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  • Hershey Kiss Wreath

    I have another wreath for you today only this one is edible. It’s chocolate, too, and I don’t see how anyone can top a chocolate wreath.  Even though it is edible, you can hang it on a door or wall as a decoration. I don’t, however, think I would hang it on an outside door or it might just slowly disappear when your door is closed.

    Kathy Zengolewicz

    Kathy Zengolewicz

    Here is what you will need to get started:

    • A 12 inch styrofoam wreath
    • 2 large bags of Hershey kisses (in Christmas color wrap, if possible)
    • 1 Roll of aluminum foil
    • A low heat glue gun
    • A medium sized red bow
    • <Red satin ribbon to use as a hanger

    Take the 12 inch styrofoam wreath and wrap it with aluminum foil. Make sure to cover the entire wreath, it is not recommended to have food, of any type, touch the bare styrofoam. Wrap the foil around the wreath tightly so that it stays in place.

    Place a small amount of glue on the foil that you have wrapped around the wreath and one by one glue the kisses on the wreath. Make sure to put a kiss everywhere you see the foil to make the wreath look full.

    Let it sit and dry. When dry, take your bow (they usually have wire attached to the middle for attaching) and tie it around the wreath at the bottom. If you don’t have enough wire to attach it, use some floral wire to lengthen the wire on the bow.

    Now, take the satin ribbon. Cut the ribbon about 10 inches to make sure you have enough. Put the ribbon around the top of the wreath, front to back. Try to work it between the kisses even if it doesn’t look straight it will hang straight.

    Enjoy!

    Post from: Blisstree

    Hershey Kiss Wreath

  • Iraq Steps Up Executions

    More than 900 people are facing immediate execution in Iraq, Amnesty International reports, and observers are worried that the ruling al-Da’wa party is using the death penalty to woo public support ahead of the 2010 elections.

    Iraq, which executed 34 people in 2008, has killed 120 so far this year and has sentenced more than 1,000 people to death since capital punishment was reinstated in 2004. The country’s court system is still in shambles, however, and there are real concerns that many of the prisoners on death row were tortured into making false confessions and were convicted based on less-than-solid evidence.

    (more…)

  • Holiday Peanut Butter Bites for Dogs

    Your four-legged friends don’t need to be left out of the festivities this holiday season, even when it comes to food. Though the same tips and suggestions for Thanksgiving still hold true for Christmas, you can treat your dog to a special holiday cookie made just for him!

    dogtreats

    Holiday Peanut Butter Bites

    3 cups of all purpose flour
    1-1/2 cups of whole wheat flour
    1-1/2 tsp of molasses
    3 tablespoons of peanut butter, unsalted
    3 tablespoons of canola oil

    ~ Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.

    ~ In a bowl mix the all purpose flour and the whole wheat flour together and set it on the side. In a separate large bowl stir the molasses, peanut butter and oil together. Then add the flours mixture into the molasses mixture and whisk it until it is smooth.

    ~ Use your hand to break the dough into small ball size pieces and roll each one into logs about 1/2″ in diameter.

    ~ Cut the logs into 1/8″ thick discs. Place the discs on ungreased baking sheets and bake for approximately 30 minutes or until golden brown.

    ~ Once done allow to cool completely before serving.

    ~ Store in an airtight container for up to 14 days, or wrap in freezer wrap and keep them in the freezer for up to 60 days.

    [image: flickr]

    Post from: Blisstree

    Holiday Peanut Butter Bites for Dogs

  • Podcast Review: MindPodcasts

    I came across some podcasts on psychology – MindPodcasts. The author is Arjen ter Hoeve from Holland and he has a site called Mind Podcast. Hoeve suggests that he is studying along with the audience. Perhaps this means that he is studying from a textbook. The blog is indexed and I turned to the first three podcasts which can be found here, here and here. Hoeve refers to each episode as a session. In the first session, Hoeve looks at Copernicus and his influence on changing contemporary perceptions of the place of people in the universe. He moves onto an overview of the different schools of psychology in session 2. Here I was interested to hear more about Wundt who founded structuralism using introspection to examine the components of consciousness. Hoeve also looks at functionalism, behaviourism, gestalt psychology and psychoanalysis. In session 3, I think Hoeve is outside his comfort zone as he discusses the structure and function of neurons and neurotransmitters.

