Blog

  • Dedicated HTC HD2 page

    Download_04_HTC_HD2 With our recent poll showing there is a significant proportion of our readers who have become a bit sick of every second article being about the HTC HD2 our readers may have noticed a reduction in the number of articles showing up on the front page about this amazing smartphone.

    This does not mean however we have cut back on our coverage of the most interesting Windows Mobile smartphone this year.  We have merely moved most of our news items to our dedicated section, which can be found here or by typing in WMPoweruser.com/htcleo.  Our coverage also still shows up in our RSS and Twitter feed, so if you do not want to miss a thing follow us using these links here.

    Of course if there is any news on any other topic you wish us to cover, don’t forget to contact us on our tips page here.

    I hope we have struck a reasonable balance which will keep all our readers happy.  Let us know in the comments below.

    Edit: In response to requests, we now also have a dedicated HTC HD2 RSS feed, for the real fanatics ;)

    Share/Bookmark

  • Huge collection of HTC HD2 tips and tricks

    Download_04_HTC_HD2 Toyboy2000 on XDA-Developers have set up a huge thread on XDA-Developers containing many very useful HTC HD2 tips and tricks which should help any new owners (and at this stage we are all new users) get up and running pretty rapidly.

    I have extracted a few of my favourites, but as can be seen from the entry numbers (which I have left in place) there are many, many more over at XDA-Developers that may just be the solution to an issue that may have been troubling you.

    See a few below:

    2. Enable Website Thumbnails When Navigating Back in Opera
    Go to HKLM\Software\Opera\Info and change EnableVisualBack from 0 to 1. Press back key and use gestures to go back pages.

    3. Increase Resolution of Back Thumbnails
    Go to HKLM\Software\Opera\Prefs\User Prefs and change History Thumbnail Size from 128 to 512.

    4. Increase Number of Opera Tabs
    Go to HKLM\Software\Opera\Prefs\User Prefs and change Maximum Allowed Tabs from 3 to say 9 (or any number)

    6. Enable NaviPanel Without Owning the Car Kit/Navigation Dock
    Go to Windows folder and copy NaviPanel.exe as a shortcut to Windows\Start Menu folder.

    14. Activate Hidden Photo Modes
    You can activate two hidden photo modes by using the following registry tweaks and then reset:
    To enable Video Share mode:
    Go to HKLM\Software\HTC\Camera\P9
    set "Enable" to "1"
    To enable GPS Photo mode:
    Go to HKLM\Software\HTC\Camera\P10
    set "Enable" to "1"

    19. Improve Suggested T9 Dictionary With Custom Words
    The Leo has a very useful hidden application in the Windows directory. You need to unhide hidden system and Rom files in order to find it. Find the file "eT9MyWords.exe" in the Windows directory and add a shortcut to this file in your Windows/Start Menu folder.
    When in the application, add the most common words you use when using the keypad such as names, locations, user names, email addresses and other words not common in the standard T9 dictionary. For example if you are based in London, UK you could add the following locations:
    Leicester, Piccadilly, Tottenham, Soho, Charring, Euston, Trafalgar, Clapham,
    and words such as BRB, DVD, coz, lol, xoxo, [email protected], ciao, etc.

    23. Enable Haptic Feedback in Opera for Link Clicking
    Go to HKLM\Software\Opera\Defaults
    Add new DWORD Value as Name: VibrationEnabled and DWORD Data (dec): 1

    27. Disable Auto Screen Lock
    If you use S2U2, you would have hated the double lock annoyance. Now you can turn off default Auto Screen Lock.
    Go to HKCU\ControlPanel\Keybd and change DeviceLockWhenSuspend to 0, or use the following cab:
    http://forum.xda-developers.com/atta…2&d=1258236796 thanks to triperko.

    29. Tips to Improve Typing Accuracy on Keyboard
    Tap each key very lightly and watch the keyboard as you type each letter. Don’t watch the suggested words that pop up. Type at a moderate pace. Don’t rush. Try the Align Screen option in the Settings/System/Screen menu. Don’t press hard. Press as light as physically possible – barely touching the screen and wait at each crosshair until it moves. If you are right handed, for the middle and two right most crosshairs use your right thumb and for the left two most crosshairs use your left thumb. If you were holding the phone with both hands and wanted to touch something on the extreme left of screen you would use your left thumb would you? Also, turn on Spell Correction in Touch Input options and turn off vibration for keys too!
    Finally the following cab decreases the sensitivity on the keyboard allowing for less mistakes. Really works. A life saver.
    http://rapidshare.com/files/30889673…hScreen_v2.cab (Cab to decrease sensitivity)
    http://rapidshare.com/files/30827317…n_original.cab (Cab to restore default settings of keyboard)

    33. Enable Auto Data Disconnect for Auto Email Downloads and Other Downloads with a Cab File
    When you have auto email downloads enabled, data is not disoconnected after mail retrieval and thus your battery is drained much faster. Modify the following reg edit to have data disconnect after 60 seconds. You can test this by tapping on the notification bar while downloading emails and watch the data connection close after idle for 60 seconds. Please note. Data connection will NOT auto disconnect if you have any HTC Sense auto download enabled such as Weather, Twitter, Stocks, Facebook or Time Sync. Please set these apps to manual download only. Please note that this setting has the possible effect of disabling simultaneous voice and data on some devices, even if you are on a capable network and signal. Finally the following app will truely disable ALL data connections AND change to GSM mode in standby to save even more battery power:
    http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=478519
    HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Comm\ConnMgr\Planner\Settings
    CacheTime = 60
    SuspendResume = should be blank. Delete "GPRS_bye_if_device_off" text.
    VPNCacheTime = 60

