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  • CES Highlights: New Mobile Concepts and More

    As day two of CES unfolds, lots of innovative new products and initiatives are showing up, including as-yet-unseen concepts for netbooks and mobile displays, numerous type of tablets and more. Here are some of the most notable debuts.

    Lenovo and others are demoing portable computers equipped with new PixelQi display technology.  These LCD displays operate in two modes — a normal color mode like most laptop displays and a non-backlit mode that allows viewing in bright light. Once the backlight is turned off the display is viewed in a black-and-white mode like that used in traditional e-ink readers.

    Yahoo has announced that it’s releasing a kit to allow developers to create their own TV widgets. It’s aiming to put “ConnectedTV” widgets on living room media devices, Blu-ray players, and cable and IPTV set-top boxes.

    Rovi (formerly Macrovision) arrived at CES this week armed with its new TotalGuide digital programming guide (formerly “Liquid”) and a slew of new content partners, hoping to win over the hearts and minds of CE manufacturers looking for a way to integrate traditional TV content alongside broadband video. Check out NewTeeVee’s take.

    ASUS has debuted a number of new notebooks and netbooks. Its EEE PC Seashell KR Collection features glitzy designs done in collaboration with designer Karim Rashid. The pink-and-black systems run Intel N450 processors, are 802.11n-ready, and have up to 250GB hard drives, but it looks like the cases are the real selling points. ASUS also showed off a concept netbook that unfolds into a big-screen tablet, and there were lots of other interesting portable computers shown.

    Meanwhile MSI is demoing a dual-screen netbook prototype with touchscreen features and no physical keyboard. The 10-inch screens are capable of 1024 x 600 resolution, and a displayed keyboard provides tactile feedback as you type on it.

    Ford’s new MyTouch platform, which will appear in the 2011 Ford Edge, puts an 8-inch touch-screen in the center of a dashboard. It provides for navigation and climate controls and more. You can also plug in a 3G modem and connect to the Internet. GigaOM Pro (subscription req’d) also has an analysis of Ford Sync, a new communication and entertainment platform for cars that responds to voice commands.

    Dell has showed off its first-ever tablet, based on the Android OS, with a 5-inch screen. It joins numerous other tablets, including an HP-branded one that Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer displayed during his keynote, and another Android-based tablet, with a 7-inch screen, from Motorola.

    And Intel CEO Paul Otellini announced last night that the company is bringing the Moblin mobile Linux operating system and the Moorestown chip to smartphones. He showed the LG GW990 phone running both and performing complex multitasked chores. LG and Sprint also unveiled new Lotus Elite and Rumor Touch smartphones. The Lotus Elite can play voice mail messages without the user having to open up the phone.

    MSI netbook image courtesy of Gizmodo.

  • CES 2010: Philips’ DirectLife Personalized Fitness Program

    Picture 1Think of this as your own personal trainer that you keep in your pocket. DirectLifeis a personalized fitness program that is meant to create awareness of your activity levels and help you set and attain goals. It is a wearable monitor that records your daily movements and then transfers that information to a website and emails you summaries of your progress.

    You are also afforded access to an online professional coach and you can choose to track yourself amongst your family and friends. You will have a personal webpage with your stats, tips and activity ideas, personalized activity plan, with realistic goals, and weekly feedback summaries by e-mail with motivational tips. The approach DirectLife takes is unique because it works to change habits in your daily routine. It focuses on making everyday life more active, rather than expecting people to have dedicated times at which they work out, play sports or exercise. Does Wii Fitness count? The site recommends companies to use this as a means to “encourage” employees to be healthy and thus lower insurance costs. That’s just a little too 1984 for my taste. The DirectLife website offers more information.

     CES 2010: Philips DirectLife Personalized Fitness Program


  • Is the Obama administration about to eat the foodies’ lunch?

    by David Gumpert

    These are heady times for foodies—you know, the people who love
    farmers markets and community supported agriculture (CSAs), and hate
    Big Ag. They’ve turned the documentary movies “Food Inc.” and “Fresh!”
    into big hits. And they’ve turned “Slow food” into a generic term
    (there actually is an organization   by that name that boasts more than 100,000 members in 132 countries).

    A seeming army of foodie bloggers (of which I am one) sees the hand
    of Big Ag’s pesticides and feedlot practices (Monsanto, Con Ag, Tyson,
    etc.) in the explosive growth of chronic disease, and genetically
    modified food. It’s a neat good-guy/bad-guy scenario, with only one
    wild card: Is the U.S. government with or against the foodies?