    The podcasts have a raw quality which I think works. Podcasts don’t always need the polished broadcasting quality production and the occasional pauses or difficulty with words convey the realistic experiences of learning a subject. Hoeve has a very natural broadcasting manner and again I thought his style worked well and that he seems relaxed throughout the presentation. The end result was that I thought Hoeve is able to deliver this material in a way which listeners would find engaging. There are some comments in the latter podcasts which suggest this is the case. In addition the episodes are bite sized and thus convenient. Although much of the material above is introductory there is a wide coverage of material and returning to basics can be argued to be useful even for those with advanced knowledge in orienting a complex field and integrating new information. The interesting point here is that Hoeve says that he is studying the material and the question arises of how valid such material is. However he is upfront about this and the listener is able to factor this in when listening to the podcasts.

    In summary I thought the podcasts had a lot of effort put into them, were engaging and could be used as a starting point for further clarification and reading. The podcasts on the blog end the following year and by this stage there are 72 in the series.

    Twitter

    You can follow ‘The Amazing World of Psychiatry’ Twitter by clicking on this link

    Podcast

    You can listen to this post on Odiogo by clicking on this link (there may be a small delay between publishing of the blog article and the availability of the podcast).

    TAWOP Channel

    You can follow the TAWOP Channel on YouTube by clicking on this link

    Responses

    If you have any comments, you can leave them below or alternatively e-mail [email protected]

    Disclaimer

    The comments made here represent the opinions of the author and do not represent the profession or any body/organisation. The comments made here are not meant as a source of medical advice and those seeking medical advice are advised to consult with their own doctor. The author is not responsible for the contents of any external sites that are linked to in this blog.

  • Volcker: There’s No Growth Other Than What The Fed’s Pouring Into The Economy

    paul volcker

    Obama advisor and former Fed chief Paul Volcker has an excellent interview this weekend with Germany’s Der Spiegel.

    An excerpt:

    SPIEGEL: The US has not yet instituted any kind of reform policy. What we see is the government and the Federal Reserve pouring money into the economy. If one looks beyond that money, one sees that the economy is in fact still shrinking.

    Volcker: What should I say? That’s right. We have not yet achieved self-reinforcing recovery. We are heavily dependent upon government support so far. We are on a government support system, both in the financial markets and in the economy.

    SPIEGEL: To get the recovery to the point where it is right now has cost a lot of money. National debt will probably reach $12 trillion in 2019. Just serving the debt costs $17 billion a year — at least according to this year’s forecast. That’s difficult to sustain.

    Volcker: You’ve got to deal with the deficit and you’ve got to deal with it in a timely way. Right now, with the unemployment rate still very high, excess capacity is still evident, and the economy is dependent on government money as we said. We are not going to successfully attack the deficit right now but we have got to prepare for attacking it.

    Read the whole thing >>

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Welcoming Two New Bloggers

    I want to extend a warm welcome to two new regular bloggers in change.org’s criminal justice community. We’re excited to have Colin Starger and Chris Cassidy join the team –they bring unique perspectives and experience to the site and I hope you’ll enjoy reading their posts.

    Colin is an acting assistant professor of lawyering at NYU Law School and a former attorney at the Innocence Project. He posted this week on the imprisonment of defense attorney Lynne Stewart. Read his older posts here.

    Chris is the assistant director of communication at the American Constitution Society, where he writes about a wide range of issues at ACSblog and tackles all sorts of new media and legal challenges. Chris wrote last week about Ohio’s switch to a single-drug execution. Read Chris’ older posts here and follow him on twitter @citizencassidy.

    Please join me in welcoming them!

