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  • UL-Certified Cable Systems

    UL is a sign of safety and trust. ODU, the connector specialist from Mühldorf, is one of the few German manufacturers of system solutions (connector + cable + assembly) to have fulfilled the demanding requirements for UL-qualified manufacturing (Wiring harnesses – UL File – ZPFW2/ZPFW8.E333666)

    From connectors with standard cables and simple assembly all the way to complex cable harnesses, ODU is able to manufacture in accordance with the required safety and quality standard and is entitled to place a UL label on these products.

    In some countries (particularly in North America), export articles without UL certification find it difficult to gain access to the market. As a result, even during the planning stage, equipment manufacturers should ensure that all individual components will be able to show UL certification.

  • Enhanced performance and more applications for automotive professionals

    FEIN SuperCut Automotive now with QuickIN quick clamping system and enhanced professional sets

    Schwäbisch Gmünd, 07 September 2009. FEIN, the manufacturer of professional power tools, presents the new FEIN SuperCut Automotive. The powerful system for vehicle repairs now features the patented QuickIN quick clamping system, enabling accessory changes that are both fast and convenient. The new generation of FEIN SuperCut Automotive is available separately or as part of three professional sets. The sets, which include an extended range of accessories, are designed to meet the particular requirements of vehicle glaziers, automotive workshops and cargo workshops.

    High cutting speed with oscillation technology
    The FEIN SuperCut Automotive is the only professional oscillator on the market and is recommended by many vehicle manufacturers for the removal of glazing from vehicles. It is fitted with a 400 watt high-power motor, produces reliable results and is extremely well-suited to continuous use. With an oscillation motion of 2 x 1.6 degrees and up to 18,500 oscillations per minute, the durable transmission ensures rapid work progress. The electronic speed control delivers a high level of consistency even when loaded. Thanks to the precise oscillating motion, the system prevents damage to paint and glass on vehicles.

    Increased operating comfort and more applications
    The FEIN SuperCut Automotive FSC 1.6 Q with the QuickIN quick clamping system features an improved tool holder. Accessories can be changed tool-free and in the blink of an eye. Thanks to the new clamping element, the oscillating motion is transferred to the tool without play, allowing for better work progress. The FEIN professional sets now include even more accessories, enabling tradespeople in the automotive sector to undertake more applications. For applications requiring a low construction height, the FEIN SuperCut Automotive is also available without the QuickIN quick clamping system.

  • COLOMBO FILIPPETTI “Spherical cams”

    A type of cam that is often described in techinical literature, but rarely made because of its manufacturing difficulty.
    This type of cam is able to produce, in minimum overall dimensions, maximum angles of oscillation.
    COLOMBO FILIPPETTI SPA, by means of custom equipment, is able to manufacture this type of cam and has patented it for the application on textile machines and on special manipulators used in assembling machines.

    The years of experience in this sector, the support to design, the ability and the precision in construction are the point of exellence of cams and cam mechanisms, both single or complementary, dedicated to the unique and particular applications of our customers.

  • Opera Mobile comes to the Gigabyte GSmart S1200

    hamigiga Despite Microsoft’s efforts Opera Mobile is still the best native Windows Mobile browser and has recently become almost the default browser on many new handsets. With the improved Pocket IE this has changed however, with many handsets shipping only with Internet Explorer.

    The Gigabyte GSmart S1200 was one of these, but this decision was recently reversed. Opera Software announced that GIGA-BYTE Communications has selected Opera Mobile 9.5 to power the “Hami” widget service on the Windows based Gigabyte GSmart S1200. Hami, developed by Taiwan’s leading operator Chunghwa Telecom (CHT), delivers local, online information directly to the GSmart screen. With Opera Mobile 9.5, GSmart users can not only surf the Web with a full featured browser, but also easily access news, weather, live stock quotes, local search engines, and other online services with just one-click.

