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  • Not by Fire but by Ice by Alan Caruba

    Article Tags: Alan Caruba

    Some say the world will end in fire;
    Some say in ice.
    From what I’ve tasted of desire I hold with those who favor fire.
    But if it had to perish twice, I think I know enough of hate
    To say that for destruction ice Is also great
    And would suffice.

    — Robert Frost, American Poet

    Considering the thousands of absurd claims made about the discredited fraud of “global warming”, a recent National Geographic News story, “North Magnetic Pole Moving East Due to Core Flux”, struck me as potentially far more significant.

    “Earth’s north magnetic pole is racing toward Russia at almost 40 miles a year due to magnetic changes in the planet’s core, new research says.” The article by Richard A. Lovett, noted that “The core is too deep for scientists to directly detect its magnetic field, but researchers can infer the field’s movements by tracking how Earth’s magnetic field has been changing at the surface and in space.”

    Source: factsnotfantasy.blogspot.com

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  • Palm Pre Plus and Pixi Plus Exclusive to Verizon

    I attended the Palm press event at the CES today and as expected Palm is set to roll out the refreshed versions of the Pre and the Pixi. It wasn’t that much a surprise that Verizon will be getting the Palm phones, but Palm has granted Big Red the two new models under exclusive contract. I’ll bet the folks at Sprint aren’t too happy after this announcement.

    The next generation Pre will be the Pre Plus and will get double the memory while losing the navigation button that wanted to be a trackball anyway. The Pre Plus will also ship with the Touchstone compatible back, making all new Pres work with the wireless charger out of the box. It was not made clear if the Pixi Plus will also include the Touchstone capability.

    The Pixi Plus remains largely the same, with the welcome addition of Wi-Fi bringing it more in line with the Pre Plus. Both new models will be available through Verizon on January 25th. Consumers who pick up one of the new Palm phones better pick up the monthly tethering option from Verizon, as Palm is including the new “Mobile Hotspot” feature on them. This option will let the phones tether to other devices to share the 3G connection, and like the MiFi with up to 5 devices at once.

    Palm will be rolling out the next major version of webOS in February. Version 1.4 will add video recording and editing to all Palm phones. The full version of Flash 10.1 will also be pushed out to webOS phones in February, making them the first smartphones to get full Flash.

    Gamers will be happy to hear Palm has deals with major game publishers, and has added development tools that allows using traditional program code in webOS. Need for Speed and the Sims 3 are available now, and they both looked pretty good in the demo shown at the event.

  • 3-D TV Will Kick Off With World Cup Match This Summer | 80beats

    3D-glassesAvatar’s success at the box office has 3-D technology on everybody’s minds these days. Now, television manufacturers are looking into bringing that same technology to your living room.

    Top TV makers including Sony Corp, Panasonic Corp, LC Electronics Inc and Samsung Electronics Co Ltd will feature 3D screen advances at the Consumer Electronics Show this week, hoping the new technology will be as big a boost for the industry as the transition to color TVs from black and white [Reuters]. A few 3-D sets are already on the market and retail for around $1,000 for a 42-inch screen (a 42-inch high-definition LCD television costs around $600).

    At a time when many households are finally ponying up the cash for an HD LCD TV, some investors are skeptical that people will be willing to turn right back around and buy a 3D television, especially since they require special glasses. Manufacturers are hopeful that consumers that have been slow to jump on the HDTV bandwagon will simply opt straight for the 3-D TV when they decide to upgrade. Market analysts think consumers will catch on as well. By 2014, 45% of all U.S. households will have a TV that can handle 3D, up from just 3% this year, research firm Futuresource Consulting forecasts [USA Today].

    One major hurdle for 3D TV is the lack of programming. However, that will soon change. Leading the charge into the third dimension will be the sports network ESPN. ESPN 3D will showcase a minimum of 85 live sporting events during its first year, beginning June 11 with the first 2010 FIFA World Cup match, featuring South Africa versus Mexico [ESPN]. Discovery Chanel has also announced it will launch a 3D network sometime in 2011. DirecTV is launching three HDTV channels in 3D in June, featuring movies, sports and other content.

    Related Content:
    80beats: America’s Electronic Waste Is Polluting the Globe
    80beats: Have You Consumed Your 34 Gigabytes of Information Today?
    80beats: TV Can Slow Language Development, Even in the Background

    Image: flickr / Phillie Casablanca


  • CES Watch: Apple accessories from the show floor

    Filed under: , , , , , ,

    CES 2010 is in full swing in Las Vegas, and while we aren’t there, we have been able to scour the webs and bring you the latest, the greatest, and the weirdest new Apple-related peripherals and accessories from the show floor.

