the rest of the text and the normal course of reading.

    The next step for VigLink is to expand beyond people who publish their own sites and blogs to places like Twitter and Facebook where bevies of users trade links. Roup hinted that this was in the plans, and said that it’s actually already possible for sites like those to integrate with VigLink’s open API.

    As a side note, I followed up with Rich Miner at Google Ventures because I was interested in the nature of the VigLink funding given the startup’s product is somewhat close to Google’s AdSense and it was one of Google Ventures’ first investments.

    While both Miner and Roup said the overlap had been positive so far, Miner meanwhile relayed a cute story about how he met Roup — while judging a business plan competition at Harvard last year. “Something about him struck me,” Miner said, noting Roup majored in computer science at MIT. “Perhaps looked a little scruffy compared to the other polished MBAs.” Roup didn’t win the competition but he did get the mentorship and eventually funding.

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  • Stoner Has High Hopes for the New Desmo

    Following the official presentation of the Ducati Marlboro Team at the Wrooom – Press Ski Meeting 2010, MotoGP rider Casey Stoner stepped up and declared himself very pleased with how the new season looks from the height of the Alps and from the saddle of the new 2010 Ducati Desmosedici GP10.

    "In the last test in Valencia we tried to the new bike, the new engine configuration, and I really loved it. We had a lot more traction," Stoner was quoted as saying by Autosport. … (read more)

  • Flurry Pockets $7M in Funding

    Flurry is building up its war chest in the wake of last month’s merger with Pinch Media. The mobile analytics firm this morning said it has pocketed $7 million in a Series B round led by InterWest partners and including participation from four existing investors. Flurry is hoping to become a major player in apps analytics, which has become white-hot thanks to a surge in application consumption in recent months. The latest investment should help the company scale its business quickly as the app space continues to explode — and that will make it that much more attractive in a year that’s likely to see increased M&A activity.

    Image courtesy of Flickr user quinn.anya.

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  • Muc-Off Biodegradable Device & Gadget Screen Cleaner

    muc1 233x300 Muc Off Biodegradable Device & Gadget Screen CleanerMuc-off isn’t the most exciting product, but it’s a necessary one for any gadget owner that wants to keep germs away. This Biodegradable Device & Screen Cleaner is safe enough on all types of screens and it will completely clean the device, including the keyboard. It’s formula leaves a Streak Free finish with zero residue, it works quickly and kills 99.99% of all germs. It’s also ammonia and alcohol free. Last but not least, its formula is also biodegradable so it’s good for the environment.device cleaner action 300x270 Muc Off Biodegradable Device & Gadget Screen Cleaner Unfortunately there is no word on pricing but Muc-Off should be affordable and it should be available to purchase soon.

     Muc Off Biodegradable Device & Gadget Screen Cleaner


  • Strata40 Gives Firefox the 4.0 Look Ahead of Schedule

    Firefox: Late last month, a Mozilla contributor showed us how Firefox 4.0 might look. The Strata40 theme and add-on gives your browser that same look, without having to wait or install pre-pre-alpha Firefox builds.

    Strata40 and its required side add-on, StrataBuddy, offer many of the same tweaks to Firefox’s interface that Firefox 4.0 will likely offer, like moving your tabs to the top of the window or just under the address bar, consolidating the address and page loading bar, and updating the various graphical bits around the browser frame.

    The top image shows off the developer’s own screenshot of his add-on in action. He’s got a nice-looking olive-type Windows theme going on; here’s how Strata40 looks installed on a stock Windows 7 copy of Firefox 3.5, with the tabs moved up top:

    The developer “requires” about three other add-ons to get Strata40 running “at its best,” like Fission, App Tabs, and Tab Progress Bar, and suggests that Firefox 3.6 is actually a better fit for his theme than 3.5. Still, with Strata40 installed, Firefox 3.5 can move forward in design time a bit without too much incompatibility risk or, seemingly, add-on drag.

    Strata40 and StrataBuddy are free downloads, and StrataBuddy is an experimental add-on. Both work wherever Firefox 3.5 or 3.6 do.