    “Browsing is one of the main features on the GSmart S1200, and Opera Mobile is widely recognized as the best browser for smartphones,” said Dr. Stanley Jenq, CEO of GIGA-BYTE Communications Inc. “Because of Opera’s leadership in developing widgets for mobile phones, we predict a seamless delivery of CHT’s Hami services, giving users an even easier way to search, socialize and simply enjoy the Web,” continued by Dr. Jenq.

    Taiwan-based CHT developed the Hami concept for smartphones so that their subscribers could access local, online information. In the future, Hami will extend its offer to paid services, such as e-book stores. Currently Hami can be accessed by three major smartphone operating systems: iPhone, Android and Windows Mobile.

    “Opera Mobile has been shipped on more than 130 million phones globally and has gained its international renown largely through successful partnerships and word-of-mouth. Widgets are a key focus on Opera Mobile, and we share Gigabyte and CHT’s vision of improving the user experience through easy, one-click Web solutions,” said James Wei, President, Asia Pacific, Opera Software. “With this partnership, Opera is extending its reach in Taiwan and bringing the convenience of widgets to more people, in more places.”

    New shipments of the GSmart S1200 will come with a preinstalled version of Opera Mobile 9.5. For the existing registered GSmart S1200 users, Opera Mobile 9.5 is now available through a firmware download from www.gigabytecm.com.

    Via JustAMP

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  • Easy Cream Cheese Danish

    Easy Cream Cheese Danish

    The dough used in danishes is similar to the dough used in croissants. It is a very flaky, buttery yeast dough that takes more than a little bit of time and patience to put together. Sometimes it’s nice to dawdle over a batch of pastry on a lazy weekend morning, but other times it’s nice to get something delicious onto your plate a little more quickly. One solution is to run to the local bakery and pick up some danishes, but another is to make a quick batch of danish using puff pastry instead of a more traditional danish dough. Puff pastry is easy to work with and produces a crisp, flaky delicious danish – especially considering that it takes so little time to make a batch.

    The secret to making these danishes so good is the cream cheese filling inside. It is made with cream cheese and white chocolate. The white chocolate gives it a rich, creamy feel and just the right amount of sweetness. A good quality white chocolate (not white baking chips) will have notes of milk and vanilla in it, which will help round out the flavor of the cream cheese. The cream is delicious on its own and bakes very well, staying tender and moist within its crisp puff pastry shell.

    Now, if you’re a purist, you could keep the cream cheese danish filling plain and serve the pastries that way. I used mixture of raspberry and peach preserves to sweeten them up a little more. Any flavor of jam will work here, but thicker jams and preserves will tend to spread less during baking and produce a slightly prettier danish in the end. This is another good example of a recipe that you can use as a jumping off point for creating your own variations. The 1,2,3 Puff! Contest that Pepperidge Farm is holding is still accepting entries and a mouthwatering Danish – or similarly enticing pastry – sounds like it would have a great chance of being a prize winner. The grand prize is an all-expenses paid trip to New York (along with some foodie bonuses, like a tour of NYC pastry shops and bakeries!), but that’s just the bonus of experimenting with new recipes in the kitchen.

    (more…)

  • Pythagoras Cave

    Samos Island, Greece | Eccentric Homes

    On the Greek island of Samos is a cave system that was once home and classroom to famous mathematician and philosopher, Pythagoras. The cave is located on Mount Kerkis, an extinct volcano that forms the second-highest peak in the East Aegean.

    Though Pythagoras’ theorems have been fundamental to our understanding of mathematics, relatively little is known about the man who first proved that, in a right triangle, a2 + b2 = c2. According to local legend, however, Pythagoras fled to these caves when he was being hunted by the infamous tyrant, Polycrates, around 400 B.C.

    During this time, it is believed that Pythagoras inhabited one small cave and used a nearby larger cave as his classroom. One can only imagine the types of lessons Pythagoras taught while living on Mount Kerkis. After all, in addition to being a mathematician, Pythagoras was also the founder of the esoteric religious movement known as Pythagoreanism.