    • Griffin has announced a few new devices, including a Display Converter ($40) to send your display out to HDMI or DVI video, a car charger ($30) that opens up another charging spot, and something called the TuneFlex Aux ($60), a cradle that sends iPhone audio out to an AUX port in your car. They’ve also got new versions of the RoadTrip and iTrip FM transmitters/cradles coming out later this year for the iPhone .
    • IvySkin sent word of their Zappack unit, a battery backup for the iPhone available for $50, the SmartCase, a case with an integrated battery pack for $80, and the CardClip, a case for the iPhone with a money/wallet clip attachment for $20.
    • Engadget posted a hands-on with Parrot’s AR.Drone, which we mentioned yesterday. Short take: it’s awesome.
    • Geneva Labs has the most beautiful set of iPhone/iPod speaker docks we’ve seen yet. They’re still useless, but they do look good.
    • On the other hand there’s the Trik / Triq iPod dock (above), a speaker dock so wild that Sony named it twice. Yeah, that is… wow.
    • Pioneer announced a car nav unit that will stream Pandora via the cell connection on your iPhone.
    • I’m sure there are induction power charging pads aplenty on the show floor, but this is the only one we’re bothering to link to.
    • Macally has announced another round of accessories, from earbuds to chargers. The most interesting is probably the PowerGo charger, which will use an AC adapter, a car lighter, or a USB plug, so no matter where you are, you can recharge your iPod.

    iPod accessories, everywhere! CES continues through the weekend — we’ll keep an eye on anything else Mac or iPod-related that shows up in Vegas.

    TUAWCES Watch: Apple accessories from the show floor originally appeared on The Unofficial Apple Weblog (TUAW) on Thu, 07 Jan 2010 16:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Report: Obama urged to push Japan to open its cash-for-clunkers program to U.S.

    Filed under: , ,

    Like everywhere else on the planet, new car sales are down in Japan (17 percent versus 2008 levels, to be exact). And, like a number of other countries, Japan has decided to spur automobile sales by creating a cash-for-clunkers-style program at a cost of $3.7 billion. Unlike similar programs from other countries, including the one that ended late last year in the U.S., Japan has drafted a set of rules that strongly favors its own automakers – in effect precluding American cars from qualifying for sales incentives of up to $2,830 per vehicle. Eighty-seven percent of all Japan’s domestic models qualify.

    By way of comparison, there were multiple C4C bills considered by U.S. policymakers, and the program that eventually went into effect allowed any and all sufficiently fuel efficient vehicles to qualify for its incentives, regardless of their country of origin. After it was all said and done, 319,300 out of a total of 677,000 (just about half) of all C4C sales were Japanese cars.

    According to the Detroit News, a number of American lawmakers, including Rep. Betty Sutton, D-Ohio, have called Japan’s program “discriminatory and fundamentally unfair… unacceptable and outrageous.” To highlight her displeasure over Japan’s insular auto market – to wit, imports make up less than five percent of all new car sales in Japan – Sutton has introduced a bill this week urging President Obama to attempt to force Japan into including American automobiles in its C4C program. What are the chances of it passing? Something about snowballs comes to mind…

    [Source: Detroit News | Image: Yoshikazu Tsuno/AFP/Getty Images]

    Report: Obama urged to push Japan to open its cash-for-clunkers program to U.S. originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 07 Jan 2010 16:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Shapeways now lets you print 3-D objects in color

    Dutch startup Shapeways, which builds printers that let you design and print your own 3-D objects in a variety of materials including plastics and steel, debuted a color 3-D printer today at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.

    AlienFigureThe objects are printed using the Shapeways’ Z printer 650 from a high performance composite (a powdery, sand-like substance) that hardens like a cement to produce full-colour objects. Shapeways then applies a new finishing technique, which both hardens the models and enhances colors. Colour 3-D printing will cost $16.22/cubic inch, which makes it the cheapest of the materials offered by Shapeways.

    We last covered the company back in August 2009 when Shapeways made its single-tone printers available to general consumers.

    The maximum size of a printed object is 10 x 15 x 8 inches. “It’s still inconceivable to most people that you can actually print an object in 3-D,” says Shapeways CEO Peter Weijmarshausen. “Until now, a Shapeways printed design existed in stainless steel or a single color plastic, black, grey or white, which could be dyed in a handful of single, solid colors. We’re excited to be able to offer our vibrant community the ability to bring their designs to life in full color.

