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  • Shannen Doherty Sued By Bank

    Former Beverly Hills, 90210 star Shannen Doherty has been slapped with a lawsuit for breach of contract and unjust enrichment after allegedly failing to repay a loan to a California bank.

    The acid-tongued actress is being sued by City National Bank (CNB) for $85,000. Bank officials say Doherty faliled to make an agreed upon principal payment plus interest on a loan she took out last summer. In court documents obtained by TMZ.com, CNB claims the star “made, executed and delivered to Cnb a promissory note (a contract to provide payment) in the original sum of $90,000.00.”

    After she missed a June 1 payment, the agreement was amended to allow Shannen until Sept. 1 to pay back the cash, but she allegedly failed to meet that deadline, too. Executives at City National Bank are demanding the outstanding payment plus interest, and ask that Doherty cover court costs and attorney fees.

  • The first 3D TVs will hit stores mid year ready for porn!

    Porn studios lead the stampede into 3D TV
    ASHER MOSES IN LAS VEGAS
    January 11, 2010 – 11:41AM .
    http://www.smh.com.au/digital-life/h…0111-m19e.html


    3D porn film producer Lance Johnson with his muse Breanne Benson. Photo: Asher Moses

    The first 3D TV sets are not set to hit stores until midyear but the porn industry is already shooting and selling immersive 3D films.

    Adult movie makers are known for being technology pioneers, having helped drive the adoption of previous new technologies such as VHS, DVD, Blu-ray, the internet and high-definition.

    BadGirls in 3D, an exhibitor at the AVN Adult Entertainment Expo in Las Vegas, is so early with its adoption of 3D that it is selling a $US3999 ($4320) kit that includes a Mitsubishi 60-inch 3DTV, two pairs of 3D glasses and a tiny PC that is used to stream the 3D films from the web.


    I think it’s so cool … Breanne Benson. Photo: Asher Moses

    Several hours of porn are shot using 3D cameras and uploaded to the site every week. It can be accessed for $US19.95 a month.

    Producer Lance Johnson said in an interview he would start selling stand-alone 3D porn discs later this year once 3D TVs start to hit the market.

    At the Consumer Electronics Show, which runs over the same dates as the adult expo, Samsung, Sony, Toshiba, LG and Panasonic unveiled a slew of 3D-capable televisions, Blu-ray players and home theatre systems.

    Samsung and Sony said they planned to have models on the Australian market midyear, to coincide with the football World Cup, which will be shot in 3D.

    “We want to bring this technology into the home and we will do this via a hardware ‘bundle’ that will work with streaming 3D porn,” Johnson said.

    “You can log onto to [our website] to purchase the complete hardware package and subscribe. From there, simply turn on your PC, log on and put on the active 3D glasses.”

    Movie studios are also gearing up to release 3D films on Blu-ray discs about the same time, including both films shot in 3D, such as Avatar, and 2D films remastered in 3D such as Sony’s Jimi Hendrix discs.

    In the US, Fox Sports, Discovery and other broadcasters have announced new 3D channels and plan to air live action sports and other content on them.

    3D has been a runaway hit in cinemas around the world, with the latest release, Avatar, grossing more than $US1.34 billion worldwide since its release on December 18.

    Johnson noted that an early 3D porn film based on old technology, which aired in some cinemas in 1969, grossed what was then an astonishing $US27 million.

    “I think it’s so cool,” said Breanne Benson, 25, who appeared in two of Johnson’s 3D porn films.

    “It [3D] is a little bit nerve racking … but no one’s ever done 3D porn before so I’m very excited.”

  • St Petersburg: City under siege?

    An op article by Gavin Stamp at Apollo Magazine…

    ———————————-

    http://www.apollo-magazine.com/news-…er-siege.thtml

    City under siege
    Despite local opposition and criticism, St Petersburg is being spoiled by developlers in the name of modernisation.
    Gavin Stamp, Wednesday, 6th January 2010

    … As in Moscow, the authorities are complicit in this process, insisting that the city must develop. The official (but often ignored) height restriction on new buildings has recently been raised from 48 metres to 100 metres. Incongruous new buildings are defended by politicians as symbols that Russia is rising from its knees after the long night of Communism, but, of course, there are close connections between many of them and the developers. There is, however, strong popular opposition to what is happening, focusing on the most serious threat to the skyline: the Okhta Centre, better known as the Gazprom Tower (Fig. 2), proposed for a site by the Neva directly opposite the Smolny Cathedral by Rastrelli. As it is essentially a colossal 400-metre-high tower, it scarcely matters that it is some six kilometres from the city centre. The architects claim that this is a ‘glass needle which echoes the spires across the city’, but for many citizens it is a symbol of the power and ruthlessness of the state-owned gas monopoly (whose former chairman, Dmitry Medvedev, is now President of Russia). There have been public demonstrations against this development, but it has been approved by the government of St Petersburg – despite the concerns of Unesco.