    Rooted in both mathematics as well as mysticism, Pythagoreanism has been described as “a philosophical school, a religious brotherhood, and a political association.” Though it is known that the Pythagoreans followed many of the religious and ascetic beliefs of their master, much of their practices have been shrouded in secrecy.

    Today, most of the caves on Mount Kerkis are open to the public. Visitors can explore the old home of Pythagoras, nearby chapels, as well as a series of stalactites which “holy water” allegedly drips from.

  • Abandoned Village of Kayakoy

    Turkey, Asia | Incredible Ruins

    The deserted ruins of a once bustling town are nestled against the Taurus Mountains, close to the world famous beaches and yacht-filled harbor at Olu Deniz. Although the stone buildings are roofless and weathered, and the narrow streets worm with age, this is not an ancient city, but modern ruin deserted for political reasons in the 1920s.

    Originally built in the 1700s, the town called Karmylassos in Greek was home to as many as 20,000 Greek Orthodox residents by the early twentieth century. The messy fallout of WWI and end of the Ottoman Empire led to the land grabs of the Greco-Turkish War (1919–1922). The resounding loss of the Greeks in this war ended with violence and retrobutions aimed at the remaining Greek Orthodox community with the new Turkish borders, and in turn, against Muslim Turks in Greece. Hundreds of thousands of Greeks fled the violence in Turkey, which led the governments to agree to a mutual compulsory population exchange starting in 1923 in order to staunch the bloodshed.

    The residents of Kayakoy, who had thus far lived peacefully with their Turkish neighbors, abandoned the town and went to Greece, which was struggling to find places for the nearly 200,000 refugees of the exchange, added to the more than a million former Turkish residents who had fled before the official exchange. Over 300,000 Turks were forcibly removed from Greece to a war-ravaged, but land-rich, Turkey in exchange. The polar explorer and Nobel Prize winning Norwegian scientist Fridtjof Nansen was assigned the task of organizing the exchange,

    In Kayakoy, approximately 3500 homes now sit empty and mostly roofless, along with two Greek Orthodox churches, and the fountains and cisterns that watered the city. Harsh winters and strong winds have stripped the buildings down to ruins, making the town look more ancient than it is. A private museum tells the story of the town.

    The book Birds Without Wings by Louis de Bernieres is set in a fictionalized version of Karakoy during WWI and the last days of the Ottoman Empire.

    Kayaköy was adopted by the UNESCO as a World Friendship and Peace Village.

  • Dear Peter Mandelson… Dan Bull Sings His Opposition To Kicking People Off The Internet

    Musician Dan Bull seems to be carving out a nice space for himself responding to UK efforts to make copyright law more ridiculous than it already is, by voicing his opposition in song. A few months back, we wrote about his awesome open letter to Lily Allen (full disclosure: I get a brief mention) and now he’s informed us that he’s back again with an open letter (in song) to Peter Mandelson, called Dear Mandy:




    I wonder if someone rich and famous has to buy Mandelson dinner before he’ll actually listen to it.

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  • Not-so-shocking admission: Zap kills Xebra, slows development of Alias

    Filed under: , ,

    Our sleuthing colleagues over at The Truth About Cars have dissected electric car maker Zap’s latest 10-Q filing, and they unearthed the following little tidbit: “The decrease of $1.5 million (in revenue) is primarily due to the phase out of our three wheeled Xebra vehicle with reduced selling prices.”

    We can’t say that we’re particularly shocked that Zap has found it difficult to continue moving its little three-wheeled Xebra contraption, especially with discretionary spending money in such short supply these days and reasonably-priced hybrids flooding the used car market. Perhaps even more damning for Zap, though, is the admission that it is doing “less work on the development of the Alias prototype vehicle.”

    Whatever the future has in store for Zap in 2010 and beyond, one thing is for sure: there will be no shortage of press releases to let us all know what’s (supposedly) going on behind closed doors.