    35. Enable Clickable Links in Zoomed Out Opera
    This reg edit allows you to tap on a link without the need for zooming in first.
    HKLM/Software/Opera/Info/az_overview_threshold
    Change value from 64 to 32

    36. Get BBC iPlayer Mobile Website Working on HD2
    The current Opera 9.7 version on the HD2 is not detected by the BBC iplayer website. Here is a modifcation to Opera preferences you can do to get it to work. Launch Opera and type: opera:config in the url bar. No http:// prefix needed. Tap on User Prefs at bottom of the list and then scroll down to Custom User-Agent. Delete ALL text in the box and enter HTC_Touch_HD_T8282. Scroll down to the bottom of User Prefs list and hit Save. Exit Opera and restart it. Now go to http://bbc.co.uk/mobile/iplayer. Videos are opened in your Streaming App on your phone.

    39. Speed Up Web Page Loading Considerably/ Enables Wireless N mode
    The following registry tweak will enable almost instantaneous web page loading in the web browser. It apparently enables wireless N mode but seems to work with cellular data too. Go to:
    HKLM/Comm/BCMSDDHD1/Parms
    11nModeDisable = Change from 1 to 0

    40. Enable Magnifying Box When Selecting Text
    Press and hold your finger on any text in a HTC app such as Messaging and an iphone-esque selection procedure with handles to drag and highlight text will appear. Modify the following registry entry to add a magnifying window as you select and highlight the text. Go to:
    HKLM/Software/HTC/TextSelection/EnableMagnifier and change from 0 to 1.

    Read the full collection at XDA-Developers here.

    Share/Bookmark

  • GekoNewCal – new finger-friendly appointment software now available

    gekonewcal Users with HTC’s latest TouchFlo3D will likely not see much point in this software, but if you are using a device with the less sophisticated TouchFlo2D you may very often find yourself dropping into the less than finger-friendly standard Windows Mobile menus to do such things as setting up new appointments.

    GekoNewCal is a new application for calendars of Windows Mobile smartphones that aims to address this.

    The software uses a kinetic picker instead of the stylus and a finger friendly set-up to make the process of creating an appointment easy and fun. 

    The software however still remains sophisticated, still allowing for example for meeting invitations to be sent out. 

    In fact, while scheduling an appointment, it’s possible to call friends and colleagues to take part by using a specifically created SMS, carrying all the details of the meeting. If accepted, a confirmation will be sent to the meeting organizer and the date will be automatically scheduled in both calendars.

    It has all the standard features of the Windows Mobile Appointment setup screen, such as enabling the user to define appointments not only by specifying date, start time and duration of each event, but also by setting a number of additional options, select the category which the appointment refers to, sets its lasting as “all day event”, manage its recurrence (none, daily, weekly, monthly, yearly) and activate a reminder alarm from 5 minutes to 1 hour before the event.

    GekoNewCal  is available in Italian, English, French, Spanish, German, Russian, Dutch, Norwegian, Swedish, Greek, Czech, Danish, Polish, Ukrainian, Romanian, Chinese (traditional and simplified) and Japanese. If necessary, the user can insert any other language simply by creating and adding a resource file with own translation.

    The software is even skin-able, with a gallery of skins soon to be available at www.gekonewmobile.com.

    GekoNewCal supports QVGA, VGA and WVGA screens. The developer aims to follow up with GekoTask, an application aimed at the management of tasks lists, fully integrated with GekoNewCal and working with the same logic and the same visual.

    GekoNewCal costs 3.99 Euro and is available for purchase at www.gekonewmobile.com.

    Share/Bookmark

  • This Is What Too Big To Fail Looks Like

    Check out this heatmap of the infamous credit default swap (CDS) market, courtesy of Zero Hedge. Obviously November 19th (the date of this heatmap) was a pretty bad day given all the red, which indicates weakness.

    Yet also notice the massive size of AIG as a proportion of the map. AIG credit default swaps make up a huge chunk of the upper left hand corner.

    CDS Heatmap

    Upper left hand corner, zoomed-in — This is what too big to fail looks like:

    CDS Heatmap

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • Negative Interest Rates Are No Cause For Panic

    chart

    We’ve highlighted before why recent negative treasury bill yields aren’t sustainable, aren’t reason to panic, and are just due to end of the year window dressing by financial companies.

    The excellent fixed income blog Across the Curve takes it further, highlighting commentary from CRT Research that basically supports this view. They interestingly add that the negative yields we’re seeing might be partially caused by the fact that we have less investment banks and more ‘plain vanilla’ financial companies with December 31st year-ends.

    It’s a great example of how markets can be distorted by the absence of business variety.

    Across the Curve: “We instead take our cue from activity in the financing markets, where year end is playing its hand – Jan bills are trading negative. The story here is not a new one as we saw bills negative at the end of the last quarter, but exacerbated by a more intense year end. We say that because 1) it’s clearly the talking point on funding desks, 2) EVERYONE has a Dec 31 year end as we have no investment banks any longer, [emphasis added] and 3) as bank holding companies there’s a likelihood that former IBs, too, need to show cash in something other than a mattress.

    analyst whom I read suggested that an exacerbating factor was the maturity of some cash management bills which were not replaced.