  • BGL’s and ketones

    Hi again,

    Thursday, when Eri got her CGMS, her bgl’s were great, up until about 3pm…then they were in the 50’s(with eating).
    After the whole day of them staying between 55-60, they went up to HI(a little after midnight). She had no ketones at that time.
    When she woke up in the morning(after she and I both checking her bgl throughout the night and insulin)…she was still HI and had a trace of ketones.
    Finally, around noon(and a call in to her CDE) her bgl dropped to 203. It finally went down after that to around 103 and is now 88, but she now has moderate ketones. It’s beyond frustrating!
    She at a good dinner of chicken and some potato and salad last night, but she had the heart palps like crazy.
    No vomiting, thank God.
    The CDE said she was glad that Eri at least has the CGMS so that they can go by that as well as her glucometer and her patient log that she is keeping. She’s been extremely thorough with that.
    She’s beyond frustrated bc she has no symptoms of lows anymore and she is a bit scared bc she never has symptoms of Hi’s until she’s vomiting.

    Here’s to hoping she won’t end up in the hospital and that she can just correct herself.
    She’s drinking gatorade and bolusing in, so hopefully the insulin will start working.
    The other night, w/ all the HI readings, it took about 12 hours bc it went down to 201(and about 40 units of humalog and her 38 of lantus and 18 of NPH).

  • My Favorite Parenting Book

    I was not parented in the healthiest way. I was adopted by an older couple and was an only child. There were a lot of issues in my family… and although I think my parents were incredible there was a lot that they just didn’t get about me. That probably was prophetic; it seems to have dogged me for my entire life. People often just don’t get it with me.

    mom-child

    However, when I first looked into my oldest daughters eyes and played with her tiny fingers I realized that I wanted to be the best mom ever. I realized that my mom probably felt the same way looking at me…and I realized that there were things I didn’t know and needed to learn.

    Looking back I can tell you that I have not been the best mom ever. I have, however, tried very hard to educate myself on what good parenting really way and I also tried to be myself. After all, if God had wanted my kids raised by someone else He would have given them to another family, right?

    So I read a lot of parenting books. I have some particular favorites but the ones I love best of all and have proven over and over to be the most helpful, the most insightful, and have the greatest effect on my parenting skills are the Mrs. Pigglewiggle books.

    You have never heard of Mrs. Pigglewiggle? Seriously?

    She is a fictional character that lives in an upsde down house. She helps neighborhood moms deal with discipline issues in a heartwarming and comical manner. And, she loves kids, which is the best prerequisite of all. So, how can I learn parenting techniques from a juvenile fiction book? Easy.

    I look for ways to apply her techniques in real life situations! You can learn something from anything! I will be sharing some of Mrs. PiggleWiggle’s best disciplinary tips in another post.

    If you have never read the books I encourage you to do so. Read them to your kids! They will love them and you will get more out of them than you thought you could. I guarantee it.

    image: sxc photoshopping by marye audet

    Post from: Blisstree

    My Favorite Parenting Book

  • Harbaugh signs extension through 2014

    Coach Jim Harbaugh has signed a contract extension to remain at Stanford through the 2014 season. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

    Harbaugh and the University initially negotiated an extension last winter that would pay him $1.25 million a year, but due to the economic climate, decided to hold off on finalizing it. It appeared, from quotes from Harbaugh, that a contract would be signed last month, but no release was made at the time.

    Due to Harbaugh’s revitalization of the Cardinal football program, he has been a hot name for many collegiate vacancies. Indeed, the announcement, from Athletic Director Bob Bowlsby to the Associated Press, comes just a day after several news sources in Kansas reported that Harbaugh was leaving The Farm to take the head coaching job at the University of Kansas.

    But the new contract, and a statement from Harbaugh, puts those rumors to bed.

    “My resolve and future proudly remains as head coach of Stanford University,” he said Saturday.

