Archivo para Septiembre, 2010

Ashton Kutcher and Demi Moore. (TwitPic)

Maybe it was just an elaborate punk?

Star Magazine is reporting that Ashton Kutcher was seen making out with a young blonde woman at Madeo restaurant in Los Angeles.

Kutcher, 32, is married to Demi Moore, a brunette 15 years his senior.

The tabloid quotes an eyewitness who said Kutcher and the 20-something gal were going at it hot and heavy in public.

SLIDESHOW: Celeb May-December Romances.

“Ashton had this gorgeous girl pinned against the wall, and he was totally making out with her,” an eyewitness, who was on his way to the restroom, told Star. “I was shocked to see him sucking face with a girl who obviously wasn’t Demi.”

Kutcher’s rep denied the report.

We checked Demi Moore’s Twitter account, and so far the Tweet-happy star has not commented about the report there.

SLIDESHOW: Demi Moore Aging Backwards.

She did post this photo of her and her hubby wearing nerd glasses yesterday.

Madeo is a popular restaurant with celebs, so it does seem odd that Kutcher would choose it as a place to carry on any illicit activity.

SLIDESHOW: Hollywood Catfight! Cougars vs. Pumas.

We’re just saying…

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friday night lightsEuro 2012 qualifying gets underway in a few days, and – if you haven’t noticed already – the scheduling may come as something of a surprise. In a break from tradition, games will no longer follow the familiar Saturday afternoon/Wednesday evening pattern, but will instead be played on Friday and Tuesday evenings. The Tuesday games maybe aren’t so strange because we’re all used to mid-week internationals, but seeing internationals played under Friday night lights is definitely new.

The obvious question: Why? And the inevitable answer: Clubs.

Because the midweek international has the second of the double-header games on a Tuesday instead of Wednesday, it means the clubs get their players back a) one day sooner and b) one day more rested. The downside for international teams is that they now have one less day to prepare for games, and fans who don’t live near the stadium may not be able to make it to the Friday night games after work. Also, there’ll be no football on television over the weekend.

It’s not all bad, obviously. There’s a certain novelty to these Friday games, and if it does mean players are genuinely more rested and clubs do less complaining then good for them. Maybe. UEFA has also shown some flexibility. Israel were not happy to be playing their games on a Friday because it’s the Jewish Shabbat, so Israel will play Malta on Thursday evening instead.

You can see the full Euro 2012 schedule on UEFA’s website. What do you think about the new Friday/Tuesday setup?

View full post on World Cup Soccer – South Africa 2010

The World Bank’s $6 billion man on climate change

BIRDFLU INDONESIAAs the special envoy on climate change for the World Bank, Andrew Steer might be thought of as the $6 billion man of environmental finance. He oversees more than that amount for projects to fight the effects of global warming.

“More funds flow through us to help adaptation and mitigation than anyone else,” Steer said in a conversation at the bank’s Washington headquarters. Named to the newly created position in June, Steer said one of his priorities is to marshall more than $6 billion in the organization’s Climate Investment Funds to move from smaller pilot projects to large-scale efforts.

While the World Bank is not a party to global climate talks set for Cancun, Mexico, later this year, it is deeply engaged in this issue, Steer said. Acknowledging that an international agreement on climate change is a long shot this year, he said there are still opportunities to make changes to cut the greenhouse gas emissions that spur climate change.

PERU/“We do see there are opportunities,” Steer said. “The mistake would be if it’s sort of all or nothing.” The bank is strongly supporting action to limit deforestation, offer quick financing to start climate projects and reform carbon markets to extend them to countries that have been left out so far.

Even though the World Bank won’t be at the negotiating table in Cancun, its members will be there, and 80 percent of them want the bank to focus on climate change, Steer said. It’s all part of a what he sees as a fundamental shift in the international attitude toward dealing with this problem.

“There is a new revolution that’s going on now,” he said . “It’s not only driven by personal commitment, like it would have been 15 years ago … Now it’s driven by just the sheer logic … If you care about long-term poverty reduction, you simply cannot avoid this issue.”

Photo credits: REUTERS/Supri Supri (Andrew Steer (right) then the World Bank’s Indonesia country director, with World Health Organization’s Georg Peterson at a news conference in Jakarta, August 24, 2006)

REUTERS/Mariana Bazo (Deforestation near a gold mine along Interoceanic highway section linking Peru and Brazil in the Amazon region of Madre de Dios, August 20, 2010)

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Rumor Roundup: Tomorrow’s Apple Event

What’s in store for tomorrow’s Apple event? It’s possible only Steve Jobs and whoever creates his Keynote presentations know for sure, but that’s not gonna stop us from making our best guess. So get out those rumor checklists and see how yours matches up.