    Whatever the case, I am certain that the present circumstance is not an indicator of financial stress as plunging bill rates have been in the past.

    Check out more from Across the Curve here.

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • Saturday catching up post

    As anyone who regularly reads this blog can tell, I’ve been a bit hit and miss in posting lately.  The bride and I have been swamped with work on the Sous Vide Supreme project.  MD has been working with chefs to develop recipes along with creating a bunch herself; she has been editing a book on sous vide for the home cook written by yet another sous vide expert; she’s been posting on the Sous Vide Supreme blog (eggs the sous vide way); and, as you can see at the left, she’s been talking sous vide to anyone who will listen.  All this while she prepares for performing the Messiah in about two weeks.  I’ve been heavily involved in the business end of things, which is a never-ending task.  Plus, I’m the taster-in-chief.  Neither of us dreamed that this would turn into such a time-gobbling project after the development of the machine.  But it has.  It seems that we are spending twice as much time now working in some capacity on  Sous Vide Supreme than we ever did before – even when we were at our busiest.  I’m going to have to work harder on my time management if I expect to keep up with all the other projects – including this blog – that I have going.

    Twitter

    The sous vide time commitments have put a real hickey on my reading.  I’ve probably read less over the past four months than in any four month period of my life.  Instead of five or six books per week, I’m down to about two or three max.  I hate it.  I’m trying to keep up with my daily medical/scientific journal trawl, but that has even slacked off a bit.  When I do find something of interest, instead of blogging on it as I used to, I stick it up on my Twitter page.  I probably post 10-15 times per day on Twitter, so if you want to keep up on a moment-by-moment basis, follow me on Twitter.  If you have a problem thinking of yourself as a Twitter person, give it a try.  I dipped my toes in the Twitter waters with great hesitation, and now I love it.  I’ve found it extremely valuable because I find all kinds of new stuff daily.  You’ve got to be careful who you follow, however, or you can waste a ton of time.  If you get started, start following people who provide you with information you can use.  I avoid following people who do nothing but tell me what they ate for breakfast that day or what movie they’re going to see that night.  Sign up an give it a go. You don’t have to write anything (or tweet, as it’s called) if you don’t want to.  You can simply lurk and be the beneficiary of a ton of good info.   The Twitter people take you by the hand and get you squared away.  It takes all of about two minutes – if even that.  Literally.

    Comments

    I have fallen way, way behind on dealing with comments.  As I wrote a while back, I had to stop answering individual comments, and I’ve pretty much stuck to my guns on that.  Problem is, I had about three hundred comments stacked up before I started doing that.

    When comments come in and I post them, they go up in by date.  So back when I was spending half my day dealing with them, I would often come across a comment that required some thought and a detailed answer.  If I didn’t have time to deal with it right then, I put it off until later.  Often when later came, I had 20 or 30 more that came in after the one requiring the time.  I didn’t want to answer those and put them up ahead of the one I hadn’t answered, so I simply didn’t deal with any of them.  Now I’ve got about 340 of them stacked up and it gives me heartburn whenever I even get on my blog administration screen.  The sad thing is that some of these comments go back months and months.

    I’ve been wracking my brain trying to figure out what to do with them, and I’ve finally come to a decision.  I’m simply going to post them as they are.  I’m going to post about 30 of them per day until they’re all up.  Why not all at once?  Because I know many of you are set up to get comments emailed to you when I post them.  I don’t want to clot email accounts with 340 emailed comments all at once, especially since some of these comments are lengthy.  So, I dole them out over the next 10 days or so while keeping up with the new comments as they come in. I won’t start this process for a few days to get those of you who don’t want even 30 of them a day coming in to unsubscribe.

    Since many of these hoarded comments contain very good questions, they are a trove of subjects for future blog posts.  As I post them, I’m going to reread them and clip those that would make for good posts into Evernote or my new favorite plaything DEVONthink that I’m just starting to feel my way along with. (See this great Steven Johnson (whom I follow on Twitter) article about the virtues of DEVONthink.)  After I’ve got these blogworthy comments in a format in which I can find them instantly, I’ll start working through them and posting.

    Bloggers and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC)

    I don’t know how closely blog readers attended to the recent announcement by the FTC that they were going to start riding herd on bloggers, but the bloggers went ballistic.

    Among its other duties, the FTC patrols the universe of advertising in this country looking for anyone or any company engaging in, as they term it, deceptive practices.  In other words, the FTC is on the prowl seeking out advertisers who make false claims in order to stop them and punish them.  Which all sounds good in the abstract, but in reality is a whole other story.

    As I pointed out in an earlier blog, it’s a valuable exercise to read Kevin Trudeau’s first book to see how the FTC operates.  The nutritional and health information he presents is total garbage, but his description of the practices of the FTC is right on the money. (I’ve got to admit that some of the nutritional and health information presented in Trudeau’s first book (the only one I’ve read) is accurate, but I write that off to the law of averages.  He presents so much information that odds are some of it just happens to be true.  So, if you read the book and come across something that is nutritionally accurate, don’t write me about it.  I know a few things are there, but not enough to justify reading the book other than the first part, which is an excellent treatise on the FTC.)