  • Top 10 Google Chrome Extensions – Part 2

    Google Chrome extensions are now fully supported by the browser maker and with the Extensions Gallery opening its doors earlier this week, one of the most requested features finally becomes a reality. With over 600 extensions already available, some are starting to stand out as the most popular either because of their being practical or just plain cool. We have already looked at the bottom half of the top 10 and now it’s time to round up the best five.

    5. RSS Subscription Extension. (screenshot below) This little tool, made by Google, does exactly what it’s intended and nothing else. It ads a small icon in the Chrome omnibox every time a feed is detected on a page, very similar to how Firefox handles the same job. Clicking on it will display the feed and allow you to subscribe to it in any popular feed reader. It’s not exactly perfect; it sometimes fails to fetch the feed even though it detects it. Also, if you use it with Google Reader, it doesn’t automatically subscribe you to the feed, it just opens it in Reader requiring an extra step. This may be a limitation with Reader though rather than the extension.

    4. Google Wave Notifier. (screenshot below) A simple extension with a self-explanatory name. It adds a small icon to the Chrome toolbar, which shows the number of unread Waves, if any. There are a few customi… (read more)

  • new to the forum

    Hello All,

    Joined this on the suggestion of a member Jason. I have had diabetes since I was 21 , I am now 40. So far knock on wood have not had any of the usual complications and I can still feel when a low is coming on etc.

    Maybe I can learn some new things about this

    Lauri

  • Loco Island – LocoRoco space coming to Home

    Cute little devils, aren’t they? Imagine if you get to see them on 3D that’ll just be too cute from all angles. You just have to have a look at that take this virtual tour

  • Green Cleaning Products Go Pretty!

    Pretty green home goods are all around us and many are hyper useful for your green home too. Some excellent looking (and useful for cleaning) green home goods include…

    pretty green home goods

    Composting is awesome; composting eliminates waste from the garbage can, saves you cash on your garbage bill, and allows you to grow a lovely garden full of flowers and yummy veggies. However, if you live in a smaller place or just don’t like the typical large and usually unattractive compost bins on the market than this Bamboo Compost Pail is a nice change. Features include a generous 1 gallon capacity, dishwasher-safe removable liner and comes with a set of charcoal filters that help contain odors.

    For hand soap that looks as good as it works while staying free of harmful chemicals try Method Hand Washes. Tear drop bottles and lively colors make this soap more fun to use and look great even in a stylish kitchen. Available in cucumber, french lavender, pink grapefruit, sweet water and sea minerals.

    SKOY is an absorbent, biodegradable and natural multi-use cloth that you can use to clean all areas of the home with, BUT it’s also attractive. Unlike paper towels SKOY saves trees being made of a natural cotton and wood-based cellulose pulp that’s chlorine free and 100% biodegradable in five weeks. Colored SKOY cloths are made with water-based inks. SKOY cloths, also unlike paper towels, are reusable and just one SKOY cloth replaces the use of an amazing 15 rolls of paper towels in an average home.

    While maybe not “pretty” the green-minded Bissell’s Little Green can surely be categorized as one of themore adorable vacuums on the market. This eco-friendly vacuum features PVC free tanks and hose, a carton that contains a minimum of 75% recycled materials, and formulas for use in the Bissell Green contain biodegradable detergents and have no phosphates, dyes, optical brighteners or heavy metals plus carry the EPA’s Design for the Environment (DfE) certification, which is recognized for safer chemistry. Also on a pretty note the Little Green’s small size means you can tuck it away out of sight, and we all know hidden cleaning goods is better for the home on an attractiveness level.

    Post from: Blisstree

    Green Cleaning Products Go Pretty!

  • G-Power takes the BMW X6 M, X5 M to 600 hp and beyond

    Filed under: , , , ,

    G-Power Typhoon X6 M – click above for hi-res image gallery

    We all know what the biggest problem with the BMW X6 M is, right? Not nearly enough power. Sure, 555 hp from a 4.4-liter twin-turbo V8 is 5 hp more potent than a Porsche Cayenne Turbo, making the X6 M the most powerful production SUV on earth. Still, 600 hp is the new black, so a stock X6 M just ain’t going to cut it. Thank heavens, then, for G-Power.