    LightPoemShapeways is aimed both at users who are familiar with 3-D modeling tools like Solidworks, and general consumers. The latter can buy objects generated from ready-made models or use the Shapeways co-creation platform to customise an object created by a designer, such as a Lightpoem candle holder (pictured).

    Although many of the objects may not win any design awards, Shapeways is at the vanguard of a trend towards democratizing physical production in the same way that web technology has allowed millions of people to create and share digital content like videos or podcasts. Giving users without 3-D design skills the ability to manufacture their own objects could unleash a similar burst of creativity in consumers.

    The most popular objects currently are home decor and hobby items, and new materials like silver are in the pipeline. Another example of this trend is 100 garages, a site that connects consumers with small-scale, local workshops equipped with digital fabrication tools that can machine, drill or sculpt almost any component they require.

    Shapeways launched in July 2008 and has a community of 30,000 users, of which 40% are located in the US. The company is currently funded by Philips Electronics as a spin-off from its Lifestyle Incubator program.

    [Check out our CES 2010 coverage.]


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  • Live from Palm’s CES 2010 Event! [UPDATE: Transcript + Images]

    CES

    Sure, we may already have suspected much of what Palm has in store for their CES 2010 annoucements this year, but we also suspect that there’s a surprise or two still left in store. No need to refresh the page – just stay tuned at 11am Pacific as we bring you what Palm’s got – live!

    UPDATE: You want a transcript? Yes you do. It’s after the break, with images and all – it seems Sprint coverage in that room wasn’t so great. Bets that Verizon was rocking?

    read more

  • Full Video Of Palm’s CES 2010 Presentation Up Now

    That’s right! Relive all the excitement of two hours ago: the video recording demo, the 3D gaming announcement, the Flash demo, the unexpected zombie attack that saw several gadget bloggers tragically join the growing horde of the undead…

    It’s all after the break! (Well, except for the zombie attack, which appears to have been edited out.) You can also check it out on Palm’s Youtube page.






  • “Smart Phone” is a Misnomer: It’s a Computer, not a Phone

    Birthdays and Android Phones...The smart phone is not a phone. It’s a computer. It’s like your desktop or laptop. It stores data. It connects to the Internet. It runs applications. It’s a computer, not a phone.

    The real challenge for the enterprise is to shift its thinking about how it will move beyond the carriers and one day become an entirely data-centric organization – an organization that gives information workers the ability to work entirely on an IP infrastructure, be it for Web-based productivity applications or on a VoiP network.


    > .”>Forrester Research issued a report
    today that calls 2010 the year of the smart phone. That seems pretty obvious, doesn’t it? To its credit, Forrester does use the report as an opportunity to explore how the enterprise can make the smart phone a part of the daily work life for as many employees as possible.

    Sponsor

    There are many reasons for the enterprise to adopt a smart phone culture:

    There is no excuse anymore. Workers have to be connected. The big weave on the social Web is getting richer. Billions of threads are being added by the day. How can we even tolerate not being connected? Collaboration depends on being connected. You can’t be fully connected without a decent smart phone strategy. People are not working at the office as much anymore. They need a smart phone to keep up with their work. As illustrated by Forrester, the trend is already in play:

    forrester.report.jpg

    It does not have to be that expensive to adopt a smart phone culture. People want to use their smart phones for both their personal lives and work, too. They will pay for their data plans.

    Forrester agrees. From the executive summary by Ted Schadler:

    “Employees, aka consumers, are mad about smartphones, attracted by the ability to email, collaborate, and work with documents from anywhere. Fourteen percent of information workers across the US, Canada, and UK already use smartphones to do work today, and another 64% would like to. That demand, coupled with the willingness of some employees to share the cost of a monthly mobile plan, sets the stage for a surge in the use of personal smartphones for information work. Information and knowledge management professionals should immediately call for a formal bring-your-own (BYO) smartphone strategy, establish a sliding scale for when to reimburse employees, and pressure mobile carriers to cut costs across corporate-liable and personally liable plans.”

    Forrester’s BYO recommendation makes sense. But he does not explore how smart phones can be treated as computers. This discussion can create a new level of discourse in the enterprise between IT and business users.

    Forrester points out that IT recognizes the importance of smart phones. Many companies are already developing policies for how the devices should be treated.

    Collaboration tool are not being heavily used but this could change if smart phones were treated as tools as much as communication devices.

    MobileIron follows this approach, offering services that give IT managers the ability to be more like change agents than police forces.