    The FTC has the power to absolutely ruin anyone and/or any company it chooses to go after.  If you read the first part of Trudeau’s book, you’ll see how.

    So, the FTC opined that they planned on monitoring bloggers to see if they disclosed the fact that they were paid to do reviews on products.  Apparently, many bloggers make money by doing paid reviews on products without disclosing such, and the FTC doesn’t like it.

    I’ve never reviewed products for pay, but I have read enough about it to know how it works.  Companies provide bloggers products, then pay these bloggers for reviews of the products.  I guess the fact that bloggers are given the products and possibly paid for the reviews as well might induce them to write positive reviews of products that they thought sucked.  And I assume that’s what the FTC is concerned about.

    The FTC’s actions certainly got the blogosphere in an uproar.  So much so, in fact, that the FTC started to crawdad, which I never thought would happen.  Just goes to show that if you turn the spotlight of public awareness on even the most aggressive and powerful of all government agencies, you can get results.

    Not that I fear the FTC on this (at least not at this point), I’ll go ahead and disclose where I get dinero from this blog.  Virtually all of the money that comes to me through the blog comes from readers buying products through Amazon.com.  When they buy a book I recommend or go through one of the book thumbnails of Protein Power or the 6-Week Cure up at the top right or any of our other books I have up on the site, I get a little bit of lucre for it.  And I get a little more if they buy anything else after entering Amazon through one of the portals in this blog.  In a good month, it’s enough to cover my hosting and web guy expenses; in a bad month (as this one is turning out to be), it’s about enough to cover the hosting of the site and maybe an hour or so of the web guy time.

    Google ads

    I get a little income from Google ads, but I’m trying to get them off the site.  I’ve had several web guys working on the site over the years, and I guess code for these Google ads is stuck all over the place.  I get rid of them in once place, it seems they pop up somewhere else.  When I had Google ads everywhere, I made about $150 per month, which, in my opinion, isn’t enough to justify tacky-ing up the site with a zillion ads.  Plus, I don’t have time to go through and spend time trying to figure out which ads to block.  Many people, I’ve learned, don’t realize that these ads aren’t part of the site, and they wonder why, when I’ve just spent 2000 words bashing statins, an ad for a statin pops up.

    A while back I was having lunch with Mark Sisson of Mark’s Daily Apple when he asked me what kind of a deal I had going with Atkins Nutritionals.  I told him I didn’t have any kind of deal going with them whatsoever.  I asked him why he asked.  He told me that he gets my blog posts by email, and that at the bottom of each one is a banner ad from Atkins.  I was embarrassed to say that I didn’t even know you could get the posts by email and that I didn’t have a clue why the Atkins ads were there.  I went home and pulled up the blog (I usually never look at the actual blog – only the admin page), and sure enough, there was a way I could get the posts by email.  I signed up to get my own posts, wrote one, and sure enough, here it came with an Atkins ad at the bottom of it.  I thought I had it all taken care of, but I just looked moments ago and there is still a banner ad at the bottom of the emailed post.  I’ve added it once more to the list of things to have my guy deal with when I get with him on Monday.

    Book recommendation

    While on the subject of Amazon.com, books and book recommendations, I might as well recommend one.
    I finished a terrific book not long ago called A Colossal Failure of Common Sense: The Inside Story of the Collapse of Lehman Brothers. As the title implies, this is a treatise about the fall of the House of Lehman, one of the country’s oldest investment banks, and is written by one of the vice presidents who names names and points the finger.

    Not only is this book chock full of great information about how Lehman Bros, Bear Stearns, Goldman Sachs and others operate, it is extremely well written.  The ‘author’ realized he didn’t have the skills to tell his own story in a readable manner, so he hired a writer.  But he didn’t just go out and hire one of the non-fiction write-for-hire folks that are swarming around out there, he hired Patrick Robinson, a best-selling thriller writer.  As a consequence, the book is absolutely gripping. Not only do you learn a ton about how the financial crisis developed, you learn it in a gripping, racing-through-the-pages fashion.  You’ve heard people say about certain books that they read like a novel.  Well, this one does.  I had real trouble putting it down.

    After reading this book, you will know exactly why we’re in the boat we’re in now and will be stupified at the mismanagement at the top.  As I read through and learned about the perfidy of Moody’s, Standard & Poors, and the other financial rating outfits that gave the most worthless financial instruments triple A ratings, I was stunned that these companies hadn’t been prosecuted.  Without their complicity, the whole house of cards couldn’t have been erected because no one would have purchased the products.  I was interested to read in today’s Financial Times that at least  Ohio is going after them.  I suspect Ohio won’t be the last.  According to the author, these companies made billions while failing to do their due diligence before passing out AAA ratings like they were candy at Halloween.

    Not long after I read the book, I came upon a piece by Calvin Trillin in the editorial section of the New York Times that summed up the situation nicely.  The problem was the enormity of the amounts of money waiting to be made drew smart people to Wall Street.  A funny but insightful short essay.

    After you read the book and Trillin’s piece, take a look at this video I posted about a year ago.  It will make it all that much more funny.  And sad.

    The 6-Week Cure blog

    All I can say is that it’s about up.  And apologies for not having it up sooner.  I hope we’ll have it operational this week and populated with a few posts.