    Meet the G-Power Typhoon. Thanks to 15% increased airflow to the intercoolers, G-Power was able to wrangle an additional 45 hp out of the Bimmer’s motivator. Torque’s up a bit, too. From 500 lb-ft to 516. G-Power claims the 0-62 mph dash is lowered to 4.5 seconds, too. One issue with that, however: Inside Line ripped off a 4.3 second 0-60 mph blast in a stock X6 M, meaning this here Typhoon should be three flavors of bonkers.

    Then there’s the matter of looks, always a sticking point when discussing modern Bimmers. Here’s what we recommend. Go down to your friendly neighborhood BMW dealer with a folding chair. Locate an X6. Sit down in front of it and start staring. Meditate, let everything else you’ve ever known or thought about cars and car design melt out of your mind. This should take between five and seven hours. The salespeople won’t mind — honest. When you snap out of your trance with your doors of perception suddenly nailed open, the X6 will appear to you as it truly is — pretty okay-looking.

    That settled, we’ll admit to liking the G-Power’s mods. For instance, you can’t say the new front clip looks worse than the old one, can you? And who amongst you doesn’t love 25mm profile tires riding on 23-inch wheels? There’s all sorts of carbon fiber this and kevlar that available as well. The best part just might be that G-Power isn’t leaving the X5 M — the X6 M’s ugly duckling sibling — out in the cold, as there’s a Typhoon kit for it, too. You know what word comes to mind? Nifty, all of it. Highly entertaining press release after the jump.

    [Source: G-Power]

    Continue reading G-Power takes the BMW X6 M, X5 M to 600 hp and beyond

    G-Power takes the BMW X6 M, X5 M to 600 hp and beyond originally appeared on Autoblog on Sat, 12 Dec 2009 12:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Henrik Fisker’s Electric cars roar into the future TNR.v, CZX.v, LI.v, RM.v, WLC.v, SQM, FMC, ROC, AVL.to, CCE.v, RES.v, QUC.v, HEV. AONE, VLNC, SNE,

    This is what we call the “Cool Factor“, it is above and below. It is bold, streamlined and ready to take off. It is your statement about your values. It is not Cheap in any sense and it is a way to go, at least for us – this is what we would like to have on a drive way. Did we mention that it is Electric Hard Hybrid with lithium-ion battery? We did, hundred times already – Electric cars are not Vacuum Cleaners with wheels any more. They are piece of art and coming in numbers. Karma Fisker is an ultimate marketing tool for Electric Revolution to happen. Money in Lithium and REE will be made with EV’s mass market saturated with Nissans, Renaults, BYDs and Revas. Mass market wild fire will be started by Cars like Karma.
    Our bull market is this “Cool Factor” multiplied by “Big IF“, position yourselves in your chairs and keep belts fastened – we are ready to take off and will keep you posted.
    “At the Los Angeles Auto Show, Henrik Fisker shows off his four-door Karma gas-electric hybrid, a 400-horsepower vehicle that will go from 0 to 60 in about six seconds. (Allen J. Schaben / Los Angeles Times / December 3, 2009)”