    The movement is about more than symbolism. After years of decline during the last century, the number of small farms (those
    with less than $250,000 annual sales) increased about one percent
    between 2002 and 2007. Many of these farms have adopted innovations in
    farming practices popularized by farmers like Eliot Coleman and Joel
    Salatin—using compost and seaweed rather than commercial fertilizers
    to build up soil, putting chickens onto pasture so they eat bugs and
    grass, using pigs as low-maintenance rototillers, and substituting
    mineralization and homeopathic programs for antibiotics and
    vaccinations to improve animal health.

    Increasingly, the heroes in this ongoing food drama are President
    and Michelle Obama, along with the president’s appointees at the U.S.
    Department of Agriculture and the Food and Drug Administration.
    Michelle Obama has received much acclaim for planting an organic
    vegetable garden on the White House lawn. A popular blog, Obama
    Foodorama, even chronicles the Obamas’ food and eating experiences,
    including menus at state dinners, and Michelle Obama’s guest appearance
    on Sesame Street, promoting fresh vegetables.

    Subordinates are trying to get with the program. Over the summer,
    the U.S. Department of Agriculture set up a farmers market in a parking
    lot outside its massive Washington headquarters. And to the accolades
    of foodie bloggers everywhere, it launched an initiative, “Know Your
    Farmer, Know Your Food,” to encourage expansion of the local food
    boomlet.

    It’s tempting to view all these developments as part of a shift in
    long-time official priorities, to encourage small farms practicing
    sustainability, at the expense of Big Ag. Unfortunately, this view is
    more mirage than reality.

    In a classic example of the government speaking out of both sides of
    its mouth, the Obama administration is actively supporting another
    movement—one that really does favor Big Ag at the expense of the
    budding local food movement. It’s the Congressional push for sweeping
    food safety legislation, which has passed the U.S. House, and is
    pending a vote by the full Senate. It’s overlooked by the foodies
    because it’s endorsed by a wide range of consumer organizations, and
    besides, who wouldn’t want to counter the high profile cases of serious
    illness, and even a number of deaths, from contaminated spinach,
    hamburger, peppers, and peanut butter, among others, over the last
    three years?

    But in their 119-page House and 133-page Senate versions, these
    bills do much more than increase the FDA’s army of food inspectors.
    They take a sledgehammer to a problem that may well benefit more from
    highly targeted, and less invasive approaches. Consider:

    Both
    bills require all food producers, including even the smallest makers of
    specialized cheeses and jams, to put together highly detailed
    production plans (known as HACCP plans, for Hazard Analysis and
    Critical Control Points), at a cost of many thousands of dollars
    requiring dozens and sometimes even hundreds of hours of specialized
    input designed to identify potential “hazards” in the food production
    process; this despite the fact that nearly all cases of food-borne
    illness have come from products made and distributed by mid-size and
    large concerns.

    Moreover, it allows FDA inspectors complete discretion in approving
    or disapproving such plans. Working within such an arbitrary system
    isn’t a big problem for multimillion dollar corporations, which can
    afford fines of possibly $10,000 a day (under the House legislation)
    and expensive consultants to work through any problems.

    It was a USDA requirement in the late 1990s that slaughterhouses
    have HACCP plans that led to the demise of hundreds of small local and
    regional slaughterhouses. Today’s small farms raising cattle and pigs
    bear a heavy burden as a result—they must often schedule slaughtering
    months in advance and send their animals hundreds of miles away, only
    to be shipped back for local distribution, adding substantial costs and
    energy consumption.

    The pending legislation actually thrusts not only the federal
    government, but also possibly the United Nations, right into the middle
    of the food production process currently experiencing so much
    innovation in the U.S. The Senate bill requires within one year the
    development of “updated good agricultural practices”—a seemingly benign
    term that is used by the Farming and Agricultural Organization of the
    United Nations (GAP, in its lingo) to describe its establishment of
    standards covering use of fertilizers, crop rotation, animal grazing
    practices, and other such fundamentals of farming. The U.N. organization
    has been active working with farmers in places like Egypt, Uganda,
    Zambia, South Africa, and Burkina Faso.

    How will the U.N.’s standards mesh with those of Eliot Coleman, Joel
    Salatin, and other American farming innovators developing sustainable
    techniques for rejuvenating soil or aging cheeses or bringing back old
    varieties of vegetables and fruits? The Farm-to-Consumer Legal Defense
    Fund worries that the FDA “will adopt regulations that treat small
    farms growing a diversity of crops organically (whether certified or
    not) the same as a facility growing thousands of acres of a single crop
    conventionally.” Farms that fail to measure up—perhaps fail to follow
    government standards for making compost or for crop rotation—would have
    their products considered “adulterated,” according to the FTCLDF, and
    thus be subject to huge fines.

    In allowing for the establishment of “science-based minimum
    standards for the safe production and harvesting of those types of
    fruits and vegetables that are raw agricultural commodities,” the
    Senate bill provides an opening for the FDA to embark on a big foodie
    no-no: the irradiation of leafy green vegetables. The FDA gave
    irradiation its stamp of approval last year.