    Another vegetarian myth

    I wrote in a bookish post (or maybe in answer to a comment on a bookish post – I can’t remember) a while back that I had read most of the mystery novels out there and was looking for a new series to sink my teeth into.  Someone suggested the DI Charlie Priest mysteries by Stuart Pawson.  I got one and liked it, so I’ve been motoring through those as time allows.

    The last one I read was Deadly Friends about a murdered doctor, a serial rapist and a host of other minor villains. At a point about midway through, DI Priest and one of his underlings are walking around scoping out a pharmacy prior to entering to get info about the dead doctor.  All these books – at least the four or five I’ve read so far – are written in the first person, so everything is from Priest’s perspective.  Here’s what he says:

    We completed our circuit of the block.  Passing the back of the butcher’s I tried not to inhale and wished I had the willpower to go vegetarian.  Trouble is, I like my steaks.

    AAARRRGGGHHHH!  Even in mystery novels I’m being reminded of how deep the vegetarian mantra has wormed its way into our collective brains.  How many times have we all heard variations on this theme?  One of the ideas the vegetarian movement has managed to get firmly implanted in the minds of many is that vegetarianism is a more healthful way to eat.  I’ve heard numerous people wistfully say they really would like to be able to follow a vegetarian diet because it’s so much more healthful, but they just like meat too much to do it.

    The truth is, as we all know, that vegetarian diets are decidedly less healthful than diets containing animal protein. But the great unwashed masses don’t seem to have figured this out.

    But I’ve got to hand it to the vegetarian brigade: they’ve managed to successfully propagandize most of the population.  And they’ve done so without any real science behind them.  The most they can point to is a sheaf of observational studies that don’t prove squat.

    The low-carb/Paleo movement, on the other hand, is producing more data almost daily that a lower-carb, higher-fat, higher-protein diet is infinitely better for a majority of the population.  But, we don’t get the message out as well as the other side does, I suppose.  I went to a Borders Books the other day and found an entire collection of free booklets written for children telling of the horrors of factory farming and encouraging them to go vegetarian.

    We are starting to make some inroads into this nonsense, however, with the help of some former vegetarians who have seen the error of their ways.  If you haven’t read Lierre Kieth’s book yet, add it to your Christmas list.

    I’m girding my loins for all the hostile comments I’m sure to get from angry vegetarians.  These comments will be from vegans telling me how healthy they are and how many miles they can run and how they could kick my butt in any endeavor I might wish to engage them in.  And they’ll reference the idiotic China Study and a host of other meaningless observational junk.  But wait.  I don’t have to gird my loins.  I’m not dealing with these comments any more.  I’m just posting them as they come in.  Give it your best shot.

    To see under what conditions our genome developed, read on.

    The hunter-gatherer lifestyle

    Just to wrap this long, meandering post up, I want to end with a link to a great article in the December 2009 National Geographic.  And to bring this post full circle, I’ve got to let you know that I found this article on Twitter.  I wouldn’t have discovered it otherwise. At least not as quickly as I did.

    The long article is about the Hadza who follow a hunter-gatherer lifestyle in remote Tanzania.  The area the Hadza roam is being encroached upon by all kinds of agricultural and tourist businesses, and the author doubts these indigenous people can maintain their lifestyle for much longer.
    The men hunt and the women gather.  The Hadza went on a nighttime baboon hunt and took the author along.  His account of the hunt makes for a riveting read.  Once killed, the Hadza haul the baboon back to what serves as a camp and prepare to serve it up.  I’ll leave you with the author’s description of the meal.

    Ngaola skins the baboon and stakes out the pelt with sharpened twigs. The skin will be dry in a few days and will make a fine sleeping mat. A couple of men butcher the animal, and cuts of meat are distributed. Onwas, as camp elder, is handed the greatest delicacy: the head.

    The Hadza cooking style is simple—the meat is placed directly on the fire. No grill, no pan. Hadza mealtime is not an occasion for politeness. Personal space is generally not recognized; no matter how packed it is around a fire, there’s always room for one more, even if you end up on someone’s lap. Once a cut of meat has finished cooking, anyone can grab a bite.

    And I mean grab. When the meat is ready, knives are unsheathed and the frenzy begins. There is grasping and slicing and chewing and pulling. The idea is to tug at a hunk of meat with your teeth, then use your knife to slice away your share. Elbowing and shoving is standard behavior. Bones are smashed with rocks and the marrow sucked out. Grease is rubbed on the skin as a sort of moisturizer. No one speaks a word, but the smacking of lips and gnashing of teeth is almost comically loud.

    I’m ravenous, so I dive into the scrum and snatch up some meat. Baboon steak, I have to say, isn’t terrible—a touch gamy, but it’s been a few days since I’ve eaten protein, and I can feel my body perking up with every bite. Pure fat, rather than meat, is what the Hadza crave, though most coveted are the baboon’s paw pads. I snag a bit of one and pop it in my mouth, but it’s like trying to swallow a pencil eraser. When I spit the gob of paw pad out, a young boy instantly picks it up and swallows it.

    Onwas, with the baboon’s head, is comfortably above the fray. He sits cross-legged at his fire and eats the cheeks, the eyeballs, the neck meat, and the forehead skin, using the soles of his sandals as a cutting board. He gnaws the skull clean to the bone, then plunges it into the fire and calls me and the hunters over for a smoke.


    25% off Entire Atkins Line!