    This vulgar, gratuitous spike has been designed by a once-respected British firm: RMJM (Robert Matthew, Johnson-Marshall & Partners). Elsewhere, a damaging scheme for the former naval dockyard called New Holland is one of several projects by the firm of Norman Foster. Foreign architects – Italians, Scots, Frenchmen and Germans – have lived and worked in St Petersburg from the beginning, from Rastrelli to von Klenze, but as well as doing fine things they also somehow responded to its unique, Russian character. These modern interlopers, however, merely impose buildings that could be anywhere. As Philip Johnson observed, ‘Architects are pretty much high-class whores. We can turn down projects the way they can turn down some clients, but we’ve both got to say yes to someone if we want to stay in business.’ As with prostitution, however, it is the clients who are really to blame, and I do wish I didn’t now feel so nostalgic for the days of the Iron Curtain.

  • They Exist in Phoenix: Vegan Blueberry Muffin

     Wholefoods_veganmuffin_0110

    One down, one to go! Today at Whole Foods Raintree, I found a vegan blueberry muffin. Now, we just need to find vegan banana nut. woo-hoo! I’ve been here in Phoenix 4 months now, and I still joke about how vegan banana nut or vegan blueberry muffins just don’t exist here. One day, I got fed up and just baked some vegan banana nut muffins on my own.

    Ive been looking for months for vegan muffins of any flavor. Blogged about it. Tweeted about it. Facebooked about it. I’ve asked every single person I’ve met since moving here if they’ve seen any vegan muffins…anywhere in Phoenix or the outlining areas. Nada, zilch, until today!

    Back in the Bay Area, you can walk into any Whole Foods and find oodles of vegan muffins. I figure asking for vegan banana nut or blueberry wasn’t asking much here in Phoenix. Oh I was wrong.

    If I were a pastry chef, restauranteur, or cafe owner here in Phoenix, I would so be selling vegan muffins because there is a WIDE open market. No competition. Of course, the muffins have to be just plain good first and vegan second.


  • Ron Jeremy says videogames are worse than porn

    In case you’re not aware, CES isn’t the only show in Vegas this past weekend, it also hosted the Adult Entertainment Expo. One of the highlights of the said event is a panel discussion on the influences

  • Gold Blasts Higher After China Gives New Green Light On Stimulus Spending

    The global money pump will continue flowing!

    China has given one of its surest signals to date that it plans on keeping its pro-stimulus policies alive. More specifically, it plans to spend the full amount of its planned stimulus this year.

    We’ll point out again that all the major powers — the US, Europe, China, and Japan — are in some way taking actions to weaken their currencies. It makes it hard not to like gold, and alas…

    Gold is blasting higher:

    gold

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  • The Smart Faucet

    One of the easiest and simplest ways to be a little greener is to turn off the water while you’re brushing your teeth or soaping up your hands. But that’s not always possible: you’ve got a job that’s complicated or dangerous, you’ve turned the faucet on for a kid who’s too small to reach it himself.

    Read the full post at Re-Nest

    Read Full Post


  • Week in review: The Consumer Electronics Show, our predictions for 2010

    Here’s our rundown of the week’s business and tech news. First, the most popular stories VentureBeat published in the last eight days:

    ces-logoWhat to watch for at the Consumer Electronics Show — VentureBeat writer and veteran CES attendee Dean Takahashi made a list of likely significant news at the “SuperBowl for the gadget industry.” You can compare his predictions with our actual CES coverage here.

    Cool stuff unveiled at the opening of Consumer Electronics Show — Speaking of CES, here are our photos from the CES Unveiled event, where members of the press get an early peek at the cool gadgets launching at the conference.

    Is Google’s army-of-Androids strategy working? — We used the launch of Google and HTC’s Nexus One “superphone” as an opportunity to examine the search giant’s broader mobile strategy. The big question: Is Google’s method of incremental improvement (compared to Apple’s more perfectionist approach) working?