    On and on it goes. The legislation thrusts the FDA, which has been
    limited to regulating food and drugs involved in interstate commerce,
    into the intrastate sphere, allowing it to regulate businesses that are
    truly local. “The bottom line is that local jam-makers, cheese-makers,
    and bread-makers have to register with the FDA, and if (the Senate
    bill) passes, they will buried in federal red tape,” says Judith
    McGeary, head of the Farm and Ranch Freedom Alliance, and a lawyer.

    The real impact of the pending food legislation is difficult to
    fully gauge, partly because the language in the two bills is in many
    places vague and obtuse. For example, the distinction between farmers
    and food producers is up for grabs. “If a farm processes food—which
    could be as simple as sun drying tomatoes or making jams from their own
    fruits—it will be treated as a processor” under the Senate bill, says
    McGeary.

    As admirable as this legislative push is for trying to fix flaws in
    existing food safety regulations, and thus reduce serious outbreaks of
    illness, it is equally onerous for going way beyond the business of
    safety. The legislation would do better to focus on identifying and
    going after repeat offenders and large producers that are the most
    frequent food-borne-illness culprits rather than placing unreasonable
    burdens on the budding local-food movement. Otherwise, there could well
    be many fewer smaller farms and food producers turning out the
    locally-produced items so prized by foodies.

    David E. Gumpert writes about the business of food and health at his blog . He is the author of the new book, The Raw Milk Revolution: Behind America’s Emerging Battle Over Food Rights.

    Related Links:

    Scientists confirm link between BPA and heart disease in humans

    FDA’s food safety blogger doesn’t think meat safety is a problem

    Climate success in 2009 should inspire the new year






  • All The Diabetics

    This is … well it’s not my ideal form of music, but it’s fun.

    YouTube – All the Diabetics

  • Times Square Attacked By Fart Machine [Farts]

    Fart machines have struck again! Juvenile? Yes…but you can’t help but laugh. Everyone seems to agree that the best reaction comes about 42 seconds in. [Digg]







  • Mansión “San Rafael” – Punta Del Este

    Mansión "San Rafael" – Punta Del Este







    Precio: us$ 1.050.000
    🙂
  • New Handheld That IS at CES: Fujitsu UH900

    Not all new products are debuting at the CES this week, as is the case with the new Fujitsu Lifebook UH900. This little handheld clamshell has a 5.6-inch screen and runs Windows 7. The little computer has Atom inside along with a 62 GB SSD to keep things hopping.

    UPDATE: I finally found this little jewel in stealth mode at the Microsoft booth. I couldn’t play with it very much but got a good photo of it below. I’m certainly going to try and track down a hands-on session with this little clamshell

    The little beast only weighs 1.1 pounds, and the display is actually multitouch capable. This could be one of the smallest “slates” capable of multitouch. The little Lifebook will be sold by Fujitsu in Asia for $999. It’s not cheap but it does pack a wallop.

    (via Akihabara News)

  • New Villain in the Obesity Epidemic: Mean Gym Teachers | Discoblog

    gym-teacherMy high school physical education teacher had a nickname for everyone. (Mine was “Little One” because I was the runt of the class. Better than “Chicken Bones,” as one scrawny boy was dubbed.) It didn’t bother me, but according to research recently published in Qualitative Research in Sport and Exercise, I dodged a bullet–or maybe the dodgeball.

    Billy Strean, a professor at the University of Alberta’s Faculty of Physical Education and Recreation, says “a negative lifelong attitude towards physical activity can be determined by either a good or a bad experience, based on the personal characteristics of the coach or instructor. For example, negative experiences may come from a teacher who has low energy, is unfair and/or someone who embarrasses students.”

    One person in Strean’s study shared this: “I am a 51-year-old-woman whose childhood experiences with sports, particularly as handled in school, were so negative that even as I write this my hands are sweating and I feel on the verge of tears. I have never experienced the humiliation nor felt the antipathy toward any other aspect of life as I do toward sports.”

    To help combat the obesity epidemic and give people a healthier attitude towards exercise, Strean suggests coaches and teachers emphasize fun and, until kids are in their teens, consider not keeping scores.

    Not sure how my high school classmate “Ace” would have felt about that….

    Related Content:
    Discoblog: Musical, Fahrvergnügen-Inspired Staircase Makes Commuters Less Lazy
    80beats: Despite Exercise, Zero-G Makes Astronauts as Wimpy as 80-Year-Olds
    80beats: All Gain, No Pain: New Drugs Could Mimic the Effects of Exercise

    Image: iStockphoto


  • Has the Window Closed for Windows Mobile?

    Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer disappointed those looking for news about Windows Mobile at CES this week, leaving onlookers to speculate that the company will unveil version 7 of the aging operating system at Mobile World Congress next month in Barcelona, Spain. But I’m beginning to think that without a new operating system, it’s already too late for Redmond to get back in the smartphone game.

    Microsoft’s winnowing importance in mobile is well documented, of course. WinMo has lost nearly a third of its market share over the last year, according to recent figures from Gartner, and AdMob traffic indicates that traffic from the OS on the wireless web has dropped off 70 percent during that time. Meanwhile, the iPhone continues to gain traction worldwide, Research In Motion is seeing strong demand for the BlackBerry and Google has built on Android’s substantial momentum with its own branded handset (which, notably, is manufactured by HTC — a company whose focus is clearly shifting from Redmond to Mountain View). To make things worse, Palm will soon make its webOS-based handsets available through both AT&T and Verizon Wireless.

    WinMo 6.5 drew scathing reviews following its October launch, making it clear that the OS desperately a complete overhaul. But the mobile world has moved very quickly in the last year, and WinMo may simply be outdated beyond repair. Microsoft might regain its relevance in mobile with a brand new OS — I think Palm’s webOS is a great fit (GigaOM Pro, sub. required) — but anything less is likely to seal the company’s fate as a niche enterprise player. And that’s a lonely place to be in a smartphone space that is now all about the consumer.

    Image courtesy of Flickr user Tijs Zwinkels.

  • Vancouver Train System To Charge Buskers Huge Fees To Play In Stations

    We were troubled last month by reports that SOCAN, a music collection society up in Canada, was looking to get buskers (street performers) to pay performance fees. Now more details are coming out on this story. It really involves TransLink, the Vancouver-area transit authority, and SOCAN, with SOCAN demanding a lot more money from TransLink. Apparently, TransLink quickly caved and agreed to a massive increase in fees, which it is immediately dumping on the buskers themselves — even though most “venues” cover any such fees themselves. It turns out that Buskers in TransLink stations already had to pay $75/year — but now if they want to play during the Olympics, that will be a separate $50 fee just for the Olympics, and the new annual fee will probably be around $300. For busking. I wonder what they want to charge you for humming or singing along?

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Interesting

    There is a hamburger place here (Snuffers) that has the BEST cheesse french fries you have ever eaten (bummer now), but they also make very good HUGE hamburgers. I went there for lunch a couple of times lately and ordered the Bacon Bleu Cheese burger with no bun with wonderful results. When the meal started my BG was 104, 1 hr PP it was 97, 2hr PP it was up to 101.

    The main lesson for me is to try new stuff and watch my meter. I can also eat 1/2 baked potato with a very small spike.

  • PUNTA DEL ESTE | Acapulco Beach | 4p | T/O

    Acapulco Beach
    DESCRIPCION:
    Apartamentos de 2 dormitorios en suite, toilete de visita, living comedor, terraza con parrillero individual, instalación para aire acondicionado, loza radiante en baños y en servicios. Servicios y amenities: Piscina cubierta, piscina exterior en cuarto piso con la mejor vista de Punta del Este, gimnasio, parrillero, salón de juegos para niños y adultos, home cinema, sauna seco y húmedo.

    Acapulco Beach es un edificio de 4 pisos, en un terreno de 2.914 m2 en el cual se construyen 4.000 m2. Se compone de 8 unidades por piso, con un total de 32 unidades.

    SERVICIOS:
    Piscina Cubierta
    Piscina Exterior en 4º. Piso con sol todo el dia y la mejor vista.
    Gimnasio
    Barrilleros
    Salón de juegos para niños y adultos
    Home cinema
    Sauna húmedo y sauna seco.





    Foto 2008

  • Promotion and Swearing in Ceremony

    podcast promotion ceremony

    Thursday January 7, 2010 – Stars and Bars are what were shining this afternoon as the new rank and file accepted their new positions as Assistant Chief, Deputy Chief, Commander and Captain of the Los Angeles Police Department.  The newly appointed command staff was sworn into their new assignments and proudly accepted their shining badges presented to them by Chief Charlie Beck.  Their friends and family joined them on stage to celebrate this very special occasion.

    Promotional_ceremony Chief Beck congratulated and individually introduced his new command staff with a heartfelt personal introduction stating, “Not only do I trust them, I put my faith in them, I am absolutely sure these are the right people.”

    The following command staff was promoted; Assistant Chief Sandy Jo MacArthur, Assistant Chief Michel Moore, Deputy Chief Debra McCarthy, Deputy Chief Patrick Gannon, Commander Blake Chow, Commander Michael Moriarty, Commander Robert Green, Captain Melissa Zak and Captain Gina Sanders.  The ceremony was held at the new Police Administration Building, Ronald F. Deaton Civic Auditorium.

