For non-Flash version, click here.

Today’s Guests:
Joseph Engo, Systems Manager, Mevio
Mark Glaser, Host, PBS MediaShift
Cade Metz, U.S. Editor, The Register

The Topics:
Facebook: 500 Million Served
iPhone Jailbreaks Legalized!
The Rise of Data-Driven Journalism
Yahoo!: Google Goes Big in Japan
Is the Droid Shortage Bogus?

Download this Episode:
iPod/iPhone/PSP: 111MB
Quicktime H.264: 137MB
Windows Media Player: 133MB
Mobile 3GP: 38MB
MP3 (Audio Only): 28MB

Right click and choose “save target as” or “save as” to download videos.



Curiously, the cancer rate is 10 percent higher in the left breast than in the right. This left-side bias holds true for both men and women and it also applies to the skin cancer melanoma.
[…]
The researchers suggest an explanation based on differences in sleeping habits in Japan and Western countries. […] The futons used for sleeping in Japan are mattresses placed directly on the bedroom floor, in contrast to the elevated box springs and mattress of beds used in the West. A link between bedroom furniture and cancer seems absurd, but this, the researchers say, could the answer.
[…]
In the U.S. bed frames and box springs are made of metal, and the length of a bed is half the wavelength of FM and TV transmissions that have been broadcasting since the late 1940s. In Japan most beds are not made of metal, and the TV broadcast system does not use the 87- to 108-megahertz frequency used in Western countries.

Thus, as we sleep on our coil-spring mattresses, we are in effect sleeping on an antenna that amplifies the intensity of the broadcast FM/TV radiation. Asleep on these antennas, our bodies are exposed to the amplified electromagnetic radiation for a third of our life spans. As we slumber on a metal coil-spring mattress, a wave of electromagnetic radiation envelops our bodies so that the maximum strength of the field develops 75 centimeters above the mattress in the middle of our bodies. When sleeping on the right side, the body’s left side will thereby be exposed to field strength about twice as strong as what the right side absorbs.

So, the new meme is, Futons good, box springs & TVs bad?




“That’s right. Come and get me!”

Marc, perhaps you could interview your squirrel on this development?

A grocery store is committing “wildlife massacre” by selling squirrel meat, campaigners claimed today.

Viva – Vegetarians International Voice for Animals – accused Budgens of supporting a “barbaric and needless cull” of grey squirrels by allowing an independently-owned branch in Crouch End, north London, to sell the meat.

Viva founder Juliet Gellatley said: “‘Culls’ of thousands of grey squirrels by so-called conservation groups to boost populations of red squirrels are irrational, inhumane and destined to fail, so it is very sad that Budgens are allowing profit to be made from wildlife massacre.”

Actress and Viva patron Jenny Seagrove also spoke out against the sales, saying: “It seems that no animal is to be spared falling victim to such companies’ marketing ploys. What gruesome product will be next to grace our food aisles? Blackbird, field mouse or mole?”

Found by Brother Uncle Don


  • New Kindle is a winner with everything improved.
  • Steve Ballmer moaning about Apple sales.
  • 170,000,000 Facebook users data in the wild.
  • Win Phone 7 reviews mostly positive.
  • Motorola Android sales saving the company.
  • Hacker finds code to make ATM machines cough out money.
  • Android will win the mobile OS wars.
  • iPhone costs more than Droids to make.
  • UK clears Google on Wi-Fi theft.

click to listen:

 

Right click here and select ‘Save Link As…’ to download the mp3 file.

CNet News

It seems like only yesterday that Apple decided it must show Motorola’s new Droid X phone as having more signal problems than the average British railway line.

Would Motorola stand by and let Apple suggest the Droid X had just the same antenna issues as any other cell phone?

Well, a previous Droid X ad had already offered these words: “And most importantly, it comes with a double antenna design. The kind that allows you to hold the phone any way you like and use it just about anywhere to make crystal clear calls.”

So who could be surprised that, according to Droid Life, a new Droid X ad has launched, one that tries to mock the iPhone for its sartorial inelegance.