    Microsoft Arc keyboard replaces squarepants design with lightweight curves – Another product launch from CES: The Arc keyboard debuted by Microsoft, which updates the stodgy PS/2 keyboard with a slim, light, gracefully curved aesthetic. The keyboard weighs under a pound and is designed to be usable both on a desk and in your lap on the couch.

    Nexus One, Droid or iPhone — VentureBeat writer Paul Boutin breaks down the pricing and features for each of the three smartphones, and comes up with a surprising pick as the best phone for readers. (In fact, his choice prompted plenty of protest and argument from other VentureBeat writers.)

    And here are five more stories we thought were important, thought-provoking, or fun:

    apple-tabletPredictions for 2010: Tablets will fail, Google will pummel Microsoft — Our look at the year ahead also covers Twitter, Facebook, the Chevy Volt, and more.

    How Jajah, a little phone company, sold for $207M, while everyone else got killed — Two weeks ago, the Spanish phone giant Telefonica said it had acquired Internet phone company Jajah for $207 million in cash. In interviews with several employees, former employees and other observers, we asked how the Mountain View, Calif. company managed to succeed even as a host of other VoIP companies, including names like Jangl and Jaxtr, either went out of business or were sold for pennies in asset sales.

    Google applies to buy and sell energy, is a Googley utility imminent? — Here’s another big announcement from Google this week: The creation of Google Energy, a subsidiary that it will use to buy and sell electricity on federally-regulated wholesale energy markets.

    Crunchies: Google Voice is coming to the iPhone “one way or another” — At the Crunchies award ceremony Friday, Google’s vice president of engineering Vic Gundotra said the Google Voice application, which is still in limbo after Apple declined to give it the greenlight for the app store, will come to the iPhone “one way or the other.”

    Boxee Beta goes public, now for a look inside the box — Media center software maker Boxee announced the public launch of its Boxee Beta software this week, after only a month in private beta. The downloadable software allows users to connect their computers to any TV and instantly stream different types of media, including TV shows, music and movies.


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  • ‘3-point’ USB 3.0 hub is self-referential fun and functionality

    Admittedly, at first we didn’t get it — the hub (with actually helpful, twisting ports) was about 90 degrees counterclockwise from the pictured position and we couldn’t get past the aesthetic similarities to the Dodge Ram logo. That’s when the friendly overseer of the Dun Cheng Technology Corp. booth in the CES International Hall twisted both our minds and the hub itself to reveal an intentionally meta moment — “3-point,” as in USB 3.0. Needless to say, we were very amused.

    ‘3-point’ USB 3.0 hub is self-referential fun and functionality originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 10 Jan 2010 19:16:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Is Your Child’s Messy Room Affecting Homework Performance?

    So, your child’s room is a mess. Shut the door and walk on. After all, the parenting folks say to pick your battles and, as long as the hazmat guys don’t come knocking, this is one of the battles you should forget about fighting, right? That depends. How is your child’s report card? Is he or she struggling to get homework done? Is getting your child to concentrate on a simple task in that bedroom virtually impossible? For many children (and some adults), a messy room can actually affect concentration. messy desk

    I was reminded of how important keeping clutter contained and having clear spaces around you can be this weekend. I was given 20 storage containers filled with stuff, which were stacked in the family room. I literally couldn’t get any work done, because I could see the containers out of the corner of my eye from my desk in the next room. I finally had to give up and spend hours sorting through the bins and loading up the car with the stuff we didn’t want so I could work.

    Shortly after I finished, I went into a child’s room and noticed a desk which had about 12 square inches of space to work on. Hmm. Could that be why he has been doing homework at the table instead of at the desk?

    Now that the house is clutter free, I’m hoping we’ll all see an improvement in how long it takes us to get things done. Does clutter make it harder for you to concentrate on tasks, too?

    Photo: SXC

    Post from: Blisstree

    Is Your Child’s Messy Room Affecting Homework Performance?

  • McRib!

    Yes! It’s back! And it’s all mine… :D

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  • Pennsylvania Borough Gives Homeless the ‘Cold Shoulder’

    … by Walter Brasch

    SUGAR NOTCH, Pa.–A regional advocate for the rights of the homeless says actions by Sugar Notch officials to deny shelter to homeless men may be based upon fear and a lack of knowledge.