  • Covered Bonds “Soar” and “Roar” in New Year

    CBI-logo-clips.jpg MJ-cbi.jpg

    By Covered Bond Investor™ Staff

    So far, 2010 is a happy new year for covered bonds, as financial news outlets are reporting with enthusiasm:

    • In a column titled “Covered Bonds Set to Roar?” Richard Kemmish of the Wall Street Journal wrote (Dec. 8): “If 2009 was the year of the European corporate bond market, perhaps 2010 will be the year of the European covered bond market.”

    • A news story from Dow Jones’ Mark Brown and Michael Wilson struck a similar note: “The market for covered bonds … is off to a roaring start in 2010.”

    • Meanwhile, the headline of a Bloomberg article by Sonja Cheung and Caroline Hyde trumpeted: “Covered Bond Sales Soar to 3-Month High, Lead European Issuance.”

    Bloomberg pegged covered bond sales so far this year [as of January 8] at €12 billion (more than USD $17 billion) – about 30 times the volume over the same period in 2009. READ MORE>>

    http://www.coveredbondinvestor.com/news/covered-bonds-soar-and-roar-new-year

  • Panasonic’s New Lumix Lineup: The Full Rundown []

    In case you missed it, we’ve got the full details on the the six new Lumix point-and-shoots Panasonic introduced at CES this week. Ultraslim, video, touchscreens, oh my!

    PANASONIC INTRODUCES LUMIX FH-SERIES DIGITAL CAMERAS, PACKED WITH WIDE-ANGLE LENSES AND POWERFUL ZOOMS

    Panasonic LUMIX FH20 Ideal for Sophisticated Users Looking for Compact Digital Camera Capable of HD-Quality Photos and Video & Powerful 8x Optical Zoom

    LAS VEGAS, NV (January 6, 2010) – Panasonic today introduced the new FH-Series to its 2010 line of LUMIX digital cameras, which includes the LUMIX DMC-FH20 (14.1-megapixels), LUMIX FH3 (14.1-megapixels) and LUMIX FH1 (12.1-megapixels). The LUMIX FH-Series are slim, pocketable models that pack a 28mm wide-angle lens with 8x optical zoom for the FH20 and 5x optical zoom for the FH3/FH1. All models can record High Definition video and thanks to iA (Intelligent Auto) – are extremely easy to use.

    “With the new Panasonic LUMIX FH-Series, consumers will be thrilled to see small, easy-to-use digital cameras that do not compromise quality or advanced features. Though there are similarities within the family, we expect slightly different users for each model. The step-up FH20 will be attractive for sophisticated digital camera users who want a longer zoom, perhaps to take photos of their kids playing sports,” said David Briganti, Senior Product Manager, Imaging, Panasonic Consumer Electronics Company. “Meanwhile, for the LUMIX FH3/1, we expect first-time buyers who may not be as concerned with a long zoom, but who still demand high performance and ease-of-use will be drawn to these models.”

    The LUMIX FH-Series features High Definition (HD) 720p motion jpeg video recording capabilities. By recording 1280 x 720p at a smooth 30 fps, in addition to WVGA (848 x 480) and normal VGA (640 x 480), the LUMIX FH-Series makes it easy to view videos on a PC or upload it seamlessly to YouTube*1 with the bundled PHOTOfunSTUDIO version 5.0 software. All models are compatible with Windows® 7*2 and can take HD-quality still photos that fill a 16:9 HDTV. Users with a Panasonic VIERA® HDTV can enjoy a slideshow of photos simply by inserting an SD Memory Card into the HDTV’s SD Memory Card Image Viewer slot.

    Panasonic’s popular iA mode, a suite of technologies that engage automatically – with no setting changes needed by the user – makes it easy for anyone to take beautiful photos. Panasonic iA includes the following: MEGA O.I.S. (Optical Image Stabilization) to help reduce blurry photos due to hand-shake; Intelligent ISO Control to help reduce blur when the subject is moving; Face Detection to ensure registered faces are captured in focus with appropriate exposure and unwanted red eyes are digitally corrected; and Intelligent Scene Selector which selects the best option from: Macro, Portrait, Scenery, Night Portrait, Night Scenery and newly-added Sunset. There is even a dedicated iA button, letting users engage easily with one click. The three models also have a 2.7″ 230,000-dot Intelligent LCD, meaning the LCD detects the lighting conditions and controls the brightness level in 11 fine steps, to display with the most appropriate setting.

    The Panasonic LUMIX FH-Series includes the Venus Engine IV image processor, which features advanced signal processing technology to produce a fast response time. The shutter release time lag on the FH20 and FH3 is approximately 0.006 second; and approximately 0.007 second for the FH1. The Auto Focus on the three models can lock on the subject in minimum 0.35 second*3.