    In MobileIron’s view, information can be tracked with a data-centric approach. Applications can be monitored. Users and administrators can view a social graph that shows usage.

    That’s a smart approach. It stimulates thinking and moves people to start exploring how a fully data-centric approach can be adopted over time as VoiP matures in the enterprise.

    Discuss


  • In the field: More re Saqqara discoveries

    RedOrbit

    Archaeologists hope to learn more about Egypt’s middle class from two 2,500 year old tombs dug up near Cairo, according to Reuters.

    The tombs were found near the entrance to the archaeological site at the Saqqara burial ground.

    Dating from the 26th dynasty, one tomb consists of a complex of rooms and corridors linked to a large hall hewn into the rock. It’s the largest discovered to date in Saqqara.

    Zahi Hawass told Reuters, “These tombs belonged to middle class Egyptian families, not royalty, and had no names on them. They were reused by many people and can give us lots of information on burial customs and religion at the time.”

    Hawass, Egypt’s head of antiquities who led the all-Egyptian archaeological team, said, “We were not expecting to discover any tombs in this area. These discoveries prove that the importance of Saqqara extends beyond the Old Kingdom of the 3rd to the 6th dynasty and can tell us so much about the 26th dynasty.”

  • Hell Freezes Over – Sony Introduces SD/microSD Storage Cards


    For the first time ever, Sony is expanding its line of consumer media with the addition of five new SD/SDHC memory cards for digital imaging products, and three new microSD/microSDHC memory cards for mobile phones. The new SD/SDHC and microSD/microSDHC memory cards, which – except for the microSD 2GB card – are all class-4-speed for high-definition recording, include unique benefits for consumers. Easy-to-use animated picture sharing software (x-Pict Story) is available via free download and allows consumers to create animated slide shows of their pictures set to the music of their choice. File Rescue software is also free via download, and helps consumers recover accidentally deleted files.

    Sony also announced that the majority of their Handycam and Cyber-shot cameras would have dual compatibility with MemoryStick Duo and SD.

    “The new cards will complement Sony’s existing Memory Stick line, satisfying the needs of a broader range of users, and strengthening Sony’s position as a full line media supplier,” said Shane Higby, director of the consumer media business at Sony Electronics.

    Sony will continue offering a full range of Memory Stick media for consumer and professional products, to support and enhance features such as stable recording or high-definition video, high-speed burst shooting and high-speed data transfer. Memory Stick is the recommended media for Sony products, offering a range of unique benefits. For example, the high-speed “HX” Series’ capabilities are optimized when using the burst shooting mode in Sony’s α (alpha) DSLR cameras, as well as high-speed archiving of high definition movies shot with Handycam® camcorders and Cyber-shot cameras.

    The full line of SD/SDHC and microSD/microSDHC memory cards, which will ship in packaging that is easy to separate and recycle, will be available this month, at the following suggested list prices:

    • SF-2N1 (2GB SD Class 4) – $14.99
    • SF-4N4 (4GB SDHC Class 4) – $29.99
    • SF-8N4 (8GB SDHC Class 4) – $44.99
    • SF-16N4 (16GB SDHC Class 4) – $79.99
    • SF-32N4 (32GB SDHC Class 4) – $159.99
    • SR-2A1 (2GB microSD) with adapter – $14.99
    • SR-4A4 (4GB microSDHC Class 4) with adapter – $29.99
    • SR-8A4 (8GB micro SDHC Class 4) with adapter – $44.99
  • Speeding millionaire driver fined $290,000, tops previous record of $107,391

    Ferrari Testarossa

    We’re pretty sure it feels amazing to break records – but what about breaking a record for speeding and ending up in court? An unidentified millionaire raked up a record fine of 299,000 Swiss francs ($290,000 USD) after Swiss police caught him driving his red Ferrari Testarossa through a village at 62 mph. He was also clocked at speeds of up to 85 mph on country roads.

    A northeastern Swiss court of St. Gallen gave the man his hefty penalty, which significantly exceeds the previous record of 111,000 francs ($107,391 USD) handed to a Porsche driver in 2008.

    “The accused ignored elementary traffic rules with a powerful vehicle out of a pure desire for speed,” the court said in its judgment.

    Of course, $290,000 dollars is nothing for a man that has a 23.3 million franc fortune ($22.5 million USD), including a villa with a large garage holding five luxury cars.

    – By: Omar Rana

    Source: Reuters


  • Boxee Beta Now Available To The Masses

    Boxee fans, today’s your lucky day: the service has just released its Beta to the general public. You can download the new version of the steaming video hub here.