    Strata40 [Firefox Add-Ons]

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  • Android 2.1 SDK released to developers

    android_dancing

    The Nexus One burst onto the scene rocking Android 2.1 and now developers can finally get their hands on the SDK for this latest Android release. The SDK offers minor improvements from Android 2.0 and includes new APIs to develop animated wallpapers, a new SignalStrength class which contains phone signal strength data and new methods to add geolocation, improved video handling and more to Android’s WebKit-based browser. It’s available now for developers to download via the Android SDK and AVD Manager and gives developers a small headstart on making their apps compatible with Android 2.1, which is expected to roll out to the current crop of handsets later this month.

    Read

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  • Warning, Nexus One users! Dangerous fees may lie ahead




    Tempted by Google’s new Nexus One phone but having second thoughts? If you’re going to break your two-year contract on the subsidized model, make sure you do it in one of two ways: within 14 days of acquiring the phone or after four months of phone usage. Canceling at any point between 14 days and 120 days subjects you to a set of terrific fees, payable both to Google and T-Mobile.

    And these go far beyond just paying back the device subsidy.

    Read the rest of this article...


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  • webOS 1.3.5.2 landing in Europe [UPDATE: Bluetooth tethering (!) ]

    webOS 1.3.5.2The night is well underway in Europe, but that doesn’t mean that you can’t get a webOS update. As it would turn out, mere weeks after hitting Palm Pre and Pixi phones in the United States and Canada, Pre owners on O2 in Europe can now pull down their latest webOS updated in the form of webOS 1.3.5.2. What’s different about this version from webOS 1.3.5.1 in the United States is currently an unknown, we’re waiting for the changelog to land right now. In the meantime, welcome to the land of space for apps, Europe!

    UPDATE: We have a changelog after the break for you, but what’s important may not be in there. According to German-language tech site Heise Mobil, Palm has baked and enabled bluetooth tethering into webOS 1.3.5.2. Users in our forum have tested this out and wonder of wonders, it works.

    read more

  • Light Bulb USB Stick Certain to Entertain the Dim-Witted [USB]

    Your mom may have told you not to stare directly into light bulbs or solar eclipses for hours on end, but you know what? You’re a big boy now, so enjoy blinding yourself with 2GB of data. [GeekStuff4U via AkihabaraNews]







  • BMW prices 2011 740i and 740Li six-cylinder from $71,025

    Filed under: , , ,

    2011 BMW 740Li – Click above for high-res image gallery

    The two least-blistering-but-still-quick-fast siblings in the BMW 7 Series line have been given prices. The 740i will relieve you of $71,025 in standard guise, with the slightly longer 740Li requiring $75,425. Those prices include the obligatory $875 destination and handling charges.

    Those figures mean that the 740i will save you a little more than $9,000 compared to the 750i. You’ll be down 85 horsepower and 120 pound-feet of torque, but you’ll be up with Brake Energy Regeneration, part of the EfficientDynamics tech on this model. Despite opting for the “base” model (a term we use loosely), buyers will be able to specify a full range of niceties including the M Sport, Luxury Seating, Driver Assistance, Rear Entertainment, and BMW Individual Composition packages.

    For more info on the baby Seven, have a read of the press release after the jump and take a look at it in the gallery of high-res photos below.

    Gallery: 2011 BMW 740i

    [Source: BMW]

    Continue reading BMW prices 2011 740i and 740Li six-cylinder from $71,025

    BMW prices 2011 740i and 740Li six-cylinder from $71,025 originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 12 Jan 2010 08:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Jessica Simpson Weight Worries Follow Holiday Snub From Billy Corgan

    The Gossip World went gaga last month after news of a romance between Jessica Simpson and Smashing Pumpkins founder Billy Corgan hit the Snitch Circuit. Despite the initial buzz, it now appears that the odd couple’s headline-snatching union may have already hit the skids.

    Jess was crushed after Billy blew her off over the holidays — instead opting to stay with family in Chicago for Christmas — and the blonde bombshell is certain her weight is to blame for the musician’s sudden lost of interest.

    A NW spy claims: “She’s heard on the grapevine that Billy prefers skinny girls and now she’s convinced he’s losing interest in her because she’s too heavy. She’s frantically trying to lose weight, but it’s tough for her. She really loves her dinners out, not to mention the alcohol and late-night snacks she uses to lift her spirits.”