As usual, rumors surrounding the event run the gamut from fairly far-fetched to the safe bet. That said, the whole fun of Apple’s press events is that you can never really count out the left-field possibilities, thanks to Steve’s now famous “one more thing” stunts. Here’s a look at what rumors are being tossed around, and which ones I’m putting my money on.

iTV

Apple TV has been little more than a hobby for Cupertino to date. It’s not a bad little device, but platforms like Boxee and Netflix, which can operate on all kinds of different hardware, or support a wide variety of file formats, are limiting its living room presence.

It makes sense that Apple would target the Apple TV for a major overhaul. According to a number of sources, that overhaul will see a name change (to iTV), a smaller storage capacity (4GB) with a focus on streaming, a switch to iOS as the software that powers it, and, accordingly, the arrival of apps.

While I don’t doubt that Apple has big plans in store for the iTV, I find it very unlikely that we’ll see its introduction tomorrow. Changes this big would merit their own press event, and I don’t think Jobs would want to bury such a major overhaul amid exciting new iPods and changes to iTunes’ services. Which brings me to my next point…

iTunes

Everyone’s favorite poorly-named media management and library software will almost certainly see an update tomorrow; that much is clear. What exactly that update will entail is much less so.

The big rumor regarding iTunes right now is that Apple will introduce 99 cent TV show rentals, available only 24 hours after their original air date, for a rental period of up to 48 hours. It’s a definite improvement over the current price tag for owning shows ($1.99 and $2.99 for SD and HD, respectively), but you also miss out on actually owning the programs, as there’s no re-watching later.

Another rumor puts iTunes in the cloud, including streaming music and video directly to users’ devices, possibly even on a subscription-based model. This is a general rumor that’s been around for a while, and isn’t necessarily tied to tomorrow’s event. I don’t think we’ll see it tomorrow, but it’s definitely something Apple is testing the viability of, you can be sure.

iTunes probably won’t go to the cloud, but it may go to the web. According to Peter Kafka of Media Memo, the next big update for iTunes could see it relocated to the web, where a lightweight, more easily accessible version would put the emphasis on music’s social aspects, allowing users to share their tastes with one another. This would actually be a natural extension of the recently introduced web-views for iTunes store content, and I think we could see it tomorrow, though I don’t think it’ll completely replace the iTunes desktop software.

Finally, CNET is reporting that Apple is going to double song preview length in iTunes. This rumor feels pretty sound, especially since it isn’t very exciting.

iPods

We will see new iPods tomorrow. Apple always updates its iPod line in September, and it isn’t about to change that now. Among those new devices will be an iPod touch with a camera. Whether it’ll have two cameras and FaceTime is still open to debate, but likely. Recent rumors that it’ll also sport a 3G antenna are also interesting, but I would say unlikely for this iteration.

The iPod nano and shuffle could both also see updates tomorrow in what appears to be an exciting new form-factor, possibly incorporating a 1.7-inch touchscreen. Personally, I think the nano will retain its video-friendly current form factor, and the shuffle will get the updated design, which will put an emphasis on control, the main area of complaint customers have regarding Apple’s most diminutive media player.

A third possibility is that the new form factor will be an entirely different class of iPod altogether. It could be to the iPod touch what the shuffle is to the nano, i.e. a barebones, limited storage device without app support and only a few utilities in addition to the iPod music player, like a clock and calendar. I think Apple is looking to streamline, not complicate its iPod lineup, though, so if there is a new device like the one I’ve described that doesn’t get the “shuffle” moniker, expect it to replace the shuffle altogether.

Last and least, we have the clickwheel iPod classic, the old Clydesdales of Apple’s lineup. I see at most maybe a capacity boost, if Apple’s determined to keep it around, but you can bet that with its focus on iOS and touch computing, the iPod classic isn’t long for this world. Who knows? It could be “out with the old,” as well as “in with the new” on the menu for tomorrow.

What do you think is in store for tomorrow’s event?

Related GigaOM Pro Research: As Always, Mobile Music Faces Uncertain Future




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Marco Quatorze, an executive with the Mexican carrier Telcel, has suggested that the iPhone 4 could see some desired hardware changes very soon.

According to the report from Mexican technology site CamelMX, the Telcel executive claimed that the iPhone 4′s antenna design may see manufacturing revisions — revisions which would aim to fix the widely reported signal attenuation issue.

The report also suggested that the updated handset, which is claimed to be free of antenna problems and the need for a case, may be made available once Apple’s current solution, the iPhone 4 Case Program, had come to a close at the end of September.

Whether or not a carrier partner such as Telcel would be privy to information of this sort ahead of time is unknown. Considering that Apple is notorious for its secretive nature, and that claims such as these have been wrong in the past, it’s easy to cast doubt over the legitimacy of Quatorze’s claims and chalk them up as mere speculation.

However, it’s worth remembering that when Apple first announced the iPhone 4 Case Program in July, it also commented that the engineers at Cupertino would be continuing to look at the antenna issue, reassessing the effectiveness of the current situation.

Whether Quatorze’s claims are fact or just purely speculation, it’s not the first time that hardware changes have been suggested.

Related GigaOM Pro Research: Will Apple’s Spectrum Bet Pay Off?




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App Review: Billings Pro

Billings ProMarketcircle has launched its latest business app for the Macintosh and iOS devices. Billings Pro builds on the award-winning Billings 3 for Mac and Billings Touch for iPhone applications to provide a multi-user time tracking and invoicing system for small business. The Mac native solution runs on Mac OS X Snow Leopard (10.6) and also provides web access to multiple platforms (Windows, Linux, BlackBerry, etc.) for timecard entry.

While Billings 3 is a very nice invoicing solution, the lack of multi-user support has been a long-standing limitation. Alykhan “AJ” Jetha, CEO of Marketcircle, confided that users have been clamoring for Billings Pro for some time:

We felt that we could offer a better alternative for the Mac centric business than what was out there, plus the requests from Billings 3 users have been overwhelming. For example, there is one customer that runs over $8 million a year in business through Billings 3. There are others that have equally impressive numbers. Those customers needed a multi-user option.

Billings Pro has all the features of Billings 3 plus some new tricks for the multi-user setup.

Billings Pro Server

The server component of Billings Pro is very familiar to anyone that has used Daylite Server. Synchronization between the Mac desktop client and the server occurs in the background about every five minutes. Billings Pro Server also allows for anywhere connectivity with Billings Pro Touch, a new iOS app that should be out soon (additional license required).

Switchboard is a new feature that automates the configuration of automatic port forwarding on supported routers and also provides a DynDNS-like service for connecting back to the server over the Internet even if you don’t have a static IP address for your Mac. The result is a system that’s much easier to set up on a normal Mac with a standard Internet connection. You simply register with Switchboard, and Billings Pro takes care of the rest in the background. I’m told that this feature will eventually make its way into Daylite Server.

Billings Pro Server Admin Switchboard feature

Billings Pro Client

Billings Pro

The client application is visually consistent with Billings 3, with the addition of a few new invoice templates. Multi-user support means that you can configure an approval workflow to allow project managers to review and approve time and expenses before someone else sends the final invoice. The client application will work offline with a local copy of the database and sync changes back and forth to the server.

Billings Pro Touch

Billings Pro Touch

The Billings Pro Touch iPhone app will also sync with Billings Pro Server, and lets you enter time and expenses (including mileage) on the road. You can also check the status of client invoices and payments and even enter payments using the Credit Card Terminal app (sold separately in the App Store). Billings Pro Touch has been submitted to the App Store, but is not yet approved for purchase.

Timecard

Billings Pro Timecard

Timecard is a new web-based time entry solution. Workers can connect back to Billings Pro Server from any modern web browser and enter time against their projects. When you start a timer in the web browser, the server keeps track of the open timer so that you can switch away and back on a mobile device and not lose your timer. This is a great solution for workers who don’t need the full features of Billings or Billings Touch.

Pricing

Billings Pro starts at $199.95 per user. There are bundles to save some money when you get multiple user licenses and Billings Pro Touch with Premium Support. Monthly licenses for Billings Pro are $24.95 per user per month. A full setup for 10 users would cost about $2,350. Many shops will not need a license for each and every person but perhaps just for managers that approve invoices, the person who sends the invoices out and collects payments, and the leadership team that wants access to current client reports.




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Part-time app designer makes serious cash

Simon Lui likes to be self-sufficient. He says, "If I need it, I develop it."  The 28-year old computer science instructor needed faster information about the MTR (Hong Kong's subway) so he simply designed an app for his iPod Touch.

The app – called ecMTR – gave him data on each stop, the fares and the arrival time of the next train.  Turns out other commuters wanted the same information and downloaded his 99 cent app more than 35,000 times.(The MTR itself recently asked Liu to disable his app so it could launch its own official MTR app. Lui says he didn't fight the request and obliged – although he still thinks his app is better.

Before disabling that app, Lui managed to pocket US$24,255 from all the downloads. (Apple has a 30/70 policy with app developers. Apple gets 30 percent of revenue while the developer pockets 70 percent.) In the past two years, Liu has designed six more paid apps from music games to war games netting him nearly US$40,000.

According to the Financial Times, app downloads could become the principal income driver for cell phone providers in developed countries over the next three years. That may not come entirely as a surprise when you look at the burgeoning marketplace of the apps. At last count, Apple's app store has 250,000 offerings.

Lui is a full-time computer science instructor at Hong Kong Polytechnic University. He creates apps in his free time. His most popular is TinHa War (roughly translated to "World in Peace.") It's a war game from the 1980's that kids used to play on paper. Liu spent six months designing TinHa War, writing code for a few hours every night after work.  In the four months it's been available for downloads, Lui has made US$12,500 on this app alone.

So can anyone be an app developer? Lui says you need a combination of persistence and skill. Here's his advice:

1) Have a clear idea of what you want to create

2) Learn Objective C code(this is the code needed for iPhone, iPod and iPad apps) Although Lui describes the code as difficult to learn he taught himself the language by using Stanford tutorials online.  ( http://www.stanford.edu/class/cs193p/cgi-bin/drupal/downloads-2010-winter)

3) Keep practicing the code.  You'll get better by trial and error.

View full post on Business 360

Take a look, and be charmed. The BMW 5-Series F10 has just received a new styling. Courtesy of Lumma Design Russian affiliate TOPCAR, the car has been made much more attractive with the sprucing up of the body.

Thanks to the new body styling done on the BMW 5-Series F10m, the new look comprises a redone front bumper with integrated LED side markers, rear bumper with diffuser, vented hood, front and rear wheel arch extensions, side skirts, rear spoiler, fitted quad exhaust system and M-style R20, R19 Lumma Design wheels.  What more do you want in the car?

The new decked up car is called the CLR 500 RS2 and comes with body components made up of vacuum formed Kevlar and carbon fiber.
The stylists have also revamped the interiors throwing in Nappa leather and carbon fiber trim inserts.  The CLR 500 RS2 gets shown at the 2010 Moscow Motor Show. More pictures below:

Lumma Design6
Lumma Design1
Lumma Design2
Lumma Design3
Lumma Design4
Lumma Design5

(Via WCF)

BMW, CLR 500 RS2, TOPCAR Lumma, Moscow Show, BMW 5-Series F10 , Styling

View full post on Car Blog | Breaking Motoring News Daily

Tell Us About the Mobile You

If we know one thing about our readers, it’s that you use the latest mobile phone platforms and newest gadgets, and you have strong opinions about which devices to buy next. Take our mobile survey to help us identify the next big trends in mobile.



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Apple to Live Stream Press Event Tomorrow

Updated: For the first time in a long time, an Apple press event will be live streamed to the public, the company announced today. Starting at 10 a.m. PT tomorrow, Apple.com will host a stream of the highly anticipated announcements of (if rumors and expectations hold true) updated iPods, iTunes rentals, and an overhaul of the Apple TV.

Update: As commenters have pointed out, this is not Apple’s first-ever live stream, just the first in a long time (and in the modern video era). Some of us vaguely recall a crappy 2004-era Quicktime video stream. If you can remember what happened, please leave a comment.

In some ways, this is the end of an era. Due to intense interest in what was being announced to a closed-door audience, Apple press events played a huge part in the birth of the art of live blogging. Sites like Engadget honed awe-inspiring team efforts to live blog every word out of Steve Jobs’ mouth and punch it up with snarky fanboy commentary, pictures and analysis, with fresh updates coming every few seconds.

To a lesser — but still significant — degree, Apple keynotes also helped streaming services like Qik get off the ground. Their early viewing records for livestreams were set by illicit video capture from the events. I know many people scramble around on sites like Justin.tv hoping to find a stream running during the event.

Since Apple doesn’t typically post video from its product launches until later in the day, demand for breaking news is incredibly high. Often, live event coverage influences the stock market. I’ve heard that even Apple employees drop what they’re doing during keynotes and tune into the live-blogs from their desks.

There’s clearly been latent demand for video from Apple’s events for some time, so I have to wonder why it came now. One potential factor might have been the trouble Jobs had getting a reliable network connection to do a live demo of the iPhone 4 at its launch in June, which he attributed at the time to bloggers using MiFi and similar devices to run their own Wi-Fi networks.

To be sure, many desk workers will still prefer text coverage to video. But the true fanboys and girls will want to see Steve for themselves in real time.

One interesting twist is that video coverage will only be available on Apple devices. This is a bit absurd, but I suppose it fits with the company’s passion for controlling the user experience. It’s possible the livestream is being used as the “gimmick” for the Apple TV relaunch, hence the OS X/iOS requirements. Besides, most watchers will be on a Mac or iOS device anyways.

Here are the viewing details:

Apple® will broadcast its September 1 event online using Apple’s industry-leading HTTP Live Streaming, which is based on open standards. Viewing requires either a Mac® running Safari® on Mac OS® X version 10.6 Snow Leopard®, an iPhone® or iPod touch® running iOS 3.0 or higher, or an iPad™. The live broadcast will begin at 10:00 a.m. PDT on September 1, 2010 at www.apple.com.

Meanwhile, we video industry watchers will have to hope that after the event Apple tells us how many people tuned in. It’s sure to be a lot.

Related content from GigaOM Pro (sub req’d):

Apple’s Path to the Living Room

Photo courtesy Tom Coates.




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