    Other features of the Panasonic LUMIX FH-Series digital cameras include:

    * Quick Setting – Allows the users’ most frequently-used settings, such as O.I.S., consecutive shooting, Auto Focus Point, White Balance – to be easily accessed through the “Quick Menu” button. There’s no need to open several menu screens to adjust them – the user simply selects convenient icons displayed on the menu.
    * Scene Modes: Baby, Pet and Sports modes let the user choose the setting and the camera does the rest. Users can also record the name/birthday of a child or pet and embed the information in the photo and have it printed if desired.
    * Photo Frame: Put attractive borders around the photo and when printed, the photos look like postcards in picture frames.
    * My Scene – Lets the user customize specific Scene modes that they like best, so they can quickly and conveniently switch instantly to the mode
    * Macro Zoom – Pulls subjects even closer by using 3x digital zoom, and captures even more dramatic close-ups.
    * SDXC Computability – Compatible with SDXC Memory Cards, including Panasonic’s newly announced 48 GB*4 and 64 GB SDXC Memory Cards – to enable high capacity content storage and fast data transfer speeds.
    * Battery Life – The FH20 can take up to 300 images and the FH3/FH1 can take up to 310 images on a single battery charge*5.

    Pricing and availability for the Panasonic LUMIX FH20, LUMIX DMC-FH3 and LUMIX DMC-FH1 will be announced 30 days prior to shipping date. Encased in a brushed metal-finished panel, the FH20 will be available in silver, black, red and violet models. The LUMIX FH3 and FH1 will be available in silver and black.

    PANASONIC’S NEW LUMIX FP-SERIES DIGITAL CAMERAS FEATURE SLEEK DESIGN AND ULTRA-SLIM PROFILE FOR USERS WITH STYLE

    Panasonic LUMIX FP3 Digital Camera, Complete with Folded Optics Design, Features 3.0″ Touch-Screen LCD and Ultra-Slim Profile for Easy Carry

    LAS VEGAS, NV (January 6, 2010) – Panasonic today announces new LUMIX digital cameras for the 2010 line with the additions to the ultra-slim FP-Series, the LUMIX DMC-FP3 and FP1. Both FP-Series models have a 4x optical zoom with a folded optics design so the front has a flat and stylish design, featuring a newly-adopted lens cover that protects the lens, and also serves as the camera’s power switch. The Panasonic LUMIX FP3 also features an intuitive 3.0″ touch-screen LCD for an easy-to-use operation combined with buttons.

    The LUMIX FP3 (14.1-megapixel) features a 3.0″ touch-screen LCD, while the LUMIX FP1 has 12.1-megapixels and a 2.7″ 230,000-dot LCD. The newly adopted, 3.0-inch touch screen LCD on the LUMIX FP3 provides an intuitive control thanks to a hybrid operation combined with the four major operation buttons. The touch-screen operation is fluid and smooth – whether in record or playback mode. While recording, once the frame is composed, users can simply touch the area they want focused before pressing the shutter button. In playback mode, users can drag the image across the screen with their finger to browse the collection of photos, as though it is a page in a book. Both models include Intelligent LCD, which detects the lighting condition and controls the brightness level of the LCD in 11 fine steps, to offer a display with the most appropriate clarity in any situation.

    “Panasonic’s new LUMIX FP-Series models are designed to be sleek in appearance and easy-to-use, perfect for a user who is concerned with the look and style of their digital camera, but does not want to compromise performance,” said David Briganti, Senior Product Manager, Imaging, Panasonic Consumer Electronics Company. “Starting with how the camera is turned on – simply by sliding the lens cover, the FP-Series is innovative and uniquely designed. Add our Intelligent Auto Mode, making it easy for consumers to take High Definition-quality photos, plus an intuitive touch-screen, and we are confident the LUMIX FP3 will be a standout this year.”

    Panasonic’s popular iA (intelligent auto) mode, a suite of technologies that engage automatically – no setting changes needed by the user – makes it easy for anyone to take beautiful photos. The LUMIX FP3 and FP1 include iA with the following technologies: MEGA O.I.S. (Optical Image Stabilization) to help reduce blurry photos due to hand-shake; Intelligent ISO Control to help reduce blur when the subject is moving; Face Detection to ensure registered faces are captured in focus with appropriate exposure and unwanted red eyes are digitally corrected; and Intelligent Scene Selector which automatically selects the best option from six popular Scene modes: Macro, Portrait, Scenery, Night Portrait, Night Scenery and newly added Sunset. To make it even easier, the new FP-Series models feature the dedicated iA button, which lets the user engage iA easily with a click of the button.