    About 40 homeless men were scheduled to receive temporary shelter at the Holy Family Roman Catholic church in Sugar Notch for a week beginning Jan. 11. About three dozen churches in the Wilkes-Barre/Scranton region each shelter the homeless for one or two weeks a year. Professional staff usually work with, and stay with, the homeless. However, borough zoning officer Carl Alber, apparently acting under Council direction, issued a letter that threatened the church with a $500 fine for each day it housed the homeless. Councilman Herman Balas, a member of the church, said that Council was acting for safety and citizen welfare. The Rev. Joseph Kakareska told the media he has no plans to deny shelter to the homeless for the week. Sugar Notch is a town of about 950 residents, about five miles southwest of Wilkes-Barre in northeastern Pennsylvania.

    A public council meeting, Jan. 4, led to a yelling contest among the Council and members of the audience; most of the Council and residents claimed the homeless could pose “problems,” with others claiming the problem had nothing to do with the homeless but with following proper zoning ordinances. However, the church is zoned R-1 (residential) and in a residential area. Council kicked the problem to the Zoning Commission, but indicated that if the church files an appeal, with a $350 fee, it would allow the homeless to stay in the church for a week. It’s an “olive branch,” claimed council president Charlene Tarnalicki. There was no ruling that if the church loses its appeal if it would still be liable for up to a $3,500 fine.

    “This is not a zoning issue, but an issue of fear by residents,” says Gary F. Clark, executive director of the Northeast Pennsylvania Homeless Alliance. “Most homeless pose absolutely no threat to any citizen,” says Clark. The homeless, says Clark, often have day jobs, and are sheltered only in evenings. Clark says that with the Recession, more persons have been laid off from jobs they may have had for several years, and have been unable to meet mortgage payments on houses. Council’s concern about the homeless, according to Balas, was that they could be violent or be drug users.

    However, Clark says that while some of the homeless may have alcohol- or drug-induced problems, most are “just trying to get by.” About 3.5 million people will be homeless at some point this year, with almost half being children, according to the National Law Center on Homelessness and Poverty. About 16,000 Pennsylvanians are homeless on any given night, according to the Pennsylvania Interagency Council on Homelessness. About one-third of homeless men are veterans, “many with post-traumatic stress disorder that keeps them from a stable life,” Clark says. It is unlikely, he says, that they pose any threat to public safety.

    Clark points out that it is unacceptable during the Winter, when snow lies on the ground and temperatures drop into the teens, to have anyone “trying to survive on our streets.” Shelter, says Clark, “is a basic human need and many more problems are created when this need is not met.” The “true measure of a society,” says Clark, “is how it treats its most needy.”

    The “movable shelter program,” run by Wilkes-Barre’s non-profit VISION program, and with the support of numerous churches that give temporary shelter and meals to the homeless, has had relatively few problems, says Clark. VISION director Vince Kabacinski told Council he has offers of legal support not only from local organizations but from some as far away as Arizona. “I didn’t ask Sugar Notch to become part of the problem with the ‘not in my backyard’ ” attitude, he said.

    On a sign in front of the church is the message, “Jesus was homeless, too.”

  • RAWALPINDI | FFCL Building | 12 Fl |Corporate Offices U/C

    Clients: Fauji Fertilizers Company.
    Status: Under construction.
    Construction Statrted: May 2008.
    Completion: Unknown
    Floors: Ground + 11
    Floors Under Ground: Unknown
    Location: Mall Road, Rawalpindi.
    [IMG][/IMG]
  • Derek Jeter Minka Kelly Married? Jeter Wedding To Actress Set For Nov. 5

    Sorry girls, New York Yankees hunk Derek Jeter has set a wedding date with his actress girlfriend, Minka Kelly. The beautiful twosome will make it official two days after the World Series ends on Nov. 5, The New York Post scooped on Sunday.

    The starting shortstop and Kelly, star of the small screen cult drama Friday Night Lights, are expected to tie the knot next fall at The Oheka Castle, a glorious turn-of-the-century French-style chateau situated on a sprawling estate in suburban Long Island.

    The Oheka Castle is the second-largest private residence in the United States and recently hosted the wedding of pop tart Kevin Jonas.

    Acting on a tip from a celebrity snitch, a Post reporter, posing as a bride-to-be, spotted an entry reading “JETER Wedding” on the calendar for the Huntington, NY castle. However, sales manager Rick Bellando refused to the confirm that Oheka will host a Jeter/Kelly wedding, insisting that a celebrity wouldn’t be listed under their real name when the reporter pointed out the date.

  • Progress on My Book Being Published

    My online friend has done a wonderful job with creating the PDF format for my book and making all the corrections I requested. It looks great, but there are some items I would like to ask about here. I appreciate your opinions.

    1.)After converting to PDF, most of the pics look blurred, out of focus. I feel certain they will look that way in the book too. I wonder if there is some way of making them look more sharp. Do you have any knowledge of whether this can be done?

    2.) A book with color interior will cost more because the paper needed for color pics is more expensive. I think all pics should be shown in black and white so the paper and book will cost buyers less. Do you agree?

    3.) If you had a choice, and you were thinking about reading this, would you prefer it be a book or would you rather read it online in Kindle? Kindle would be cheaper but then there would be no actual book. (I want to do only one of these at the start. I have my reasons.)

    4.) I asked the owners of all 10 websites where I belong for permission to advertise. All of them have given me permission, some with enthusiasm. Amazon has every right to turn me down if they think the book will not be profitable for them. (I am not expecting a response to #4. I just needed to let that out. It has been worrying me. ) :rolleyes:

  • Velaslavasay Panorama

    Los Angeles, California | Unique Collections

    In the late 1700s and early 1900s a new form of interactive media was invented. Considered lowbrow at the time, it was the 3D movie of its day, a fully engaging visual experience for the masses, known as panoramic paintings.

    Generally displayed either in a large circular room, and surrounding the viewer, or occasionally stretched across two rollers like a ribbon and cranked across them to create a moving landscape for the audience, they were wildly popular in their day. Good panorama painters, such as John Banvard (who at one point painted a half a mile long panorama the longest in the world at the time), were made rich and famous. But with the advent of photography, optical toys and later film, panorama paintings all but disappeared, with most of the world forgetting they and their creators ever even existed.

    Taking a cue from these popular panoramic paintings, the Velaslavasay Panorama in Los Angelos is a curious throwback to this old form media. Here, visitors are engaged once again in a fully immersive, 360-degree representation of landscape painting, complete with lighting and sound.

    The current exhibition, Effulgence of the North, is an arctic landscape created by Sara Velas, an artist and Los Angeles native who founded The Velaslavasay Panorama in 2001. Effulgence is a rare, contemporary re-production of an otherwise outdated medium, exhibited in a traditional rotunda which features a spiral staircase that allows viewers to enter from the center of the cylindrical room.

    A subtle 35-minute soundtrack and light show accompanies the painting and three-dimensional foreground, further adding to a “complete sensory phenomenon” similar to the panoramic spectacles of the past which also often included sound and mood lighting.

    Eventually, the rise of the motion picture industry aided in the demise of the panorama as an art form. As such, The Velaslavasay Panorama occupies a somewhat ironic location in an old 1920s silent film theater and only draws more attention to how technology has drastically changed our visual experiences.

    The old Union Theater, which once served as a tile layers’ union headquarters in the 1970s, is still used by The Velaslavasay Panorama Enthusiasts Society today. In line with the “magnetic showmanship and spectacle” of this era in media and Los Angeles culture, past events have featured Alpine yodelers, esoteric instruments and automata. The front desk even provides sensational pamphlets, such as one on The Alabaster Isle of Penglai, a garden behind the theater which is home to pet bunnies and carnivorous plants.

  • CES Postmortem: So Long, And Thanks For All The Press Kits

    To cap off the CES coverage, we’d like to give a shout-out to our partners and also discuss our coverage. We do this for you guys, after all, so feel free to chime in with your opinion on both the show and us. The biggest electronics show in the world is a difficult thing to report as it is with only a handful of timid bloggers, ripped from their natural habitat as it were, and placed in an unfamiliar environment. But to put them in front of a live camera and ask them to provide meaningful commentary for hours on end is to invite calamity.

    Fortunately, thanks to our great Livestream team and partners like Alienware, who provided our rendering computers, I think we did passably well. Impressions and notes on the show and our coverage follow.


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  • Kia offers 7-Year/150,000 km warranty on all cars sold in Europe

    Kia offers 7-Year/150,000 km warranty on all cars sold in Europe

    Korean auto maker, Kia, has announced a seven-year/150,000 km bumper-to-bumper, parts-and-labour warranty for all vehicles sold and registered in Europe from January 1, 2010. This is far-and-away the longest fleet-wide warranty ever offered by a car manufacturer anywhere at any time and the move could have far reaching consequences. Brands with big reputations are charging two, five, even ten times as much for a car as Kia, yet they are clearly unprepared to guarantee their quality to the same extent, and this might well be the point the public finally understands that new price does not reflect quality, that quality is measurable, and that reputations for quality are distinctly at odds with reality. At very least, as the warranties are fully transferable to subsequent owners, Kia resale values should skyrocket…

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