  • New Moon (and Personal Finance Links)

    Today, I made good on my promise to take my wife to the Twilight / New Moon Saga. I’d put the first 25 or 30 minutes of the movie up there with the most boring of any I’ve seen. At least it picked up from there almost edging into being an average movie in my opinion. In fact, it’s not up with other Kristen Stewart movies. The very underrated Adventureland, for example, blew it out of the water, in my opinion.

    Here’s a couple mostly spoil-less thoughts. Those who have seen the movie (or I’m told read the books) will know what I’m going with these.

    • The highlight for me was this Alice quote, “Leave it to you, Bella. Anyone else would be better off when the vampires left town.” The real quote is longer, but gives a little more of the story away.
    • The whole concept of the movie – seemed somewhat lifted from The Real Ghostbusters – Episode 38 – No One Comes to Lupusville. Click through for some subtle hints there.

    Also in the previews we saw Letters to Juliet – really the whole movie – in about 3 or 4 minutes. After it, my wife and I turned to each other and said, in unison “And that was a good movie.” The screen then flashed to show “Coming Soon”, and three other people in the theater commented how it was already out and they just saw it.

    And now the personal finance links:
    Money Writers:

    Other Top Personal Finance Posts:

    Related posts:

    1. Personal Finance Links (Newport Here We Come Edition) So my wife and I are halfway through our trip…
    2. NFL Draft (And Some Personal Finance Links) This was a big weekend in Boston sports. With the…
    3. Weekend Personal Finance Links (Tuesday Edition) If it’s good enough for Sheryl Crow (“He’s got a…
    4. Personal Finance Links (Bon Bini Aruba Edition) This week, my wife and I are enjoying a vacation…
    5. Personal Finance Links (Dallas Advice, Anyone?) This week my wife and I are traveling to Dallas…


  • The Sony Online Service Is Not An iTunes Competitor – It Aspires To Be Far Bigger


    p029_091119_11_f6dc1a83b9

    Another bombshell to drop out of Sony’s recent Investor/Analyst Meeting was the revelation of an upcoming online store called the “Sony Online Service.” While the name is tentative, the features Sony are planning for it aren’t and we should expect it sometime in 2010. But what does “Sony Online Service” really mean? Is it just the infrastructure of the Playstation Network with a new name and more multimedia? Hardly. This isn’t just another competitor to iTunes – its far beyond that.

    The upcoming Sony Online Service will be a personal and premium digital ecosystem. In the first slide, you can clearly see that Sony will begin this process by enabling network connectivity with all of its digital imaging products throughout 2010 and beyond, enabling devices to upload, store and share their content online. This personal content (created by you) will coincide with the vast majority of Sony’s entertainment offerings, including music, movies, games, and books. Sony will also embrace many 3rd party content providers to bolster their initial offering – something they have proven themselves capable of with their current partners in the Playstation Store and streaming partners in their latest networked Blu-ray product.

    However, one of the main focus points will be you.

    “One of the things we really need to get into is the whole concept of user-driven content,” EVP Kazuo Hirai of Sony said in an interview.

    “There already are a lot of services out there but we want to try to bring something that is uniquely Sony to the experience.”

    It doesn’t stop there though – Sony also plans to offer streaming media, applications (including 3rd party), services (such as health/fitness, banking, etc), and shopping (such as the ability to buy products at SonyStyle). The great thing is that many Sony devices will be able to view the service, including VAIO computers, Blu-ray players, BRAVIA Televisions, and of course the PS3 and PSP. This will ensure that Sony products have access to the total entertainment experience.

    p035_091119_11_f6dc1a83b9

    Sony has also identified a problem with their current television strategy – there is little retention business. This means that once they sell a television, they can’t really make much money on it afterwards. Sure, if someone buys a HDTV from Sony, they might buy a Playstation 3, a Sony Blu-ray player, or a Sony home theater. But there is no guarantee that they will buy a Sony. That same consumer could buy a XBOX360, a competitors Blu-ray player, and a competitors home theater. It was clear to Sony, after witnessing the revenue success with the App Store for the iPhone, that a similar model must come to TV. With the Sony Online Service, Sony can enable consumers to make purchase through their televisions through microtransactions. Sony calls this the “Evolving TV.”

    p055_091119_11_f6dc1a83b9

    The Sony Online Service will leverage the Playstation Network infrastructure, meaning they will co-exist (at least initially). Only one user ID will be necessary to access the service. This is all a part of the “UX Platform,” meaning a common user experience across all products. This means that the appearance of the store should be the essentially the same no matter what device you view it on, whether it be through a Playstation product or on your BRAVIA, VAIO, or Reader. Sony has also noted in the slide above that there will be new mobile products that will be able to access the service.

    p036_091119_11_f6dc1a83b9

    The Sony Online Service will be part of a larger Cloud service, as demonstrated above. We’re still a little unsure of this slide, but essentially I believe Sony will make their televisions much more intelligent, essentially integrating the ability to stream content from one device to the next. An example of this would be integrating the functionality of the TDM-NC1 Digital Media Port into a BRAVIA TV. There are more plans for the Sony Online Service as well judging by this slide, but we will let you make your own interpretations.

    So, when should we expect this total revolution in networked Sony products? Hard to tell, but 2010 seems to be the year.