Har!



I watched CBS’s news show last night with Katie Couric so you don’t have to. They spent quite a lot of time marveling at how clean the beaches were and how the skimmer boats had practically nothing to pick up. Showed graphics on how massive oil spill had now shrunk to seemingly insignificant size. Guess the crisis is over. If you can’t trust Katie who in this world can you trust?

“WASHINGTON (AFP) – With BP’s broken well in the Gulf of Mexico finally capped, the focus shifts to the surface clean-up and the question on everyone’s lips is: where is all the oil?”

NEW ORLEANS (Mother Jones) – I don’t know who the fuck these everyones are, but I’m happy to help out them, and ABC, and this AFP reporter writing that due to BP’s stunningly successful skimming and burning efforts, “the real difficulty now is finding any oil to clean up.”

I sent one text message to Bloomberg’s Lizzie O’Leary, who’s standing on Grand Isle, Louisiana, right now, asking how the beach looks. “Lower part past the barrier untouched with globs of oil that washed up last night,” she said. By “untouched,” she means by cleanup crews, and that “barrier” she’s talking about is the one the press isn’t allowed past.
[…]
I can’t even count the number of correspondents down here who’ve pointed out that digging a finger under the surface of supposedly clean sand turns up crude, or the number of cleanup workers who’ve said cleanup efforts are strictly cosmetic, or that no matter what they do the contamination just keeps bubbling up.

It’s BP’s job to whitewash this story and make it easier to indulge the desire to forget about the scope of the devastation, guys. Not the media’s.


  • MSFT moaning about Yahoo Japan.
  • Black Hat event underway with cool discoveries.
  • 3D a theme with Panasonic as the company brings out a camera and camcorder with 3D capability.
  • Kindle sold out.
  • Plankton is dying!
  • Verizon users use more data than anyone else. Why? I have a theory.

click to listen:

 

Right click here and select ‘Save Link As…’ to download the mp3 file.

It’s not exactly official, but should also surprise no one: According to a new study the psychological profile of iPad owners can be summed up as “selfish elites” while have-not critics are “independent geeks.”

Of course the “haves” would probably call the “have nots” “cheap wannabes” to which the “have nots” would retort: “FANBOI!!”

Which is why we should stick to the science. Consumer research firm MyType conducted the study, in which opinions of 20,000 people were analyzed between March and May. The firm’s conclusion was that iPad owners tend to be wealthy, sophisticated, highly educated and disproportionately interested in business and finance, while they scored terribly in the areas of altruism and kindness. In other words, “selfish elites.”

They are six times more likely to be “wealthy, well-educated, power-hungry, over-achieving, sophisticated, unkind and non-altruistic 30-50 year olds,” MyType’s Tim Koelkebeck told Wired.com.

So, are you an elitist snob? Don’t be a denier!




Good Morning Viet Nam!!

It looks like the draft is back if the Democrats get their way. Funny that this is not getting any attention.

Bill: To require all persons in the United States between the ages of 18 and 42 to perform national service, either as a member of the uniformed services or in civilian service in furtherance of the national defense and homeland security, to authorize the induction of persons in the uniformed services during wartime to meet end-strength requirements of the uniformed services, and for other purposes. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,

Now what was the reason we elected Obama? Oh, yes, to stop global warming.



Is it time for Kool-Aid communion, yet?

1,200 investors, and more than $190 million lost in just 3 years. It all began as market turmoil gained momentum in the run-up to the Great Recession, and investors were searching for a safe haven for their savings.

Minnesota money manager Trevor Cook and radio show host Pat Kiley said they had the answer, with the promise of solid returns and a no-loss guarantee. The Securities and Exchange Commission, however, calls it a “scheme to defraud perpetrated by Cook and Kiley…”

Kiley, 72, used the airwaves to get the word out on his weekly Christian radio program, “Follow the Money.” Kiley called his listeners “truth seekers” and appealed to their distrust of Wall Street and the government…

Cook and Kiley told investors that they could withdraw their money at any time. Now almost all the money is gone, and investors are out of luck…

Some investors were drawn in through Kiley’s radio show. In fact…Kiley claims his radio program brought in 75% of the funds raised in the foreign currency program…

Merri Jo Gillette, who heads the SEC’s Midwest division in Chicago, says…“Nobody’s gonna protect you from these folks except yourself,” Gillette told CNNMoney.