    New to the FP-Series is High Definition (HD) video recording capability at 1280 x 720p at a smooth 30 fps, in addition to WVGA (848 x 480) and normal VGA (640 x 480). The FP-Series models are compatible with Windows® 7*. Also, the new FP-Series models include the Venus Engine IV processing engine, which supports a fast response time. The shutter release time lag is approximately 0.006 second for FP3 and 0.007 second for the FP1. With fast shutter speeds, the Panasonic FP-Series makes it easy to capture sudden, spur-of-the-moment photo opportunities. Both LUMIX FP-models also have a start-up time of approximately 0.97 second.

    Other features of the Panasonic LUMIX FP3 and FP1 include:

    · Quick Setting – Allows the users’ most frequently-used settings, such as O.I.S., consecutive shooting, Auto Focus Point, White Balance – to be easily accessed through the “Quick Menu” button. There’s no need to open several menu screens to adjust them – the user simply selects convenient icons displayed on the menu.
    · Scene Modes: Variety of options, such as Baby, Pet and Sports – lets the user set in this Mode and the camera does the rest. Users can also record the name/birthday of a child or pet and embed the information in the photo and have it printed if desired.
    · Photo Frame: Put attractive borders around the photo and when printed, the photos look like postcards in picture frames.
    · My Scene – Lets the user customize specific Scene modes that they like best, so they can quickly and conveniently switch instantly to the mode.
    · Macro Zoom – Pulls subjects even closer by using 3x digital zoom, and captures even more dramatic close-ups.
    · SDXC Computability – Compatible with SDXC Memory Cards, including Panasonic’s newly announced 64 GB** and 48 GB SDXC Memory Cards – to enable high capacity content storage and fast data transfer speeds.
    · Battery Life – Can take up to 300 images on a single battery charge***.

    Pricing and availability for the Panasonic LUMIX FP3 and FP1 will be announced 30 days prior to shipping date. Both models are built of solid, high-quality aluminum, and will be available in the following colors: silver, black and navy for the LUMIX FP3; silver, black, red, blue and pink for LUMIX FP1. For more information on these Panasonic LUMIX digital camera models, please visit www.panasonic.com/ces2010.

    PANASONIC’S NEW LUMIX DMC-F3 DIGITAL CAMERA DELIVERS ON STYLE AND CONVENIENCE FOR ENTRY-LEVEL USER

    New LUMIX F3 Digital Camera is Compact with 4x Optical Zoom and High Definition Video Recording Capabilities

    LAS VEGAS, NV (January 6, 2010) – Panasonic today introduces a new entry-level digital camera, the LUMIX DMC-F3, which has been designed with simplicity in mind, without overlooking the importance of style and performance. The 12.1-Megapixel LUMIX DMC-F3 has an impressive 4x optical zoom, considering its small size, as well as Panasonic’s shooting-assistant, Auto Scene Mode. The LUMIX F3 also records dynamic High Definition video in 1280 x 720p, at a smooth 30 fps, in addition to WVGA (848 x 480) and normal VGA (640 x 480). The LUMIX F3 is equipped with a 28mm wide-angle lens, a high-sensitivity CCD, and an Extra Optical Zoom function which extends zoom power to 7.8x, plus a 2.7″ 230,000-dot resolution LCD designed so the user can clearly see it while shooting still photos and videos.

    “The Panasonic LUMIX F3 was designed for the casual and frequent user who wants a digital camera that is not only small and stylish in design, but that has sophisticated features to help enrich the photo-taking experience,” said David Briganti, Senior Product Manager, Imaging, Panasonic Consumer Electronic Company. “With extended zoom and Auto Scene Mode, the Panasonic LUMIX F3 can take high-quality photos and videos, while still being easy-to-use and small enough to fit in your pocket.”

    Other features include, Auto Scene Mode, which when activated, includes the following three shooting-assist functions:

    · Intelligent ISO Control prevents the blurring of a moving subject by optimizing shutter speed and ISO settings to render sharp, clear images. On the LUMIX F3, unwanted red-eyes are digitally corrected and backlight compensation automatically activates.

    · Face Detection helps to clearly capture registered faces and focus on faces with the appropriate exposure. This is helpful when trying to focus on one person within a group.

    · Intelligent Scene Selector automatically selects one of six scene modes that best suits the shooting situation – Macro, Portrait, Scenery, Night Portrait, Night Scenery.

    Additionally, the Panasonic LUMIX F3 also has a Digital Image Stabilizer which helps suppress hand-shake and prevent blurry photos. The Panasonic LUMIX F3 has an auto power LCD function which detects light conditions and automatically boosts the LCD backlighting by a maximum of 40% when shooting outdoors to secure clarity and visibility of the screen. In addition to supporting conventional SD/SDHC Memory Cards, the LUMIX F3 is compatible with SDXC Memory Cards, including Panasonic’s newly announced 48 GB* and 64 GB SDXC Memory Cards – to enable high capacity content storage and fast data transfer speeds. The LUMIX F3 is compatible with Windows 7**.