    It’s not always down to your weight, Jess. It could be the fact that the two of you have nothing in common….Just a thought.

  • [Slovakia] social events (concerts, sporting events, exhibitions …) /spoločenské akcie ( koncerty,športové podujatia ,výstavy…)

    Sem pridávajte odkazy alebo informácie o blížiacich sa akciách u nás doma ,slúžiť by to malo hlavne turistom , ale takisto aj nám, aby sme sa dozvedeli , čo , kde, kedy a ako . Takisto sa tu bude aj o týchto akciách diskutovať , zážitky z akcii , športových podujatí ale aj čo očakávate od danej akcie…

    This add links or information about upcoming events here at home, it would serve mainly tourists, but also us to find out what, where, when and how. Also there will also discuss these events and experiences from action sports events but also what you expect from the action …

    50 Cent – 2.3.2010 o 20:00 hod, Steel Aréna, Košice
    http://www.ticketportal.sk/Podujatie…h.asp?ID=12440

    EROS RAMAZZOTTI 27. Februára 2010 Košice / STEEL ARÉNA
    http://www.ticketportal.sk/podujatie…h.asp?ID=65096

    Armin van Buuren – 9.4.2010 (piatok) od 20 hod.Incheba Expo Aréna Bratislava
    http://www.ticketportal.sk/Podujatie…h.asp?ID=14442

    EUROPE – 2.2.2010 o 19:00 hod, Mestská športová hala Prešov /3.2.2010 o 19:00 hod, Mestská športová hala Trnava
    http://www.ticketportal.sk/Podujatie…h.asp?ID=14113

    Fed Cup Slovensko – Čína 6. – 7.2. 2010, SIBAMAC ARÉNA – Príkopova 6 Bratislava
    http://www.ticketportal.sk/Podujatie…h.asp?ID=14366

    Sony Ericsson Freestyle Motocross 2010 – 23.1.2010 o 20:00 hod STEEL ARÉNA, Košice
    http://www.ticketportal.sk/Podujatie…h.asp?ID=65099

    🙂

    ja sa osobne najviac tešim na armina … vo štvrok idem po listky , len dúfam , že aspon raz to organizačne team , ktorý to ma nastarosti zvládne a bude všetko OK hlavne šatne a socialne priestory…

  • Kia UVO (Your Voice): Kia’s Version of Ford SYNC

    Kia has just introduced their own “infotainment” system to rival Ford’s SYNC.  The Kia UVO (Your Voice) will be extremely similar to the SYNC system as they both run off of Windows software and share many of the same high-tech features, some of which include the voice commands and ipod compatability. The big difference? UVO uses Microsoft’s latest and greatest software available, which can decifer intricate speech patterns and words that, which with previous versions such as SYNC, proved to be an annoyance.  No more screaming at a voice recognition system that only gets more confused we scream louder. However UVO was not only developed for its convenience but also for its safety aspect. Drivers will have the ability to answer phone calls verbally through UVO, allowing them to keep their eyes on the road instead of being distracted by searching for their phone.

    The 4.3″ interface will be in full color that will provide information such as the contact data. UVO will be introduced as an open platform system allowing simple integration from numerous cell phones, mp3 players, and other hand-held electronic devices, making it easy for even the most technology illeterate person to use. It seems that UVO will turn out to be an easy-to-use, hands-free unit that will give Ford some competition.

    Plan on seeing the UVO first revealed in the 2011 Kia Sorento this summer and seeing it available in several other models in the future.


  • Intel AppUp Center Beta is an App Store for Netbooks

    screenshots 300x176 Intel AppUp Center Beta is an App Store for NetbooksIntel has just released a public beta of their netbook App Store, Intel AppUp. The apps available on AppUp are all optimized for netbooks. AppUp is loaded with a variety of free and paid applications. While it is positioned for netbooks, the apps seem to work on any PC (but resolution might not be optimized). If you have a netbook it’s definitely a great source to find apps made for you without having to go through any hassles. AppUp will also install applications directly from within the application, so you don’t have to go to the developers’ website and fish through various screens to download and then install the software. When you install applications from AppUp, AppUp you will also allow you to launch them from within AppUp. Unfortunately, AppUp is only available for Windows right now (sorry Linux users). And at just 17mb, it’s worth giving a try, so be sure to leave some feedback.