    “(We’d like to) at least get the service up and running within the next calendar year…earlier in the year would be obviously a lot more preferable,” Executive Vice-President Kazuo Hirai said in an interview with Dow Jones Newswires Friday.

  • Hotfixes/Tweaks for HD2

    SS1

    These are a series of hotfixes packaged as exes (partly cause cabs look bad, and partly to prove I can).

     

    So far, there are three, though I can add more if people want/can give me tweaks.

    CameraModes enables Burst, Picture theme, sports,video Share and GPSPhoto in the camera.l3v5y_Camera_Modes_2009112122156

    Opera 10 Sensor Fix enables the GSensor in Opera 10l3v5y_Opera_Sensor_Fix_20091121221522

    SecurityPolicy disables warnings about unsigned whatever…

     

    l3v5y_Security_Settings_20091121221535

    The UI should be self explanatory, with swipe gestures used throughout rather than buttons…

    Visit gettag.mobi from your device to get MS Tag, or click on the images for a direct download.

    Note: they need to be run on the device rather than anywhere else…

    Share/Bookmark

  • Cars & Coffee: Lexus LFA shows up ahead of LA Auto Show

    Filed under: , , ,

    2011 Lexus LFA at Cars & Coffee – Click above for high-res image gallery

    The Lexus LFA supercar might not be in dealerships for another year or more, but the two prototypes are getting quite a workout. After driving the car in Miami, we heard the white one was shipped off to Europe while the black one took up residence in its new home: a trailer. The car has made a few appearances around the country, most recently at SEMA and a private showing in the Los Angeles area. Next stop on the LFA tour appears to be the LA Auto Show, but apparently it couldn’t stand to be cooped up too long.

    Along with a handful of other Lexus show cars, it showed up at our favorite Saturday morning car meet. The handler fired it up several times so the crowd could marvel at that V10 shriek. Reactions were mixed, mainly where price was concerned. We heard more than one person say that if it had a Supra badge and sub-$100K pricetag, it would be a killer. At four times that price, the Lexus badge just doesn’t seem to win as many people over. One thing almost everyone loved was that changeable display with the sliding center gauge.

    Cars & Coffee: Lexus LFA shows up ahead of LA Auto Show originally appeared on Autoblog on Sat, 21 Nov 2009 20:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • On the (Augmented) Media

    Sixth Sense,” my interview with NPR’s On the Media, talking about augmented reality, went live this weekend. Here’s the audio:

    (MP3 download also available.)

  • POLL POSITION: Who was the Best F1 Driver of 2009? Team Principals say Vettel

    Filed under:

    The principle of Occam’s Razor states that, all things being equal, the simplest explanation is usually the right one. So it stands to reason that the driver who wins the championship must be the best, right? Well, that’s assuming all things are equal, and of course in reality they seldom are.

    After a hard-fought season, Autosport magazine asked each of the team principals in Formula One to anonymously rank who they thought was the best driver, awarding race points to their top ten choices. The result? Sebastian Vettel came out on top, nine points ahead of world champion Jenson Button. In other words, if all things actually were equal, those in the know would have placed Vettel as champion in Button’s stead.

    For his part, Vettel – who came second in this year’s standings and, it should be noted, secured the Nations’ Cup at the Race of Champions alongside Michael Schumacher – was pleased with the vote of confidence. But he’s determined to take the fight back to the track for next season, which is already shaping up to be one of the most exciting yet.

    So do you think the bosses are right? We’ve placed a little poll of our own after the jump, and invite you to place your own vote.

    [Source: Autosport]

    Continue reading POLL POSITION: Who was the Best F1 Driver of 2009? Team Principals say Vettel

    POLL POSITION: Who was the Best F1 Driver of 2009? Team Principals say Vettel originally appeared on Autoblog on Sat, 21 Nov 2009 18:37:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • HTC HD2 Photo Upload

    The HD2 has quite a lot of social networking things built in, with Facebook integration in the contacts, Twitter.

    Not only can you upload photos direct to Facebook (that has been present in some older devices such as the HTC Touch HD), you can also download the photos and browse them without having to suffer the less than perfect Microsoft Facebook application.

    Share/Bookmark

  • Ricardo develops airplane taxi bot to reduce emissions, noise

    Filed under: ,

    Ricardo TaxiBot — Click above for high-res image gallery

    It’s certainly good to see some other wheeled vehicles doing their part for the environment, even if it is an airplane — especially if it’s an airplane. Actually this news isn’t about the plane itself, but a “pilot-controlled towing vehicle” for an airplane called a “TaxiBot.”

    Ricardo — the same folks that make car components — have engineered the TaxiBot to allow a plane to turn off its main engines when taxiing to the gate and around the concourse. The trick is an automated clamper placed within a standard tug; once the pilot guides the nosewheel into the clamp, the pilot steers, turns, and brakes the tug with the airplane controls. Instead of motive force coming from giant Pratt & Whitneys, the tug’s two 500-hp V8s can pull planes up to 747s and A340s.

    If adopted widely, the TaxiBot could save airports and airlines millions of dollars in gas and debris damage as well as sparing the world tons of CO2 emissions. You can get the details on the taxibot and its implementation in the press release after the jump.

    Gallery: Ricardo TaxiBot

    [Source: Ricardo]

    Continue reading Ricardo develops airplane taxi bot to reduce emissions, noise

    Ricardo develops airplane taxi bot to reduce emissions, noise originally appeared on Autoblog on Sat, 21 Nov 2009 17:07:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Senator: Let’s Tax The Rich To Pay For The Afghanistan Quagmire

    carl levin

    Dear rich people: Here’s another burden you’ll be expected to shoulder.