    The new version is really a complete overhaul of the app — it’s received a new, sexier UI that makes it easier to browse through the service’s content (and anything you might have saved locally too). Niceties include the ability to filter a show by season and episode and easier sharing using Boxee’s social features. There’s a lot that’s changed in the background too, including a switch from OpenGL to DirectX and support for hardware-accelerated video decoding for Windows users.

    Today’s launch also brings with it some new content partnerships, including TV.com, blip.tv, and IGN. Unfortunately, the Boxee/Hulu cat and mouse game continues. Boxee says that some Hulu content now works in the app, and they’re working to get the rest of it added.

    The Beta has been a long time coming — we first saw pictures of it back in June, when it had a planned September release date. It was finally unveiled in December, with a projected CES launch date (which they hit). Now the Boxee team says they want the 1.0 release to debut at next year’s CES.

    Boxee has been making a lots of waves at CES, primarily with its new Boxee Box — a hardware device built specically to let people stream content to their TVs using the service. The device will sell for under $200 and comes complete with a QWERTY remote.

    If you’d like to get a feel for Boxee, or are setting it up for the first time, check out this new guide that was put together by Howcast and Boxee.

    Crunch Network: MobileCrunch Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.


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  • The Twitter Picture Sites Start Targeting Foursquare. First Up, TweetPhoto.

    Screen shot 2010-01-07 at 12.49.16 PMHot on the heels of Photocheck.in, a service we covered a few days ago that allows you to check-in on Foursquare simply by sending a picture, comes news that TweetPhoto is creating a platform for picture integration with Foursquare. Using TweetPhoto’s new API, any third-party Foursquare developer can add picture functionality to their site or app.

    Whereas Photocheck.in is a stand-alone service that allows you to check-in via picture, this new TweetPhoto API is aiming for developers who create apps that use both Twitter and Foursquare. Because Foursquare does not allow for pictures to be placed on its site or in its check-in stream, the idea here is to leverage Twitter (which Photocheck.in can also do) to send these pictures out after their location information is filtered through a Foursquare check-in. The advantage to this is that developers will be able to query photos by Foursquare venue name. As you might imagine, this might be a cool little feature in a third-party location app.

    Naturally, for this all to work, you have to send your pictures via a GPS-enabled phone (such as the iPhone or an Android device). And developers who integrate this API will also have access to TweetPhoto’s other tools such as picture commenting, voting, and adding favorites.

    We are doing what TwitPic did for Twitter for FourSquare while also continuing to take market share away from TwitPic and yFrog,” TweetPhoto Sean Callahan tells us. A quick scan of Compete shows that TweetPhoto is in fact experiencing some impressive growth compared to its rivals.

    Eventually, the plan is to allow users to log-in to TweetPhoto using their Foursquare credentials, but for now this remains only an API method. If you’re a developer who is interested in learning more, read up on this documentation. You can also see a test tweet using this API here, as well as the TweetPhoto page for the picture.’
    Screen shot 2010-01-07 at 12.49.54 PM

    Crunch Network: CrunchBoard because it’s time for you to find a new Job2.0


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  • General Motors builds first Volt battery pack on production line [w/video]

    Filed under: , , , , ,

    First Volt battery pack of the line – Click above for high-res image gallery

    It was exactly three years ago today that the original Chevrolet Volt concept rolled onto the stage at the 2007 Detroit Auto Show. Last summer, we visited a facility in Brownstown Township, MI that General Motors had chosen to manufacture battery packs for the production Chevrolet Volt. In the intervening five months, GM has been busy installing assembly equipment in the formerly empty building and today GM invited the media back to Brownstown to watch the first “official” pack roll down the assembly line.

    Starting today, the battery packs are full production-spec units, but GM engineers are still tweaking the management software in an attempt to maximize range and lifespan. Between now and November, the plant will be producing several hundred packs that will be used for a variety of development tasks. Some will be heading straight into the cyclers at the test lab in Warren, MI, while the the rest will be going into the pilot and production verification Volts that will begin rolling out of the Detroit Hamtramck assembly plant by April. More details after the jump.

    [Source: General Motors]

    Continue reading General Motors builds first Volt battery pack on production line [w/video]

    General Motors builds first Volt battery pack on production line [w/video] originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 07 Jan 2010 16:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Parque da Mônica fecha as portas em 16 de fevereiro

    07/01/2010 – 16h00
    Parque da Mônica fecha as portas em 16 de fevereiro
    As informações estão atualizadas até a data acima. Sugerimos contatar o local para confirmar as informações

    FABIANA SERAGUSA
    colaboração para a Folha Online

    Os paulistanos têm pouco mais de um mês para aproveitar as brincadeiras oferecidas pelo Parque da Mônica: o local será fechado no próximo dia 16 de fevereiro.