    Here were some of the suggestions for improvement that I had:

    -Don’t use a fixed window size for the application, even if it is optimized for netbooks. It seems to only have a 10” diagonal on my regular laptop

    -Introduce a performance rating for applications. This can be based on my netbook specs, which could be entered manually.

    -Brand AppUp for netbooks specifically – no where in the AppUp center does it say it’s optimized for netbooks

    -I’d prefer not to create a log in to download apps

    -Don’t require billing information until I choose to download a paid application

    -I couldn’t successfully create a log in: “Legal restrictions prevent us from fulfilling your request”

    However, don’t let my suggestions prevent you from downloading it and playing around. AppUp has a lot of potential, and is still very convenient to use even in its beta state, and Intel is very aware they have a lot of work to do to make it the ideal Netbook App Store.

     Intel AppUp Center Beta is an App Store for Netbooks


  • Attracting Investment: Subsidies versus Weak Labor Laws

    There's some disagreement as to whether weak labor laws are used by certain countries to attract foreign investment (or at least, they have that effect, even if it is not their goal).  Some critics of trade agreements say that weak labor laws in some countries leads to unfair trade, as it is difficult for companies in industrialized countries to compete with companies in the developing world whose labor costs are much lower.  By contrast, others contend that the evidence does not show this is a significant factor companies take into account when choosing a location.

    I tend to think it is a factor, but just one of many.  Here's some anecdotal evidence from the domestic context that it can have an impact.  From the Economist:

    In 1983 Nissan became the first foreign carmaker in America’s South when it opened an assembly plant in Smyrna, Tennessee. Other Asian and European automakers soon arrived, bypassing Detroit for Dixie and building factories in Kentucky (Toyota), Alabama (Honda, Mercedes-Benz, Toyota, and Hyundai), Mississippi (Nissan), Texas (Toyota again) and South Carolina (BMW). A common attraction in each of the states was the anti-trade-union climate.

    Now the aircraft industry is following suit. Late last autumn Boeing announced it would build a second assembly line (the first is in the Seattle suburb of Everett, Washington) for its 787 Dreamliner jet in North Charleston, outside the lovely old city of Charleston. The company chose to put its $750m factory in South Carolina because it was determined to distance itself from a fractious labour union in Everett. Machinists there went on a 57-day walkout in 2008 that cost the company more than $2 billion and led some airlines to switch their orders to Europe’s Airbus.

    South Carolina has one of the lowest rates of unionisation in the country. Amazingly, according to the US Bureau of Labour Statistics, not a single work day was lost to strikes in the state in 2008. And workers who currently make 787 parts at another Boeing factory in North Charleston voted in September to cut their links to the International Association of Machinists.

    Mr Woodward reckons that South Carolina and other southern states, which have laws against union closed shops and relatively low labour costs, are a template that could help America retain at least some of its shrinking manufacturing base.

    So this article demonstrates that weak labor laws attract investment, right?  Well, maybe.  There's also this:

    Details of the estimated $450 million incentive package that South Carolina has promised Boeing Co. could draw international attention as fodder in a long-running trade dispute between the aviation giant and its European rival, Airbus.

    Airbus Americas chairman Allan McArtor views the South Carolina incentive deal differently.

    "Of course it's a subsidy!" McArtor said in an written statement about the offer. He said that it will be up to the European Union to pursue further action.

    Boeing was not identified by name in the special legislation that lawmakers passed in October to win the assembly plant, but the bill made certain incentives available to companies that generate more than 3,800 jobs and invest more than $750 million during a seven-year span.

    Boeing has said it plans to meet those thresholds.

    So which is it?  Weak labor laws?  A $450 million subsidy?   A little of both?

    As the second article notes, subsidies are covered by international trade rules.  Should weak labor laws be covered, too?  They are covered in some recent FTAs, but as discussed just the other day, it's not clear whether existing WTO rules can do much here.

    As a final point, there's an interesting "specificity" issue:  "Boeing was not identified by name in the special legislation that lawmakers passed in October to win the assembly plant, but the bill made certain incentives available to companies that generate more than 3,800 jobs and invest more than $750 million during a seven-year span."