    Bloomberg: Higher-income Americans should be taxed to pay for more troops sent to Afghanistan and NATO should provide half of the new soldiers, said Carl Levin, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee.

    An “additional income tax to the upper brackets, folks earning more than $200,000 or $250,000” a year, could fund more troops, Levin, a Michigan Democrat, said in an interview for Bloomberg Television’s “Political Capital With Al Hunt,” airing this weekend.

    It’s certainly politically expedient to say the rich should be taxed for this and that, though obviously this only goes so far.

    Fortunately for Uncle Sam, we suppose, the rich aren’t going to be leaving the country anytime soon, like they have in states (California, NY), that have tried the same strategy.

    Really, we should just hope that ABC got it right when it said Obama would cut losses in Afghanistan — a report, that the administration has, so far, denied.

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • Audi TT car review

    Audi TT car review

    Stig drives the Audi AS1 and the Audi TT MTM Bimoto around the track. The AS1 is super-light and the Bimoto has two engines so they should both be very fast – but can either of the German cars beat the British Radical in the power lap times

  • Bring Back The Old (BBO)

    Today on BBO, we are featuring the classic and still undefeated Leo flight simulator. This application was one of the best Windows Mobile  application in 2007, and since nothing else has risen up to challenge it, remains the one and only Windows Mobile OS  flight simulator.

    I used this application on my phone (HTC Touch Pro2) this whole week, and I love it. This software has A LOT of trade offs like graphics, time and power. I rate this app  5/5, as there is nothing better,  if there is I want to be the first to know about it.

    For people that want to have a little fun on their phones and want it to be a flight simulator, you kind of have to get this. There is also a new feature that supports G-sensor for HTC devices, so get that version if you can.

    Get it here.

    View Flight

    Share/Bookmark

  • The Output Gap Model: Fatally Flawed

    Could it be that the fundamental economic indicator that is gospel not only to Goldman Sachs, but to Ben Bernanke in estimating and determining monetary policy, the output gap, provides a flawed reading of the economy? As a reminder, Ben Bernanke has repeatedly expressed little regard for either commodity inflation or US dollar exchange as having an impact on overall US inflation. As Askari and Hochain state: “according to [Bernanke’s] theory, inflation was related only to the output gap. As long as the output gap was negative, that is, if actual gross domestic product was below potential GDP, the economy was at no risk of inflation. Hence, he argued that the central bank had to adopt an aggressive money policy until the output gap closed.

    Read the whole thing at Zero Hedge >>

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • Sony Ericsson Moves North American HQ To Atlanta And Sheds 2,000 Jobs Worldwide


    se

    Cellphone maker Sony Ericsson is moving its North American headquarters from North Carolina to Atlanta and close a half-dozen sites world-wide as part of a global consolidation that will cut about 2,000 jobs. The joint venture between Ericsson and Sony will consolidate product development operations by closing sites in Research Triangle Park; Seattle; Miami; San Diego; Kista, Sweden; and Chennai, India, spokeswoman Stacy Doster said.

    The site closures are new elements of a plan announced in April to cut world-wide staff of 10,000 by 20%. About 400 jobs have been cut since then and about 1,600 remain to meet that goal by the middle of next year, the spokeswoman said.

    The company has about 425 workers left in Research Triangle Park after shedding hundreds of jobs in the past year. She said she’s uncertain how many of the employees would be moving to Atlanta.

    The company announced last month that its losses worsened to €164 million ($244 million) amid falling sales in the third quarter, up from a €25 million loss in the same period a year ago. Sales during the quarter dropped by more than 40%.

    Copyright 2009 Associated Press

  • REPORT: Chevrolet Spark still under consideration for U.S.

    Filed under: , ,

    The 2010 Chevy Spark is still said to be an “on-and-off thing” when it comes to the U.S., although now we are in an “on” phase. That’s according to GM’s Jack Keaton, the man in South Korea overseeing GM’s minicar development. The miniature runabout is expected to make do with a 66-hp, 1.0-liter four-cylinder or a 78-hp, 1.2-liter four-cylinder engine that will be good for 47 mpg. Keaton’s team is also investigating peripheral connectivity and, as if that weren’t enough, he says, “We can even package the Spark for Big Gulp cupholders.”

    The issue is getting it here and on sale at the right moment. While this is an “on” phase, there are still regulatory issues and the matter of whether U.S. buyers are ready to make a minicar profitable. It will take something compelling to get Americans back into the frugal mindedness of last year, and gas isn’t nearly expensive enough for that yet. The Spark’s appearance in Chevy’s American lineup does look to be an eventuality, though, when Keaton says “We have to start thinking now about how to meet the standards… and people will be looking for minicars and small cars to lead the way.”

    Nevertheless, while the Spark looks to be coming to America, it probably won’t be built in America — at least not until GM sees that the market here will be large enough to support it. We’re all right with that for now; just get it here and make sure it doesn’t do anything to remind us of Skid from Transformers.

    [Source: Ward’s Auto]

    REPORT: Chevrolet Spark still under consideration for U.S. originally appeared on Autoblog on Sat, 21 Nov 2009 15:27:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments