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  • Teresina (PI) | Maternidade Evangelina Rosa | Zona Sul

    Consegui uma imagem do projeto de reforma e ampliação da maternidade Evangelina Rosa aqui em Teresina. Só tenho essa imagem, mas dá pra ter uma idéia. Acho que pra sair do papel vai demorar muito, mas ta aí o projeto.

    Segundo um Deputado a obra está em fase de licitação e espera que comecem esse ano de 2010, mas vai saber.Palavras dele:

    "Já enviamos a secretaria estadual de Saúde, para as mãos do secretário Assis Carvalho. Pretendemos começar o projeto em 2010 e ampliar um centro materno tão importante para a população do Piaui"

    Tomara que façam logo 🙂

  • HTC HD2 controlling a droid!


    It’s not quite a Parrot AR.Drone, but it’s what I can do in an afternoon with left a bunch of leftovers.

    IMAG0020
    I’m trying to show off what WM can do apart from being a very good mobile email platform.

    I’m using the HD2 with its accelerometer to send data about a heading to an Arduino via bluetooth. The Arduino then controls the motor speed, enabling turning and things. Currently, there’s a computer sat between the HD2 and the Arduino because I don’t have a serial bluetooth module. (The computer just takes the bluetooth data and dumps it down a USB cable).

    IMAG0027

    What do you lot think? What can I add?

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  • Howie Mandel Replacing David Hasselhoff On “America’s Got Talent”

    The British tabs called it: Former Deal or No Deal host Howie Mandel will be replacing David Hasselhoff at the judge’s table on America’s Got Talent, NBC Universal Television Entertainment Chairman Jeff Gaspin confirmed on Sunday morning at NBC’s Television Critics Association panel.

    The germaphobic star will join stars Piers Morgan and Sharon Osbourne when the show returns for a fifth season this summer. Last Wednesday, Hasselhoff announced his departure from the reality competition, along with plans to start his own TV show.

    “”David is leaving America’s Got Talent and, yes, Howie Mandel is replacing him. As you know, Howie was a big part of our schedule for the last several years with ‘Deal or No Deal,’ and we thought he did a phenomenal job,” Jeff told reporters following this morning’s panel. “If you think about an expertise, Howie has had a Las Vegas show for years and he constantly performs in Las Vegas. So we actually though — not only is he a great communicator, but he’s actually an expert.”

    Gaspin also confirmed that the network is no longer making new episodes of Deal or No Deal, but the game show is still in syndication.

    “We are not doing any more ‘Deals’ for NBC currently,” he explained.

  • [Kharkiv / Харкiв] Бизнес-центр “Мегаполис” / “Megapolis” (“Megalopolis&quo

    Расположение: пр. Московский, 179-Б / Location: Moscow ave., 179-b.


    (Google Maps)

    Общая площадь: 9304 кв. м. / Floor area: 9304 sq. m.

    Рендеры:




    Quote:

    Если Вы планируете открыть/расширить/изменить статус/ офиса/представительства в полуторамиллионном городе Харькове, характеризующимся динамичным развитием, мы можем предложить Вам офисные помещения в Бизнес-центре «MEGAPOLIS». Бизнес-центр расположен в новом деловом районе города, в котором сосредоточены лучшие проекты:

    • «Металлист-Сити» – центр большого спорта и активного отдыха, торговый и офисный центр, концертная арена, конференц-центр, ряд развлекательных объектов, пятизвёздочная гостиница;
    • МФК «Изумрудная долина»: офисные, жилые, торговые и развлекательные объекты;
    • Жилой дом бизнес-класса с инфраструктурной зоной общ. пл. 116562 кв.м.;
    • ТРЦ «Французский бульвар» – ледовой каток «Шато Ледо», боулинг-клуб, концерт-холл, торговая галерея;
    • Развлекательный комплекс высокого уровня «Колизей».

    РАССТОЯНИЕ ОТ ГРАНИЦ БИЗНЕС-ЦЕНТРА К ОБЪЕКТАМ ГОРОДСКОГО ЗНАЧЕНИЯ И СТАНЦИЙ МЕТРО:

    Центр города (Госпром) – ~6,2 км
    Харьковский городской совет – ~3,8 км
    Облгосадминистрация – ~5,5 км
    Южный вокзал – ~6 км
    Автовокзал «Левада» – ~3,5 км
    Станция метро «площадь Восстания» – ~1,5 км
    Остановка общественного транспорта – ~250 м

    ПРЕДЛАГАЕМ ТОЛЬКО ДЛЯ ВАС:

    • Офисные юниты пл. от 50 до 900 кв. м.;
    • Свободная планировка, устройство внутренних перегородок по индивидуальному желанию арендаторов;
    • Спутниковое телевидение;
    • Контроль доступа, система видеонаблюдения;
    • Оптоволоконные телекоммуникации;
    • Скоростные лифты грузоподъёмностью до 1000 кг.

    …skipped…

    Дополнительный сервис:

    • Конференц-зал, оснащенный новейшим мультимедийным оборудованием и техникой, обеспечит максимальный комфорт и удобство при ведение деловых переговоров;
    • Возможность комплексного питания, не выходя из здания;
    • Круглосуточная служба охраны;
    • Профессиональная клининговая компания для уборки здания;
    • Служба рецепции;
    • Большой наземный паркинг;

    Технические характеристики:

    • Энергообеспечение: наличие двух независимых вводов от двух различных источников электроэнергии для гарантии бесперебойной работы систем жизнеобеспечения здания, внутренние системы отопления выполнены немецкой фиромй «Kan»;
    • Отопление: автономное, крышно-котельное оборудование компании «Viessmann Werke», Германия;
    • Водоснабжение: система многоконтурного холодного водоснабжения и циркуляционная система горячего водоснабжения, сантехника в санузлах – унитазы, умывальники фирмы «Kolo» производства Польша, фурнитура – «Oras» Финляндия;
    • Вентиляция: централизованная система, вентялиционная система и колориферы – фирмы «Rosenberg» производства Германия;
    • Кондиционирование воздуха – централизованное, кондиционеры – «Daikin» Япония;
    • Высота потолков: 3 м;
    • Алюминивый вентилируемый фасад фирмы«Alcan», Германия;
    • Стеклопакеты на фасадной системе фирмы «Rainers», Бельгия;
    • Плитка в санузлах фирмы «Sanchis» Испания;
    • Подвесной потолок в офисах и местах общего пользования – «Grilliatto», Голландия;
    • Светильники в офисных помещениях – растровые «Цветовые технологии с электронной начинкой «Phillips», декоративные светильники «Delta» Германия, «Brilluxe» в помещении кофейни;
    • Входая дверь в офисные юниты производства Испания;
    • Лифты – 2 скоростных с vip-отделкой фирмы «Izomet», Болгария грузоподъёмностью по 1000 кг;
    • Центральный вход в бизнес-центр выполнен из гранита;
    • Безопасность: российская система «Орион», представлена адресная система на этажах, т.е. каждый офис поставлен на охрану, имеется 2 рубежа охраны, есть датчик движения и
      открытия, 2 видеокамеры, которые выходят на пост охраны (2 поста), 3 турникета на основном и 2 турникета на дополнительном входе.,
    • Автоматические системы пожарной сигнализации;
    • Телекоммуникации: возможность одновременного подключения арендаторов к различным телекоммуникационным провайдерам, оптоволоконные линии связи; возможность использования общей АТС здания или установки собственной АТС;
    • Наличие трёх телефонных провайдеров – «Укртелеком», «Велтон», «Голден Телеком», заведено 8 пар оптоволокна, спутниковое телевидение;
    • Категория энергопотребления 2 – заведено 250 кВт, 3 – заведено 550 КВт, 1 – 50 КВт.

  • The Coming Tornado: Cloud in the Enterprise

    This guest post was written by Aaron Levie, CEO and co-founder of Box.net. Box.net was founded in 2005 with the goal of helping people and businesses easily access and share information from anywhere. Box.net is now used by millions of individuals, small businesses, and Fortune 500 enterprises worldwide.

    Consumers have readily embraced the Cloud in the form of services like Facebook, YouTube and Gmail, but businesses are a different story. While small and medium businesses have been drawn to the cost efficiencies of web-based solutions, the Cloud has thus far hovered on the periphery of mainstream business IT, with many dismissing it as unfeasible on a large scale, or at best, a distant solution. But cloud-based services are about to tip for the enterprise, and quickly.

    The coming shift echoes the disruptive transformation of IT in the ’90s, driven by companies like Oracle, Microsoft, Lotus and Sun. Geoffrey Moore, author of “Crossing the Chasm” and “Inside the Tornado,” studied this transition and described the chain of adoption for enterprise technology: innovators are followed by early adopters, visionaries, and finally IT departments. And when enterprise technology hits this latter group, we’re officially in the Tornado.

    Well the dust is beginning to swirl once more. Over the next two years, enterprise IT will follow in the footsteps of today’s early adopters and visionaries, finally embracing the Cloud and moving content, applications, and processes to the web. So what are the catalysts for this perfect storm? A combination of maturing platforms, generational and cultural shifts, and compelling economics, making cloud-based solutions the undeniable choice for nearly all future non-core technology purchases.

    The platforms are ready

    Today’s web-based platforms are finally maturing into real, viable solutions for businesses. They’re not just for small businesses or early adopters. Between Amazon EC2 for infrastructure-as-a-service, Force.com for platform-as-a-service, and Google Apps for software-as-a-service, companies large and small now have enough options to run their entire business in the Cloud. These complementary services can now talk to each other like never before, making it easy for IT administrators to weave connections between web platforms. And unplanned downtime is no longer a valid argument against the Cloud: like most cloud-based offerings, Google guarantees that Google Apps will be available at least 99.9% of the time, and will reimburse customers if this target isn’t met. According to a study by The Radicati Group, companies with onsite email solutions averaged 30-60 minutes of unscheduled downtime and 36-90 minutes of planned downtime per month in 2008. Even after a spat of outages in 2008, Matthew Glotzbach of Google’s Enterprise unit estimated that Google Apps downtime totaled a mere 10-15 minutes per month. Furthermore, cloud vendors front the bill to get the server back online, not your internal IT team.

    Make way for new workers and a new way to work

    Not only have our applications and platforms changed, so have the people using them. We’re now seeing the newest generation of the “knowledge worker” emerge in the enterprise. The formative years of this generation were spent chatting online, facebooking strangers and friends alike, and maxing out their hard drives with music and movie downloads. Accordingly, these employees are simply not capable of doing more work to find information than performing a Google search (I know, because I am one). They have no patience for convoluted IT policies, limited email storage and siloed data. Cloud-based IT services are the only solutions that can match the experience, efficiency, and access that we get in our personal lives. We’re already seeing companies like Salesforce mimic consumer tools with offerings like Salesforce Chatter. It’s only a matter of time before more vendors catch on that enterprise collaboration should be as easy as social networking, and must likewise take place in the Cloud.

    The cloud is cheap

    Okay, so we’re almost out of the recession. Companies who hunkered down will soon shift from survival mode to winning back marketshare. But guess whose stock is already at an all-time high? Salesforce. Despite the still-fragile economy, businesses are buying into the cloud, and there’s a lot more room to grow. At the risk of sounding completely obvious, they’re buying these services because they cost so much less to maintain and the barriers to getting started are much lower. And although the economy is showing signs of improvement, the past few years have fundamentally changed the way we think about technology purchases. Higher cost does not necessarily translate to higher quality. Products from behemoth software vendors like Microsoft are not necessarily more reliable. And in the Cloud, substantially fewer people are needed to get started: a medium-sized business five years ago required dedicated personnel, consulting, and redundant infrastructure to deliver corporate email. Today, the point of entry is a credit card transaction, with no infrastructure in sight. The time to transition to cheaper, more manageable platforms is now.

    Momentum in the IT department

    Managing infrastructure and technology that is not competitively-additive has become competitively-expensive. As we approach the Tornado, IT experts are redefining their roles and priorities from directly maintaining all the “contextual” applications around their business (CRM, email, file servers, search) to honing in on technologies that are core to their company’s performance and competitive advantage. This opens up the IT department to a new world of meaning and purpose. IT will move from a pure systems and process management function to a business success through technology service.

    How do we know this is happening? IT decision-makers are starting to knock on the doors of Google, Amazon, Salesforce and Box.net. Box’s 10 largest sales in 2009 were made with IT managers at organizations you’d recognize. The common thread linking these IT buyers? In our case, they want to move toward Cloud Content Management, in lieu of spending hundreds of thousands of dollars on traditional ECM. This comes from awareness that their role is not about being bogged down in server administration, storage limitations and downtime, but rather about finding best-of-breed technology to solve their company’s issues and enhance their business, quickly. Imagine a world where IT is defined as a means to increase margin through people and process productivity gains, rather than an expense to the organization.

    Ok, so what’s holding us back?

    There is no question that Security concerns and a fear of relinquishing control of data and applications are still holding back adoption of cloud technologies in the enterprise. The interconnectedness of our web identities, and especially our reliance on email as a primary authentication provider, limits the level of security possible for web-based software today. We saw an example of this with Twitter’s leaks from Google Docs. But traditional IT has never been fully secure either, and Cloud IT providers have a number of mechanisms at their disposal to improve lock-down procedures on all fronts – plus, their business survival hinges on reliability and security. Between two-factor authentication, centralized network and hardware security, and other standards now being implemented by cloud providers, I think we’ll see the Cloud as being more secure in aggregate than traditional IT.

    Vendors of cloud-based services are aggressively tackling security concerns as a final hurdle, and thanks to maturing platforms, a new generation of knowledge workers and compelling pricing, the Tornado is already gathering momentum. Many concede that the Cloud is indeed coming to business, but see it as a distant solution, perhaps five or ten years off. But the Tornado-like transformation of Enterprise IT will soon be upon us. And once adopted, the Cloud is inherently scalable. Internal infrastructure can take months to set up, but cloud solutions can be online within hours. Traditional platforms require ongoing maintenance and tedious administration and training, but web-based platforms can (and should!) be as end-user friendly as their consumer-focused counterparts. And because cloud-based platforms can be woven together, it’s no longer about forcing your business to fit a one-sized-fits-all solution, but rather designing a solution to fit your business.

    Most businesses have spent the past few years in survival mode, trying to minimize losses and weather the recession. The coming Tornado will be game-changing for those who dive in early, and devastating for companies that continue to resist. Once the Cloud tips for enterprise IT, the whirlwind of adoption will be impressive. We should see major surges of implementation in 2010, with the Tornado in full force in 2011. And unlike the storm Geoffrey Moore detailed in the 1990s, the drivers of this fast-approaching disruption won’t be the behemoths Oracle, Microsoft, Lotus and Sun. They’re too bogged down by rigid ecosystems and product upgrade commitments. Rather, it’s a new generation of cutting-edge, nimble software companies that are disrupting the current order and leading the charge into the storm. A storm that is bringing unprecedented change to IT and competitive advantage to early adopters, ultimately redefining the role of Enterprise IT itself.

    Crunch Network: CrunchGear drool over the sexiest new gadgets and hardware.


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  • Massive 4TB Buffalo TeraStation WSS NAS Wears Equally Massive Price Tag [Storage]

    Hey storage fiends? The 4TB WSS NAS monster from Buffalo just jumped the Pacific and made its way Stateside. The smokey smell is your credit card.

    At $2,000, the 4TB version may be a bit steep for some, and the 2TB version for $1,600 ain’t much cheaper. But that’s still a lot of storage.

    For comparison’s sake, one of this unit’s predecessors, a 3TB beast launched in 2007, was $2183. One extra terabyte, just $183. Now, what to fill it with… [PR Newswire via Engadget]







  • Monster debuts world’s fastest HDMI cable and 3.5mm superthin cable

    The new Monster SuperThin Cables for HDMI feature a built-in LED indicator that instantly ...

    Monster announced two additions to its cable products and a new home networking solution at CES this week. On the cable front, the “future ready” M Series M2000 Hyper-Speed Cable for HDMI is the world’s fastest at a blistering 21 Gigabits per second, while the near invisible 3.5mm SuperThin Cable for Mini HDMI has been specifically designed for use with the latest HDMI enabled digital cameras and camcorders. The Powernet 1G with PowerLine Communication (PLC) technology
    instantly turns a home’s electrical wiring system into a high speed Ethernet network…

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  • Intelligent sport: BREAKAWAY Game revealed at 2010 FIRST Robotics Competition Kickoff

    Intelligent sport: BREAKAWAY Game revealed at 2010 FIRST Robotics Competition Kickoff

    FIRST (For Inspiration and Recognition of Science and Technology), a not-for-profit organization founded by inventor Dean Kamen to inspire young people’s interest and participation in science and technology, launched its nineteenth FIRST Robotics Competition (FRC) season today with the Kickoff of a new robotics game called “BREAKAWAY”. “FIRST is about giving kids the opportunity to build skill sets like analytical thinking to then develop what they may or may not use to build a robot; but they might use these skills to become a scientist, engineer, or inventor,” said Dean Kamen, FIRST Founder, as he explained how what students learn from FIRST is very different from other sports. “Ten years from today, one of these students is going to be out in the world having done something extraordinary for a major, global problem.” FIRST sees informed thinking, creative analysis, and Gracious Professionalism™ as the keys to changing society…

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  • “The Jay Leno Show” In Primetime Cancelled

    After just four months on the air, Leno’s primetime experiment has come to an end. The Jay Leno Show is officially leaving its 10 PM time slot on February 12, NBC Universal Television Entertainment Chairman Jeff Gaspin confirmed on Sunday morning.

    NBC said on Sunday that it was abandoning its cost-cutting prime time experiment with talk show host Jay Leno, and “going back to basics.” The NBC will drop its low-rated Leno next month, but sto keep both Leno and his Tonight Show successor Conan O’Brien on its late-night roster.

    “I can confirm what many of you are reporting, starting February 12, ‘The Jay Leno Show’ will no longer air at 10 PM,” Gaspin told reporters at NBC’s Television Critics Association session in Pasadena.

    Gaspin confirmed the network wants to make Leno shorter and air it at 11:35 PM, with The Tonight Show With Conan O’Brien at 12:05 AM and Late Night With Jimmy Fallon at 1:05 AM. But the deal is not done.

    “As much as I’d like to tell you we have a done deal, that’s not true. The talks are still ongoing,” he explained. “My goal right now is to keep Jay, Conan and Jimmy as part of our late-night lineup. As much as I’d like to tell you we have a done deal, we know that’s not true.”

    Gaspin said the network had come under pressure from its local affiliates who complained audiences had dropped for their lucrative late news broadcasts because of the poor audiences for “The Jay Leno Show

    He added, “Both Jay and Conan and Jimmy were incredibly gracious and professional and they all said they understood the situation that I was in. Beyond that was a private conversation.”

    Gaspin told reporters that the talk show hosts “have the weekend to think about” the proposed change before talks resume on Monday.

  • Hands-on with Microvision’s pico projector-equipped gun controller

    You remember a few months ago there was a video going around of this thing, and I called it out for being derivative of the Redneck Techie’s Game Gun? Well, that criticism still stands, but after testing this controller out, I have to say that whether it’s the only game gun on the market or not, this thing is awesome.

    IMG_0192

    Basically what you’ve got is a gun-shaped controller with a lightweight, laser-based projector (a modified version of their SHOWWX) mounted on top, which uses a mirror vibrating harmonically and a few lasers to create an 848×480 image that’s always in focus. That’s key: there’s no focus at all, no matter what. The unit itself is about iPhone-sized:

    IMG_0197

    The gun is equipped with motion detectors that let you go as far as you want left, right, up, or down. Another version has tilt as well, which I found would be very handy in FPSes with lean controls. There’s a d-pad in the front of the gun and a few buttons, one of which locks the viewpoint so you can move the gun without moving the camera in-game. This is for when you reach the edge of your room or screen and need to look further: you hit the button, drag back to the middle of the screen, and again you have space to move around.

    Basically, it’s all in the video, though of course you can’t see what I’m doing because it was pitch dark and the camera wouldn’t pick up the image in the light. Brightness wasn’t a problem; the image was good, but you will want to be in a dark or semi-dark area to use it.

    IMG_0191

    The main thing that impressed me was that there was absolutely no lag between my movements and the display. To be clear: not “very little lag” as even the next-generation motion controllers have, but no lag at all. It really helped with the immersive feel to not feel that the game was “catching up” to my movements. Microvision told me that part of this was the projector, part of it was the way they’d set it up, but at any rate there was another benefit of the laser projection: quick movements won’t blur or separate the colors, since each frame is rendered almost instantaneously. Add that to the always-in-focus aspect and you’ve got a pretty killer setup.

    IMG_0202Of course, this was all pre-production equipment and so on, so we can actually expect things to be a little better (the wireless version, for instance, still had lag, which they assured me will be mostly eliminated). Oh, and the wireless version uses “clips” as batteries. How cool is that? Ammo!

    Man, I’ve gone on a bit here. But really, this thing was extremely cool. Having to actually look up with the gun, for instance, and have things above you actually be above you, was awesome. My reservations, of course, remain: not many people have a room well-suited to this kind of controller, but many people do have small rooms that will probably do well enough. I got a great experience on a hastily-erected sheet hung in the corner of a meeting room.

    But my skepticism has been conquered. This type of controller is going to be a lot of fun to use, and I hope Microvision gets their due, since they seem to have it pretty well together ahead of the others.


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  • SAN JUAN | HATO REY | Uruguay 268 | 13p

    URUGUAY 268
    San Juan

    Link: http://rsvp-architects.com/

    Edificio de oficinas de 60,000 p/c a ser ubicado en la Calle Uruguay. El mismo contara con 7 pisos para estacionamiento y 6 pisos de oficinas.

    Renders:

  • Gereformeerde kerk, Andijk

    De meeste West-Friese torens zijn oude, gotische kolossen, maar deze toren is juist modern en vernieuwend.

    Hoogte toren: 45 meter
    Hoogte schip: 23 meter

    Architect: Egbert Reitsma
    Bouw: 1929
    In gebruik: 1930
    Stijl: expressionisme / Amsterdamse School
    Functie: kerk

    Bijzonderheden: Reitsma beschouwde deze kerk als zijn beste gebouw.

    Bijnaam: "Gereformeerde Kathedraal"

  • RCA Airnergy Charges Gadgets with Nothing But Wifi Signals [Chargers]

    Forget PowerMats and wireless charging and the like, because the Airnergy wi-fi signal harvester is my new front runner for the future of gadget charging.

    It’s not exactly new tech, as ohGizmo notes, but it’s the first application that’s of any real use to consumers. Put simply, Airnergy takes the energy created by wi-fi signals and stores it in a rechargeable battery. At CES, the device’s battery, which I believe was precharged with Wi-Fi power, was able to charge a BlackBerry from 30% power to full power in about 90 minutes.

    Pretty handy, and supposedly available this summer for $40. Not too shabby, and very appealing considering how ubiquitous wi-fi hotspots are these days. Very simple, somewhat cheap and incredibly useful if it works are advertised—by far one of the coolest things I’ve seen come out of CES this year. [OhGizmo]







  • 120 Collins Street

    Also known as Bluescope Steel Centre
    City:Melbourne

    Basic Facts:

    Year: 1991
    Height: 265 metres
    Floors: 52
    Architect: Daryl Jackson Pty Ltd
    Use: Office

    Key Facts:
    Sourced from Emporis.com

    *The tower at the top is designed around an open tubular structure on an 8×8 metre square base, and tapers to the tip of the spire from the fourth platform upwards.
    *Two satellite dishes are mounted on the lower platform, each 6.8 metres in diameter. The middle platforms are structurally designed to support eight 2-meter microwave dishes, and the highest platform is capable of holding assorted communication equipment.
    *Including the spire, 120 Collins Street was Australia’s tallest building when it was completed.
    *The building is topped by a 43-meter communications tower and decorative spire.

  • Top 10 YouTube Videos of All Time

    YouTube has come to define the era of online video, so let’s take a look at their most popular videos of all time. We first did this list in August 2007, at which point Evolution of Dance by comedian Judson Laipply was number 1 with nearly 56 million views. The next update was September 2008, when Avril Lavigne’s Girlfriend pop music video was number 1 with 103 million page views (although commenters argued it may have gamed the system).