    A assessoria de imprensa do parque diz que a decisão de encerrar as atividades com dois meses de antecedência –a data prevista inicialmente para a desocupação do local era 30 de abril– foi de comum acordo entre a diretoria do parque e o shopping, e que a programação de férias será mantida. Ainda segundo a assessoria, desde o anúncio de que o espaço seria fechado (há cerca de seis meses), o público aumentou em 10%. Não há data nem local previstos para a reinauguração do parque.

    Em 2 de julho do ano passado, o quadrinista Mauricio de Sousa, que completou 50 anos de carreira, anunciou em seu Twitter que o shopping Eldorado (região oeste da capital paulista) solicitou de volta a área onde fica o Parque da Mônica.

    Na ocasião, Mauricio disse que fechar o local significa "uma perda de uma área de lazer que recebe milhares de crianças, de escolares, para lazer e cultura". O quadrinista também revelou que havia um projeto de modernização do parque, mas que foi paralisado porque o shopping já vinha pedindo a diminuição da área para um quarto da atual. Atualmente, o Parque da Mônica conta com mais de 30 atrações nos 10 mil m² de área coberta e climatizada.

    Falta de atratividade

    A direção do shopping Eldorado diz que a medida é uma forma de "buscar alternativas mais atualizadas e que estejam dentro das expectativas dos consumidores". De acordo com o comunicado enviado pela assessoria do shopping, o parque, inaugurado em 1992, não recebia "investimentos necessários para ampliar sua atratividade com nível adequado de conforto".

    A nota ainda diz que o Eldorado passa por um amplo processo de reposicionamento e revitalização, e que o espaço onde atualmente fica o parque, de "excelente visibilidade", vai servir para abrigar "operações inéditas". Quanto às novas lojas que ficarão no espaço, hoje ocupado pelo empreendimento de Mauricio de Sousa, a assessoria diz que as propostas estão em andamento e que o shopping terá uma definição até abril deste ano.

    ***

    Sacanagem… acho que os personagens do Maurício mereciam coisa ainda muito melhor.

    Quanto às justificativas do shopping, são tão evazivas quanto fala de atendente de telemarketing. Só faltaram os termos em inglês.

    http://guia.uol.com.br/crianca/ult10047u675820.shtml

  • Join NEHGS & Ancestry.com for Family History Day 2010 in Boston

    The following news release was just received from Anastasia Tyler at Ancestry.com:

    Ancestry.com and the New England Historic Genealogical Society are excited to sponsor Family History Day 2010 — Saturday, February 20, 2010, from 8 am to 4 pm. Held at Westin Copley Place, Boston, Massachusetts.

    Join us for a full day of:

    • 6 fantastic classes to help you grow your tree
    • Ancestry.com experts on hand to answer your questions
    • One-on-one consolations with NEHGS genealogists
    • Opportunity to have photos and documents scanned on professional scanners

    The cost for attendance is $30, which includes parking. Learn more or register today for Family History Day 2010 in Boston!

  • Death in Detention: Russia’s Prison Scandal

    Amy Knight

    Nataliya Magnitskaya, the mother of Sergei Magnitsky, holding a portrait of him and letters he sent to her from jail, Moscow, November 30, 2009 (Alexander Zemlianichenko/AP Images)

    The horrors of Soviet prisons and labor camps were described vividly in Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn’s Gulag Archipelago, Yevgenia Ginzburg’s Into the Whirlwind, and later, by the Soviet dissident and former political prisoner Anatoly Marchenko, in his 1969 memoir, My Testimony. To judge from a disturbing new report about the tragic death of 37-year-old lawyer Sergei Magnitsky in a Moscow prison in late November, Russia’s current penal system is almost as bad as it used to be.

    As was the case under Stalin and his successors, the treatment of prisoners reflects the deeper problems of a politicized law enforcement system that routinely disregards human rights. Now, the Magnitsky case seems to have persuaded Russian President Dmitry Medvedev to begin to address these problems—though his powerful Prime Minister, Vladimir Putin, has a vested interest in preserving the status quo.