    Los Angeles Times

    By Scott Kraft
    December 12, 2009
    The Danish designer creates cars to be fast and beautiful, and he’s convinced that people will pay for those features in a hybrid. With a federal loan, his Irvine firm will put that to the test.
    Not long ago, Henrik Fisker was dashing up Interstate 5 to San Francisco when a highway patrolman clocked his Aston Martin roadster — a car that Fisker himself designed — going 97 mph. He protested. (“It was 90 at the most.”) He got a ticket and set the cruise control at 70. For the next four hours, “I was overtaken by every grandmother,” he said. Running late, he pressed down the pedal. This time, the radar gun caught him going 88 mph. “How long since your last ticket?” the officer asked. Fisker paused, but decided to fess up. “Well, actually, not that long ago,” he replied.
    Over the last two decades, Fisker has designed some of the sexiest cars on the road: sleek BMWs and Aston Martins that accelerate from 0 to 60 in the time it takes to count the fingers on one hand. Now the Danish designer has his own Irvine-based car company and a half-billion-dollar loan from the U.S. government to build gas-electric hybrid cars that plug into a home outlet, go 50 miles without a drop of gas and don’t look a bit eco-friendly. Oh, and they’ll also be fast. “People feel very emotional about cars, and I don’t want them to feel bad about driving a fast car,” said Fisker, as he steered his growling roadster through rush-hour traffic on Sunset Boulevard. “We’re building beautiful and fast cars that you can drive without having a bad conscience or ruining the environment.”
    Many auto industry analysts are skeptical. History is scattered with the wreckage of car companies started by big dreamers, Preston Tucker and John DeLorean among them. Building eco-friendly cars, even eco-chic cars, is one thing, analysts say. Selling them to a fickle public, with pump prices below $3 a gallon, is another. But Fisker, one of the world’s most highly regarded designers of luxury automobiles, likes his chances. And he’s a focus group of one.” As a car lover, I ask myself: What am I going to be buying in the future?” he said. “Will it be a boring, underpowered, dorky car because the government tells me I shouldn’t pollute? Or do I come up with a cool-looking, sexy dream car that is also part of the future? “Tall and fit, tanned and blond, Fisker, 46, is a dream front-man for a car maker, with a resume that few designers can match. He is best known for designing the BMW Z8 and the Aston Martin DB9 and V8 Vantage, vehicles with six-figure sticker prices and ageless silhouettes. An automobile is one of the most complex products for a designer, who must create an aesthetic that combines elements of proportion, sculpture and graphics while accommodating thousands of parts and teams of engineers and marketers. Fisker is known for designs that are fresh as well as classic. “He can do something new and contemporary — but do it with an echo of the brand legacy,” said Stewart Reed, chairman of the transportation design department at the Art Center College of Design. “He understands the importance of proportion and architecture. But he also understands that design, at the end of the day, is a business tool.” The Z8 roadster, a $128,000 update of the 1956 BMW 507, reflects Fisker’s classical design sensibilities, with long, sweeping hood lines and a bold curve over the wheels, which is one of his signatures. The result is a car with a powerful stance, an unmistakable BMW pedigree and, as many reviewers put it, a “timeless design.”James Bond drives a silver Z8 in the 1999 film “The World is Not Enough.” Bond survives in the movie; the car doesn’t. It is sawed in half.Walking around his Aston Martin V8 Vantage recently, Fisker pointed out the design elements he used in the $150,000 vehicle. The long, sleek lines are “a human-like form of sculpture that I think makes a car sexy,” he said. “It’s like a muscle, with the veins of the muscle shining through.” The Vantage has a rounded shoulder over the wheels, giving it a muscular bearing. “I like to have the widest part of the car being the wheels and not the body,” he said. “It gives it a more athletic look and, with the sculpture, helps make a car look sexy.” For Fisker, raw, curbside appeal is the key to car design.”You’ve got to capture the emotional part through the form, so that when people look at it, even before they know if it’s a good-quality car or a fast car, even if they aren’t a ‘car person,’ they say, ‘Wow, I’ve got to have that.’”When I see a car I’ve designed going down the street and somebody admiring it, that’s a nice feeling,” he said.
    The story of how Fisker became a heralded car designer and the eponymous head of what he likes to call “a new American car company” began in Denmark, a country with no automobile manufacturing industry. He had his first inkling that he might one day design cars at age 5, when he was riding in his father’s Saab near their home in suburban Copenhagen. A Maserati raced past.”I got butterflies in my stomach,” Fisker said. “It was then that I knew I had to do something with the way cars look.”He began drawing cars for fun and continued long after boys his age outgrew the phase. His teachers discouraged his ambitions; Denmark, after all, had no jobs for car designers. But Fisker’s father, an electrical engineer who had visited the United States as a teenager, encouraged him.” America had inspired him to believe that you can do whatever you want in life, and that’s what he always told me,” Fisker said. “That was not a typical thing to say to your