    [Source: TTAC]

    Not-so-shocking admission: Zap kills Xebra, slows development of Alias originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 30 Nov 2009 18:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Slain Lakewood officers prompt Seattle manhunt

    Person of interest had history of mental illness

    Editor, The Times:

    I was not surprised to find out that the alleged murderer of the four Lakewood police officers has a documented history of mental illness [“4 officers slain; Seattle manhunt,” page one, Nov. 30].

    We will continue to see innocent members of our community become victims of violent crime as long as the judges put the rights of the seriously mentally ill ahead of the safety of the public.

    We deserve to be protected from people like this.

    — Doug Hjellen, Mill Creek

    Gun sales: a U.S. epidemic

    The tragic massacre of four police officers at a coffee shop in Tacoma reminds us that even with John Allen Muhammad dead [“Life and death not black and white,” Opinion, Leonard Pitts Jr. syndicated column, Nov. 15], his spirit lives on.

    Recall that it was a Tacoma gun shop that not only supplied this D.C. sniper and his sidekick with their guns, but which was implicated in selling guns that were involved in more than two dozen crimes. It used to be said that scofflaw operations and gun fairs accounted for a very high percentage of guns obtained without background checks, but dicey gun sales are now the rule in much of the U.S. No one thought to alert authorities, for example, when Fort Hood Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, a former psychiatrist-turned-mass-murderer, bought his gun at Guns Galore.

    The gun epidemic in the United States now costs at least 30,000 lives a year — as many deaths as influenza causes, with another 70,000 being injured each year, 10 percent of whom are children. The United States is painfully in need of civilian gun control, and I write this as a good neighbor from Canada with many relatives and friends living in the U.S.

    American guns pouring over the border end up on Canadian streets, making police work in Canada much more perilous as well.

    — Ron Charach, Toronto, Canada

  • WTO riots: 10 years ago this week

    Seattle should be proud of historical riots

    Thank you for providing a balanced view in The Seattle Times reviews at the 10th anniversary of the WTO conference in Seattle [“10 years after the Battle in Seattle, an evolving national policy on trade,” Opinion, Gary Locke guest commentary, Nov. 29].

    Too often the events have been portrayed as a few out-of-town anarchists took over the city. The vast majority of people protesting in the streets — I was one of them — had very real concerns about the anti-democratic WTO, a shadowy world government if there ever was one. The WTO was designed to benefit corporations, not people — even the WTO’s leader admitted that much in your article.

    The Seattle protests started a worldwide discussion about trade and whom it should benefit. Seattle should be proud to have started this discussion.

    — Jan Heine, Seattle

    When will we start listening to the protesters?

    Jon Talton’s column “Battle of Seattle protesters proved right” [Business, Nov. 30] is thought-provoking. Many other large protest movements of recent years have proved to be right, too, though initially discredited by the media and much of the mainstream.

    Remember the civil-rights demonstrations? The anti-Vietnam War marchers? The anti-nuclear protesters? The grass-roots anti-poverty movement? The environmental groups that have been warning for years about global warming and depletion of irreplaceable resources?

    There is much to learn from those with the gumption to speak out against injustice and inequity even if it isn’t popular to do so.

    Will we ever learn to listen to them?

    — Sarah Johnson, Kirkland

    Seattle: a city of complete mismanagement?

    It’s clear after reading Lynda V. Mapes 10-year anniversary article on the WTO protests that she needs to get out from behind her keyboard and actually talk with real Seattleites [“Five days that jolted Seattle,” Seattletimes.com, Local News, Nov. 29].

    Real Seattleites have always wanted their streets plowed and basic city services met. Sadly, Seattle got hijacked years ago by elites obsessed with making Seattle a world-class city at all costs.

    Of course, who determines what world class is and what benefits accrue from that magical status are mysteries that no one has ever got around to explaining. Judging from what’s going on in Seattle, world class to them seems to be an antonym to words like competence and livability. As a result, we get the WTO disaster, last winter’s failure and Boeing moving out.