    On December 28, the nongovernmental Public Oversight Commission—a Moscow-based organization mandated by Russian law in 2008 to monitor human rights in prisons—issued a twenty-page report about the treatment of Magnitsky, a former auditor and lawyer for the Firestone Duncan legal and accounting firm, whose clients included the international investment fund Hermitage Capital Management. As has been revealed by Hermitage executives, Magnitsky discovered in 2008 that Russian authorities had been engaged in a huge tax fraud. Officials from the Ministry of Internal Affairs (MVD) raided Hermitage’s offices in 2007, robbing the fund of three subsidiaries for which they then claimed $230 million in tax refunds. In November, 2008, shortly after testifying about this fraud, Magnitsky himself was arrested by the MVD on bogus charges of tax evasion.

    According to the Public Oversight Commission report, Magnitsky was in good health at the time of his arrest. But less than five months after his incarceration at Matrosskaya Tishina began, he fell ill and ended up in the prison hospital, where he was given an ultrasound and diagnosed with gallstones and pancreatitis. The doctor ordered a follow-up ultrasound and possible surgery within a month. Disregarding these orders, prison officials transferred him in July 2009 to a maximum security facility, Butyrka Prison, which has no equipment for ultrasound or surgery. Magnitsky’s symptoms worsened. He developed excruciating pain in his abdomen, but his repeated pleas for medical attention were ignored. Not until November 16, 2009 did prison officials finally call an ambulance to take Magnitsky back to Matrosskaya Tishina for surgery, which might have resolved the problem had they acted on it immediately. By the time he arrived at Matrosskaya Tishina and was put in a prison cell, Magnitsky was flailing in agony and screaming that the authorities were trying to kill him. Yet instead of operating on him, the prison doctors called in psychiatrists, who diagnosed “psychosis” and ordered Magnitsky handcuffed. Within a couple of hours he was dead.

    Magnitsky’s death was not an isolated case. According to Yevgenia Albats, editor of the independent weekly The New Times and one of Russia’s most respected independent journalists, the numbers of prisoners who die each year while awaiting trial run into the thousands. But the criminal neglect of Magnitsky by prison officials and doctors is only a part of the story. The fraud that Magnitsky had uncovered while working for Hermitage Capital implicated high officials in the Russian government, and the denial of medical treatment appears to have been a way to pressure him to change his earlier testimony against the MVD. According to Magnitsky, in a petition he reportedly sent from prison to the MVD, “Every time, when I repeatedly rejected these propositions by the investigators pushing me to be dishonest, the conditions of my detention become worse and worse.”

    Albats produced evidence that the organizers of the tax scam uncovered by Magnitsky were employees of the FSB, the Federal Security Service, which has close ties to Putin. The officials in question, according to Albats, worked in the FSB’s Department K, which is charged with monitoring Russia’s credit and financial system and is headed by Major General Viktor Voronin, a long-time Putin associate from the St. Petersburg KGB. As Albats reported in her investigation of Magnitsky’s death, prison officials and MVD officers, as well as judges and members of the prosecutor’s office who ignored Magnitsky’s numerous complaints about his medical care and the appalling prison conditions, were getting their marching orders from the all-powerful FSB.

    In early December, amid growing public outcry over Magnitsky’s death, President Dmitry Medvedev fired twenty senior officials in the Federal Prison Service, including the chief of Butyrka prison and the Moscow prisons chief, and ordered the Ministry of Justice, which oversees prisons, to investigate the case. On December 29, a day after the Public Commission’s report came out, Medvedev went higher up the ladder, dismissing the deputy chief of the Federal Prison Service, Lt. Gen. Aleksandr Piskunov. Medvedev also made it illegal to hold persons accused of tax and other financial crimes in pre-trial detention. This was an important step because those who are wrongly charged with financial malfeasance—a common occurrence when powerful people want to get rid of enemies—can languish in prison for a year, or even longer, if the court consents, without a trial.

    Medvedev also moved against the MVD. In mid-December he fired the head of the agency’s tax crimes unit, Anatoly Mikhalkin, who in 2007 had ordered a subordinate to gather confidential information about Hermitage Capital’s holding companies. On December 24, Medvedev signed a decree mandating a 20 percent cut in MVD staff by January 2012 and calling for a series of organizational reforms in the agency.

    Unfortunately, the main culprit in the Magnitsky affair, the FSB, has until now remained unscathed. Despite the dismissal of Putin’s close ally, Nikolai Patrushev, from his post as FSB chief in 2008 (apparently as a result of internecine feuds), this agency is filled with Putin appointees and continues to wield tremendous influence over the other law enforcement agencies, including the MVD. Medvedev deserves credit for taking some first steps toward cracking down on the terrible human rights abuses in Russia’s criminal justice system. But he does not have the power to openly challenge Putin’s FSB stronghold, even if he wanted to—and his larger intentions remain a matter of much speculation.