    Pricing and availability for the Panasonic LUMIX DMC-F3 will be announced 30 days prior to shipping date. The Panasonic LUMIX F3 will come in silver and black models. For more information on these LUMIX models, please visit: www.panasonic.com/ces2010.







  • Cooperative Living in Connecticut

    Cooperative associations are not common in Connecticut, and the difference between condominiums and cooperatives escapes many.  Both are forms of living in a community, be it in apartment-style buildings, townhouse-style buildings, or some other form of construction.  Both can offer very similar benefits and privileges.  But the legal set-up of the associations and land which lay behind these developments is significantly different.  In this blog, we will discuss primarily cooperative living arrangements, also known as “co-op’s,” whose setup is governed primarily by Chapter 828 of the Connecticut General Statutes, also known as the Common Interest Ownership Act (“CIOA”).

    By its very nature, and contrary to the thinking of most, the individual units of a co-op are not real estate.  One corporation (or other legal entity), usually titled something like “XYZ Cooperative Association,” owns the land and all property upon it, including the individual units.  This is the only real estate that truly exists – the unit “owners” do not own any real estate.  There is then propriety leases signed between the unit owners and the association.  This is the way it was, at least, until CIOA.

    Not owning actual real estate has certain serious implications.  For example, ownership of the unit would not be recorded in the land records of your town (or county).  There would therefore be no way to record a lien against only one unit.  This means that, for instance, a loan could not be secured by a mortgage deed against only one unit.  To be clear, the association could still mortgage property and have liens filed against it, but the unit owners could not.  It also means that real estate taxes could not be levied against the property.

    CIOA changes some of this.  In exchange following certain formalities, which a good real estate attorney could handle, co-ops (and their individual unit owners) can now treat everything as individual real estate.  Transfers are now accomplished by deed, rather than simply corporate records.  Therefore mortgages and others liens can be recorded against the individual units.  But still, real estate taxes are levied against the corporation and not against the individual.  This means that your association fees still pay your taxes, and that you get no separate tax bill.

    In addition to the benefits inherent in organizing as a co-op rather than a condominium association, such as the bundling of taxes, co-ops are supposed to offer a form of living where the owners more closely work together.  Co-ops may bundle other fees, such as heat, sharing furnaces and the like, rather than requiring each other to buy and maintain their own furnace.

    In the end, it’s up to each individual association to decide both how to organize, and what to allow.  A co-op can act basically as a condominium association, or can be quite different.  There is a great deal of choice in the matter.

  • “Hannah Montana” Will End After Fourth Season

    Teen Queen Miley Cyrus is saying goodbye to the Disney Channel Original series that shot her to tween superstardom.

    The upcoming fourth season of Hannah Montana will be its last, The New York Post said Friday.

    “You never know in this business… but right now we’re scheduled to wrap [forever] after shooting this new batch of episodes,” Disney Channel Worldwide’s senior VP/programming Adam Bonnett tells The Post.

    Production on the fourth season is scheduled to begin Jan. 18 and end this summer.

    The plot of the final season will reportedly mirror Miley’s own life, as her character must decided if she is going to trade her secret double life as a pop star in for the life of a normal American teen.

    The network does not know how many episodes it will shoot or when it would wrap it’s season, but noted there are enough new episodes to air through 2011.


  • 10 High Protein Vegan Foods For Your Musc


    Are you vegan or vegetarian and looking to lose weight and sculpt your body without meat? Have you been told that it’s next to impossible to get enough protein while living the Vegetarian Lifestyle?

    If so, then keep reading as you are about to discover 10 high protein vegan foods that you can easily incorporate into your diet that will help in your quest to gain muscle.

    A Surprising High Protein Food

    Yes, You Get to Eat Pasta!

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    For great info on vegan vitamins, vegetarian supplements and nutrition, visit www.vegetarianvitaminsguide.com today!

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    10 High Protein Vegan Foods For Your Musc is a post from the Vegetarian Vitamins Guide blog where you can find suggestions and advice from vegetarians and vegans on vegetarian diets, supplements, vitamins and overall nutrition.

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  • Is It This Easy to Pull Straight Nude Pics From Airport Scanners? [NSFW] [Nsfw]

    The Drudge Report has an image of a woman from an airport scanner up right now. It’s scandalous enough as is, but it’s shockingly easy to make it look even more like a normal nude photograph.

    Reader Sigfried discovered that by simply inverting the image in Photoshop, you restore the photo to a more realistic tint. Of course, we’re not sure where this image came from or if it’s an accurate example of what these machines produce. But if so, let me just deliver a message to all you airport security workers out there: I just got out of a cold pool, I swear.