If it sounds too good to be true, it probably isn’t. If it sounds too good to be true – and “God says it’s safe” – run for the nearest exit!


Read the whole article for a number of fascinating examples of how you are easily manipulated by this. And you know politicians, the military, talk show hosts and many others are using this to sway public opinion, too.

The Misconception: You rationally analyze all factors before making a choice or determining value. The Truth: Your first perception lingers in your mind, affecting later perceptions and decisions.
[…]
In 1974, Amos Tversky and Daniel Kahneman conducted a study asking a similar question. They asked people to estimate how many African countries were part of the United Nations, but first they spun a wheel of fortune.

The wheel was painted with numbers from 0 to 100, but rigged to always land on 10 or 65. When the arrow stopped spinning, they asked the person in the experiment to say if they believed the percentage of countries was higher or lower than the number on the wheel.

They then asked people to estimate what they thought the actual percentage of nations was. They found people who landed on 10 in the first half of the experiment guessed around 25 percent of Africa was part of the U.N. Those who landed on 65 said around 45 percent. They had been locked in place by the anchoring effect.
[…]
When shopping for a car, you know it isn’t a completely honest transaction. The real price is probably lower than what they are asking for on the window sticker, yet the anchor price is still going to affect your decision.


From Comic-Con via io9



Click pic to watch video

In other war news, General Mattis appeared today before the Senate committee who will vote on his nomination:

The general who led Marines from Camp Pendleton into combat in Afghanistan in 2001 and Iraq in 2003 and 2004 warned Tuesday that there will be more U.S. casualties in coming months in Afghanistan, where the U.S.-led coalition includes 10,000 troops from Camp Pendleton.

Marine Gen. James Mattis, nominated to become commander of the U.S. Central Command, with authority over Iraq, Afghanistan and other potential hot spots, told the Senate Armed Services Committee that there will be more fighting ahead but that the momentum favors the U.S. and its Afghan allies.

“I believe it will be a difficult summer and into the fall,” Mattis said. “We will have some bad days ahead, but so long as we hold fast and adapt faster than the enemy, the enemy’s situation will continue to worsen.”

On the other hand, there’s this about funding the war which got additional funding approval today in the House despite Wikileaks’ infodump which shows how increasingly pointless it all is.


  • Mac OSX 10.6.4 now out for new iMacs.
  • Apple shows magic trackpad.
  • Apple begs people to not Jailbreak phones.
  • Google does backdoor deal with Yahoo Japan.
  • Dell Streak delayed, kind of.
  • Gamestop buys online games company. Good idea.
  • Laser chips added to silicon for faster network.
  • Droid-X is in shortage.
  • AT&T doing Win Phone 7.
  • Nobody will pay for Twitter.
  • Climate change means Mexicans will come to USA.
  • nVidia loses to Rambus.
  • One million ebooks sold by author.
  • Black Hat and Defcon coming to the news cycle.

click to listen:

 

Right click here and select ‘Save Link As…’ to download the mp3 file.



Banks trying to kill customers

Laboratory tests commissioned by Environmental Working Group (EWG) have found high levels of the endocrine-disrupting chemical bisphenol A (BPA) on 40 percent of receipts sampled from major U.S. businesses and services, including outlets of McDonald’s, CVS, KFC, Whole Foods, WalMart, Safeway and the U.S. Postal Service. Receipts from Target, Starbucks, Bank of America ATMs and other important enterprises were BPA-free or contained only trace amounts.

The total amounts of BPA on receipts tested were 250 to 1,000 times greater than other, more widely discussed sources of BPA exposure, including canned foods, baby bottles and infant formula.

Found by TwelveTwo.


« Previous PageNext Page »

Bad Behavior has blocked 11729 access attempts in the last 7 days.