    Only an idiot would be shocked that over a decades worth of complete mismanagement is finally bearing bitter fruit. I’ve given up hope that Seattle is going to get better before it gets much worse. Want things to get better, Seattle? Ignore Paris and New York City, and worry instead about Phinney Ridge and Columbia City.

    — Tim Mahoney, Bellingham

    An Aussie’s take on WTO; memorial should be as loud as Pearl Jam

    I visited Seattle this year for one week. One of my goals was to visit where the 1999 WTO protests took place. I knew of many other places to visit in Seattle and Washington state, but for people from outside the U.S., this is one of the things for which Seattle is known.

    A friend took me to the Convention Center and I was disappointed — but not too surprised — that there is no monument to the momentous events that took place 10 years ago. It is poignant to reflect on those events after living through the continuing global financial crisis. There were many disparate groups and reasons that coalesced in Seattle, but most were protesting against the unfounded faith in free markets, against casino capitalism, for transparency in the operations of corporations and for a more equitable international financial system.

    I hope the people of Seattle who did not understand the reasons for the 1999 protests at the time have joined the dots between now and then, since they and billions of others have felt the impacts of lack of regulation, bad policies and greed. If those messages from 1999 had been listened to and acted on, we could be living in a very different world today.

    For these reasons, it is time that a permanent memorial is built in Seattle to explain what the purpose of the WTO meeting had been, discuss what the protesters were railing against, and to consider how those in authority escalated the tension through disproportionate violence and illogical decisions.

    The memorial doesn’t need to be as high as the Space Needle, or as sublime as the Experience Music Project. But it does need to speak out as loudly as Pearl Jam. And if it doesn’t, the decision to not commemorate the protests will be even fishier than Pike Place.

    — Jeremy Tarbox, Australia

  • Ringtone Expressions 50% off just today on Cyber Monday

    ringtonexpressionRingtone Expressions is a desktop tool which allows one to create your own custom ringtones for your Windows Mobile Phone using the music from your music library. This allows one to create an unlimited amount of ringtones and never have to pay for ringtones again.

    The software features:

    • Create ringtones instantly with Drag and Drop from iTunes
    • Create ringtones from songs purchased on the iTune plus
    • Get Ringtone Shuffler for absolutely free
    • Express your ringtones to friends on Facebook and Twitter
    • Create ringtones from YouTube Videos
    • Discover cool new ringtones from your Facebook friends
    • Create ringtones from website with flash based music or video player
    • Create ringtones from your computer’s microphone
    • Your own Ringtone Expressions Facebook Widget
    • Gorgeous Interface and Experience

    Gx5, the developer, is offering 50% of this application this Cyber Monday.  The software is available in our in our software store here. Remember to enter the coupon code of cybermonday-rte to access the discount.

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  • REPORT: Audi intent on keeping upcoming A1 premium

    Filed under: , ,

    Audi A1 Sportback concept – Click above for high-res image gallery

    After watching from the sidelines for years as arch-rival BMW found success with the Mini brand, Audi is finally gearing up to jump into the scrum with the new A1. But unlike the Mini One (which slots below the Cooper in overseas markets), Audi doesn’t intend to target the budget market. Instead, the new A1 will take aim directly at the Mini Cooper.

    Don’t expect to see any engine badges on the back of the four-ringed Polo, however, as Audi reportedly intends on keeping the displacement on the A1 hidden. An S1 is tipped to be in the works, but short of that the only thing onlookers will have to distinguish one engine model from another is the exhaust note. Expect the pre-production A1 – previewed by the Metroproject and A1 Sportback concepts – to debut at the upcoming Geneva Motor Show with sales beginning later next year.

    [Source: EVO]

    REPORT: Audi intent on keeping upcoming A1 premium originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 30 Nov 2009 17:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Former Gov. Gary Locke on trade

    Answers on economics still inadequate

    Gary Locke rightly says that concerns over the economics of trade haven’t been fully answered [“10 years after the Battle in Seattle, an evolving national policy on trade,” Opinion, guest commentary, Nov. 29].