  • CES 2010: Evolution Unveils the Mint, a Wet/Dry Floor Cleaning Robot

    Picture 2Move over Roomba. Mint is here! It offers both dry and wet floor cleaning using special motions to systematically clean every square inch. Due to North Star navigation technology, it tracks where it has cleaned and even integrates information from 3 different positioning systems to map and plan how to return and pick up spots not covered on the first round. I’d be glad to relinquish my floor chores to this master Mint.

     CES 2010: Evolution Unveils the Mint, a Wet/Dry Floor Cleaning Robot


  • Pesticides loom large in animal die-offs

    by Tom Laskawy

    Yale’s Environment 360 has a new must-read report by Sonia Shah linking pesticides to the high-profile die-offs among amphibians, bees, and bats. What makes this news timely isn’t necessarily the toxicity of the pesticides per se, it’s the indirect effects on these animals of chronic, low-dose exposure to chemicals:

    In the past dozen years, no fewer than three never-before-seen diseases
    have decimated populations of amphibians, bees, and—most recently—bats. A growing body of evidence indicates that pesticide exposure may
    be playing an important role in the decline of the first two species,
    and scientists are investigating whether such exposures may be involved
    in the deaths of more than 1 million bats in the northeastern United
    States over the past several years.

    … The recent spate of widespread die-offs began in amphibians. Scientists discovered the culprit—an aquatic fungus called Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis,
    of a class of fungi called “chytrids”—in 1998. Its devastation, says
    amphibian expert Kevin Zippel, is “unlike anything we’ve seen since the
    extinction of the dinosaurs.” Over 1,800 species of amphibians
    currently face extinction.

    It may be, as many experts believe, that the chytrid fungus is a novel
    pathogen, decimating species that have no armor against it, much as
    Europe’s smallpox and measles decimated Native Americans in the
    sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. But “there is a really good
    plausible story of chemicals affecting the immune system and making
    animals more susceptible,” as well, says San Francisco State University
    conservation biologist Carlos Davidson.

    Shah goes on to explain a mechanism whereby pesticides applied to fields in California’s Central Valley drift into the Sierra Nevada mountains “where they settle in the air, snow, and surface waters, and inside the tissues of amphibians.” A scientist who studied the matter “found a strong correlation between upwind pesticide use … and declining amphibian populations.”

    Meanwhile, bees and bats have suffered a similar fate—killed off by powerful pathogens that in theory could be novel but in practice seem to have taken advantage of animal populations immuno-compromised by pesticides.

    One of the most interesting aspects of the piece was the description of an Italian scientist’s unpublished research that suggests the “missing link” between neonicotinoids, a powerful pesticide already banned in Europe but still in use in the U.S., and bee colony collapse. It relates to the practices of using neonicotinoids-coated seeds planted by machines that kick up clouds of pesticide as they work:

    … In as-yet-unpublished
    research, [University of Padua entomologist Vincenzo] Girolami has found concentrations of insecticide in clouds
    above seeding machines 1,000 times the dose lethal to bees. In the
    spring, when the seed machines are working, says Girolami, “I think
    that 90 percent or more of deaths of bees is due to direct pesticide
    poisoning.”

    Girolami has also found lethal levels of neonicotinoids in other,
    unexpected—and usually untested—places, such as the drops of liquid
    that treated crops secrete along their leaf margins, which bees and
    other insects drink.

    But Shah concludes by observing that this accumulating evidence comes with challenges and caveats that, I would point out, industry ruthlessly exploits:

    Proving, with statistical certainty, that low-level pesticide exposure
    makes living things more vulnerable to disease is notoriously
    difficult. There are too many different pesticides, lurking in too many
    complex, poorly understood habitats to build definitively damning
    indictments. The evidence is subtle, suggestive.

    Subtle and suggestive though it may be, it’s extremely unlikely that these chemicals aren’t also acting on us. This news plus the data surrounding the consequences to human health of low-dose exposure to chemicals like atrazine, BPA and phthalates should have us in a panic and our government in a regulatory frenzy. Instead we get paralysis and promises of “further study.” As we wait for a chemical “smoking gun,” I wonder what animal population will die off next. Anyone care to wager?

    Related Links:

    Scientists confirm link between BPA and heart disease in humans

    A scientist chases penguins chased by climate change

    Food giants pile on salt to tart up flavorless dreck