kids in Denmark. “Fisker eventually lugged his portfolio to Switzerland, where he studied at the European campus of the Pasadena-based Art Center College of Design. After graduating, he went to work at BMW’s advanced design studio and later became president of its subsidiary, Designworks/USA, in Ventura County.In 2001, Fisker moved to Ford Motor Co., first as creative director of its design center in London and then as head of the design studio in Irvine. Later, he was design director, and member of the board, at Aston Martin, the ultra-premium carmaker Ford owned at the time. Two years ago, Fisker and Bernhard Koehler, a German car executive who had worked with Fisker at BMW and Ford, launched Fisker Automotive. The Department of Energy awarded it a $528.7-million loan in September to build two cars, part of a $25-billion effort to jump-start a green revolution in the industry.The first car built will be the Karma, an $87,900 plug-in hybrid sedan with solar panels that will run the climate-control system, keeping the car cool when the vehicle is shut off. The Karma will be assembled in Finland, with a majority of American parts, and production will start late next year, with a target of 15,000 vehicles annually. The majority of the federal money, though, will go to Fisker’s next-generation vehicle, code-named Project Nina, a “family oriented” plug-in hybrid sedan that will cost $47,400 (less a $7,500 federal tax credit). The Nina will be built beginning in 2012 at a former GM plant in Delaware, with an annual target of 100,000 vehicles a year.”A lot of cars have a stylish and sexy sculpture,” Fisker said, but the Nina “will definitely be the most radical, sexy family car on the planet.”
    Fisker Automotive, with about 75 employees, is headquartered in an office park in Irvine and has an engineering facility in Pontiac, Mich. So far, 45 dealers nationwide have signed up to sell Fisker automobiles, and more than 1,600 people, including former Vice President Al Gore, have placed orders for the Karma. The design of Fisker’s Nina remains under wraps at company headquarters, where fingerprint identification is required to access the design rooms. But Fisker executives say it will be as dramatic as the four-door Karma, which is on display at the Los Angeles Auto Show.In designing the Karma, Fisker said, he was mostly focused on what it wouldn’t look like: an eco-friendly car. The result is a vehicle with Fisker’s characteristic long lines, rounded shoulders over the wheels and, in a radical move for Fisker, a front grille that resembles a smile. The design has won admiring reviews, though Fisker says he’s happy if it doesn’t appeal to everyone. “We’re not making cars for everyone,” he said. “I want to have some character in the car. I don’t want a design that is a milk doughnut. “Milk doughnut?”Oh, what’s the word in English? Milquetoast. That’s what I mean. “Both the Karma and Nina will go 50 miles on an eight-hour charge from a 110-volt outlet. After that, a gasoline engine will kick in to generate electricity, adding 250 miles to the range. When using both electricity and gas, the cars will average about 100 miles per gallon, the company says. Fisker noted that the average American commute is less than 30 miles round-trip, and 80% of motorists drive fewer than 40 miles a day. On longer trips where electrical outlets are not available, the Karma and Nina can be driven on gasoline alone, eliminating what designers call “range anxiety” and providing an advantage over all-electric vehicles. As for speed, the 400-horsepower Karma will go from 0 to 60 in about six seconds, almost as quickly as the V8 Vantage, with a top speed of 125 mph. “Our cars will say, ‘I care. But I also enjoy life,’ ” Fisker said. He will have plenty of competition — from all-electric vehicles made by Tesla Motors, another California recipient of a large federal loan, as well as other companies with hybrids in development. “There’s a lot of good with this company, and the Karma is absolutely stunning,” said Rebecca Lindland, an auto analyst with IHS Global Insight. “But the risk is huge. They’re as likely as a Hollywood starlet to make it. Some do and others don’t. What separates the two is often luck.” Either way, she said with a touch of admiration, “you have to have a lot of self-confidence and a lot of charisma to start up an auto company.” Fisker feels especially at home in California, “a place where people still love cars,” he said. He lives with his wife and two teenage children in Newport Beach and commutes to work in the 2009 V8 Vantage, which he leases. (“People think they give you these cars when you design them, but they don’t,” he said.) By this time next year, he’ll be making the drive in a Karma.He still finds time to draw new ideas for cars: in hotels, at his desk at home or on the drafting table in his office.” Sometimes I’ll be taking in some sun by my pool and, suddenly, I’ll have a good idea,” he said. “I go in and get a piece of paper and make a little sketch. “He particularly relishes his time behind the wheel, where he keeps the radar detector on and the cellphone off.” A car is one of the last things in our civilized society where we can still control amazing power,” he said. “If the car were invented today, it wouldn’t be legal. “He fondly recalls one day in Germany when he was driving to work on the Autobahn around 5 a.m. He looked up at the speedometer and was surprised to see that he was going 196 mph. “That’s why you can’t use cup holders in Germany,” he said. “My palms were a bit sweaty. It was pretty cool.”
  • Buzz surrounds Apple’s recent streaming media moves