    How is Evolution of Dance doing now, given the influx of pop music and movie videos into YouTube? Not to mention all of those goofy comedic routines by teenagers and cutesy baby or animal videos. Let’s check out the top YouTube videos of all time, as it stands today…

    Sponsor

    1. Hari’s comedy act; 186,361,277 views

    Note: Some people claim that this video got to number 1 due to a hack. See this video response, although it contains no strong evidence and is also racially offensive at the end.

    2. Charlie bit my finger – again !; 148,757,751 views

    3. Evolution of Dance; 134,412,139 views

    4. Miley Cyrus – 7 Things – Official Music Video (HQ); 108,577,069 views

    5. Jeff Dunham – Achmed the Dead Terrorist; 104,013,553 views

    6. Hahaha – Small daring boy; 103,262,937 views

    7. Lo que tú Quieras Oír; 99,291,111 views

    8. Pitbull – I Know You Want Me (Calle Ocho); 92,408,735 views

    9. Susan Boyle – Singer – Britains Got Talent 2009; 85,126,780 views

    Note: This video has been labeled "Embedding disabled by request" on YouTube, but we’ve embedded it below via Dailymotion:

    10. Timbaland – Apologize (feat. One Republic); 81,299,096 views

    Discuss


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  • Spy Shots: Mystery small Cadillac spotted – ATS or Converj?

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    A previously unseen prototype has been spotted wearing surprisingly light camouflage. Given the visible details at the back of the car, this appears to quite clearly be a Cadillac of some sort, as the vertical taillamps and the horizontal spoiler/high-mounted stop lamp are dead giveaways. The confusion lies with the rest of the car. While Burlapp Cars is speculating that this may be a prototype of the upcoming ATS that will slot in below the CTS, we have our doubts. The styling buck we saw at GM’s design center last summer was a notchback two-door, and we would expect a four-door sedan to follow a similar layout.

    A more likely scenario is that this is a prototype of a four-door Converj. The Chevrolet Volt-based Converj appeared at last year’s Detroit Auto Show as a two-door coupe with a similar profile to this car. The car in the photos appears to offer similar proportions to the Volt.

    It’s certainly possible that Cadillac has shifted design directions for the ATS to go with this fastback look. It’s also possible that Cadillac is developing a five-door hatch based on the ATS for the European market to go up against the Audi A5 Sportback and the Gran Turismo version of the next generation BMW 3 series that was recently spotted testing. Thanks to Ed for the tip!

    [Source: Burlapp Cars]

    Spy Shots: Mystery small Cadillac spotted – ATS or Converj? originally appeared on Autoblog on Sun, 10 Jan 2010 15:07:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • ioSafe Solo SSD plays with fire, gravity, and the pathway of a tractor

    It’s an inevitability, when a product claims to withstand Kryptonian strength, someone out there’s gonna phone up the son of Jor-El himself for a trial run. Today’s entrant is ioSafe’s Solo SSD, which Extreme Tech took for a few rounds to determine its actual survivability. Spoiler alert: the SSD drive is still functional in the end, and it’s really none too surprising when you realize the test site is run by ioSafe itself — who else would have such an appropriate location handy? Still, the journey is what’s interesting here, and there’s plenty of pictures of incineration, falling, and drowning here — and even a video of an intimate encounter with a tractor tread. Jigsaw would be proud. Video after the break.

    Continue reading ioSafe Solo SSD plays with fire, gravity, and the pathway of a tractor

    ioSafe Solo SSD plays with fire, gravity, and the pathway of a tractor originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 10 Jan 2010 15:19:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Engadget Podcast 179: CES 2010 Final Goodbye – 01.10.2010

    Goodnight CES! You were cool and had a lot of great technologies this year.