    Unfortunately, his only answer is more of the same: more trade and more rhetoric about how it benefits everyone.

    His panacea seems to be more exports. But there’s nothing Americans can make for export that Chinese and Indians can’t make more cheaply. Wages will inevitably be driven down and economic insecurity will inevitably increase. A few will make it into the technological and managerial class, but most people will be stuck in low-wage, dead-end occupations in a continually churning economy.

    Beyond that, our democratic sovereignty is eroded by global trade agreements that our political and business elites lock us into, with no public input and little ability to renegotiate.

    Sorry, Locke — and President Obama — our answers are still inadequate.

    — Chris Nielsen, Shoreline

  • Fringe – s2 | e10 – Grey Matters

    The team investigates bizarre brain business.

    Add this to your queue
    Added: Mon Nov 30 21:58:05 UTC 2009
    Air date: Thu Dec 10 00:00:00 UTC 2009
    Duration: 44:03
    Closed captions available.

  • Danny Westneat’s red-light advice

    The defining difference of mentalities

    I can’t believe that there is someone who regards running a red light to be the equivalent of illegal parking [“Red-light tickets veer off course,” NWWednesday, Nov. 25]. This defies logic, but of course politicians and the law have never been particularly concerned about logic.

    Sadly, it looks like some of our citizens also have trouble with logic.

    Running a red light is stupid and dangerous and reckless. It signifies an elitist mentality that pervades our citizenry. Howling about photo cops also smacks of an “if you don’t catch me, then I didn’t do it” mentality.

    Where is the attitude of, “I am a citizen and therefore I respect the laws and my fellow citizens” mentality?

    Running red lights and stop signs is a serious problem. In small towns, such as where I live, it is an absolutely endemic practice that everyone seems to tolerate. Such practices simply breed disrespect for traffic laws, and have a downstream consequence that implies, the only crime is getting caught.

    One easy way to avoid a ticket is to behave responsibly. Don’t speed, don’t run red lights, don’t moan about the costs of doing so.

    — Dick Swenson, Walla Walla

    I’m a two-time recipient of camera citations

    As a two-time recipient of $128 red-light camera citations, I have to say to columnist Danny Westneat and the whining 49: Get over it.

    It was folly to ever equate, however loosely, running a red light with a parking violation. Only one of these transgressions routinely puts life and limb at risk. Only one needs a disincentive with teeth in it. Only one presents incontrovertible evidence that a driver was willing to endanger all who unwittingly cross his path on his way to shaving precious seconds off his all-important trip.

    No doubt all have seen downtown intersections, teeming with crossing pedestrian traffic, where the occasional self-absorbed driver comes barreling through against the red, all the while chatting on a cellphone. This harried sort of behavior is practically an epidemic, and a measure that encourages one to chill for about 30 seconds every so often is a positive one.

    It’s compromise enough that these citations do not appear on our driving records. Ratcheting the fine down to the parking-ticket range would turn it into an elaborate but forgettable wrist slap. Besides, in these days of the impossible budget mess, where public agencies are struggling to maintain services and keep people employed, it would be shortsighted to begrudge them this win-win revenue generator.

    — Jeffrey Floor, Seattle

  • Chinese Journalists Busted For Helping To Cover Up Mining Disaster That Killed 35

    china miners chinese

    We knew the squeaky clean image China presented at the 2008 Olympics was too good to be true, but a recent cover-up scandal reveals just how hard Beijing tried.

    Guardian: China will prosecute 10 journalists and dozens of officials over the three-month cover up of a mining disaster that killed 35 people, state media said today.

    Mine bosses moved bodies, destroyed evidence and paid reporters 2.6m yuan (£231,000) to conceal the disaster, the China Daily newspaper reported. They used threats and large payoffs to keep relatives quiet, cremated bodies against the wishes of bereaved families and dumped earth to seal off the shaft, according to reports.