    Last week, Apple purchased music streaming service Lala for $85 million, fueling speculation that the company will move toward a cloud-based iTunes service. Such a change could allow users to access and stream their purchased iTunes content anywhere, from a variety of different devices.

    Sources have said Apple is currently considering a usage model that would allow consumers to access and manage purchased content directly through the Internet without downloading that content, or even using the iTunes software.

    In addition, Apple changed its policy on streaming media solutions, allowing the very first live broadcasting software to be released on the App Store. The Ustream Live Broadcaster for the iPhone 3G and iPhone 3GS allows users to transmit live video from their phone. In addition, the Knocking Live Video application was approved for sale, but only after a plea directly to Apple co-founder Steve Jobs, developer Pointy Heads software has claimed.

    Read more from AppleInsider

  • OverClocked ReMix celebrates 10 years of video game music

    OverClocked ReMix turns 10 today, celebrating the milestone after countless projects and collaborations, DKC2 and Xenogears among the more recent. The musical virtuosos have amassed 1,800 fan arrangements, 25,000 registered members, and innumerable downloads in a decade

  • HP Glisten now on sale at AT&T

    hpglistenatt

    If you have a yearning for an AMOLED smartphone with a front-facing QWERTY keyboard, you can now get the HP iPAQ Glisten from AT&T online.

    Not in stores yet, the smartphone is available for only $179.99 on a two year contract.

    Are anyone tempted by this device? Let us know why in the comments below.

    Via WMExperts.com

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  • Retinopathy

    Hello everyone….I’m new to this forum and am currently doing research on diabetic retinopathy. I’ve had 3 or 4 lasers done on my L eye which is now almost totally vision impaired and they want to start on my R eye (my good one 😉 Would love to hear from anyone out there about their own experiences and/or alternative remedies (other than lowering your A1C, eating healthy and excercising). My intuition tells me not to continue with these surgeries but I’m at a loss as to finding a new direction.:confused:

    Thank you all 😀

  • Volkswagen iPhone app lets you follow Dakar progress

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    Dakar Touareg

    There are thousands of iPhone apps for all “that” and too much more, but few that we think have the potential to be this cool. VW will contest the Dakar Rally from January 2-17 — Race Touareg 2 drivers Giniel de Villiers and Dirk von Zitzewitz Mark Miller finished 1-2 last year — and you can follow the VW team with its Rally Mobile app.

    The information will start flowing before the race and continue throughout and afterward. Look for daily reports and video recaps, photographs, background information on the the Race Touareg 2, and detailed stage information. Also, It’s free, which is always cool. All the pertinent info and the download link are in the press release after the jump.

    [Source: Volkswagen]

    Continue reading Volkswagen iPhone app lets you follow Dakar progress

    Volkswagen iPhone app lets you follow Dakar progress originally appeared on Autoblog on Sat, 12 Dec 2009 10:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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