    Hosts: Joshua Topolsky, Nilay Patel, Paul Miller
    Producer: Trent Wolbe
    Song: See You Again [Maximum FX Crushed + Screwed Mode]

    Hear the podcast

    04:12 – Inbrics M1 is the thinnest Android slider we’ve seen, probably everything we ever wanted
    04:29 – LG GW990 hands-on video
    06:50 – 3D @ CES
    14:25 – RED Scarlet and Bomb EVF surprise hands-on!
    20:05 – Lenovo Skylight hands-on and impressions (video)
    20:20 – Intel
    22:00 – E-ink
    22:55 – Chances of Netflix on Nintendo ‘excellent,’ says Netflix CEO
    23:05 – Andy Rubin on multitouch in Android: ‘I personally don’t like two-handed operations’
    23:17 – Boxee
    24:10 – Pixel Qi: The e-Reader story of CES 2010
    33:35 – The Android Army is Rising
    34:05 – Synaptics Fuse concept hands-on


    Subscribe to the podcast

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    Download the podcast

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    Contact the podcast

    1-888-ENGADGET or podcast (at) engadget (dot) com.

    Twitter: @joshuatopolsky @futurepaul @reckless @engadget

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    Engadget Podcast 179: CES 2010 Final Goodbye – 01.10.2010 originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 10 Jan 2010 15:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Mexico City – Thrue the lens of my mobile cam

    Hello there…

    In this thread I have been thinking of collecting some of the fotos from My Mexico city trips. I have been there several times and its one of my favorite cities. 🙂

    Like all big cities there are positive and negative things. I will do my best to show Mexico city here in the best possible way. All of the pictures are taken by myself with my Sony Ericsson mobilphone. So dont expect ultra high quality pictures.

    I will start with pictures in the historic center of the city and then slowly circle around further out.

    So enjoy….. 🙂

    First up is Zocalo square. Located on top of what used to be the ancient city of Tenochtitlan.
    At the moment on this picture there was alot of christmas festivities going on.

    And on this foto from last year you can see the zocalo square with thousands of people standing in line to enter what I believe was a temporary museum.

    The square and cathedral.

    Parts of the cathedral. Beautiful on the inside and outside.

    One more with the cathedral.

    The national palace next to the Zocalo square is huge. This is the south fasade of the palace complex.

    Inside the national palace

    The historic center is a very colorful and lively place.

    On car free days, people takes over the streets.

    The historic center is also a place to find statues like this.

    Like mentioned earlier. The historic center of Mexico city is built on top of what used to be Tenochtitlan. Some remains are still here. Like the ruins of Templo mayor.

    Here its possible to see architecture from to compleate different eras and two different civilizations.

    I recommend the Templo Mayor museum that is located right next to the ruins. There you can see objects archeologists have found at the Templo Mayor. Also a big model of what the city once looked like.

    Lovely architecture is to be find everywhere in this part of the city.

    That´s it for now. More is coming very soon. 🙂

  • The “Human Right” of Free Trade

    From Jeff Jacoby of the Boston Globe:

    Free trade isn’t a battle that countries (or states) win or lose. It is a human right – the liberty to engage in voluntary transactions that leave both participants better off. If John wants to sell something that Mary wants to buy, it should make no difference to the lawfulness of their exchange whether they are residents of different neighborhoods, different states, or different nations.

    Compare this with the Appellate Body's recent statements in China – Publications on the "right to regulate trade":

    221. Thus, our analysis so far suggests that the phrase "China's right to regulate trade" is a reference to China's power to subject international commerce to regulation. As explained above, this power may not be impaired by China's obligation to grant the right to trade, provided that China regulates trade "in a manner consistent with the WTO Agreement".

    222. We read the phrase "in a manner consistent with the WTO Agreement" as referring to the WTO Agreement as a whole, including its Annexes. We note, in this respect, that we see the "right to regulate", in the abstract, as an inherent power enjoyed by a Member's government, rather than a right bestowed by international treaties such as the WTO Agreement. With respect to trade, the WTO Agreement and its Annexes instead operate to, among other things, discipline the exercise of each Member's inherent power to regulate by requiring WTO Members to comply with the obligations that they have assumed thereunder. When what is being regulated is trade, then the reference in the introductory clause to "consistent with the WTO Agreement" constrains the exercise of that regulatory power such that China's regulatory measures must be shown to conform to WTO disciplines.