    Chinese reporters have long taken hush money after accidents, according to the Guardian.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • 2011 Ford Fiesta gets another early reveal

    Filed under: , , , ,

    2011 Ford Fiesta Hatchback – Click above for high-res image gallery

    The Fiesta Movement, Ford’s campaign to introduce the little global Fiesta car to the U.S. market, kicked off at the Chicago Auto Show earlier this year and will end this week during the LA Auto Show with, what else, a party. Oh, and the official unveiling of the 2011 North American version. We got a sneak peek of the Fiesta earlier today that it now seems was incorrect, based on these new pictures found buried on Ford’s website.

    The U.S.-style three-bar grille is thankfully not present in these official pics, though the hatch and sedan do wear different grilles (we like the hatch’s version better, for what it’s worth). The rest of the car remains as good-looking as the Euro-spec version ever did, and the interior will be a big draw for this car – along with solid MPG numbers, of course. For those of you who hoped Ford would bring the Fiesta over from Europe pretty much intact, it appears your wishes have been granted. We’ll have all the details from LA right soon.

    [Source: Ford]

    2011 Ford Fiesta gets another early reveal originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 30 Nov 2009 17:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • HTC HD2 being subjected to knife attack once again

    We have seen the HTC HD2 withstand a knife attack, but some have expressed doubt that it was real. Today we bring you another video of the HD2 being torture tested, this time with a Leatherman Supertool 200, and we have first-hand eye witness testimony from our friend Dawid of PDA.pl that this in fact is horribly real, a fact confirmed by the real hesitation seen by the HD2 owner just before he takes the knife to his expensive smartphone, and that the HD2 survived unscathed.

    Are any other HD2 owner willing to try this out themselves?  Let us know in the comments.

    Source: Chip.pl via PDA.pl

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  • If We Don’t Kick People Off The Internet For File Sharing, Football Will Die

    We’ve discussed in the past how the UK’s Premier League’s fear of the internet has been a case study in what not to do online. But it seems that the Premier League bosses still want to push forward with plans to make it more difficult and more annoying for fans to actually watch matches. Jeff T alerts us to an opinion piece in The Guardian from the CEO of the Premier League, Richard Scudamore, in support of Lord Mandelson’s Digital Economy Bill for kicking accused (not convicted) file sharers off the internet. It’s the usual rant against “piracy” without much basis or knowledge:


    Without the safe passage of the bill — requiring ISPs to take firm measures against unauthorised filesharers who are currently streaming and downloading with virtual impunity — the marker that this is theft isn’t even set down, educating consumers cannot begin in earnest, businesses cannot begin to develop new models because the market won’t be functioning properly and, most importantly of all, the current levels of investment that create jobs as well as talent will be lost. And that is when the real cost of digital theft would become apparent.

    And yet, even as he writes those words, the creative industries that he insists are dying have been growing. How? Because the business models have been adapting just fine — even without additional artificial barriers to competition or the ability to kick people off the internet. And, in the case of the Premier League, Scudamore seems to be leaving out an awful lot of important facts, such as how incredibly limited an online offering the Premier League has put forth, which is a large part of the reason why lots of people stream it illegally. He also tosses out some totally made up “facts” such as “the UK leads the world in illegal downloads of TV programmes, with up to 25% of all online TV piracy taking place here.” Well, perhaps it’s not totally made up since he uses the magic words “up to.” But if there is a problem with file sharing of TV shows in the UK, it’s likely (as Jeff noted in his submission) because the “creative industries” that Scudamore insists are so important still delay the release of popular shows in the UK and demand that online streaming sites like Hulu not work outside the US.

    Piracy is not the problem. Piracy is only showing folks like Scudamore that they’re doing a terrible job in meeting demand. He doesn’t need people kicked off the internet to adjust his business model. Lots of others are already doing so.

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