Saturday, April 21, 2007

Sing Out! The Folk Song Magazine - Paroplapi: La Finestra dell'Ultimo Piano

October 18, 2005 -- ORLANDO—Gateway Inc. may have thrown in the towel on making TVs, but competing PC makers are still eager to plug their boxes into living rooms ...more



PC Magazine - Dell Inspiron E1705


January 24, 2006 -- Dell is usually far ahead of the curve when it comes to integrating the newest technology at reasonable prices—and this time around is no different.
more...



PC Magazine - Dell Dimension E310


February 2, 2006 -- Dell considers the Dell Dimension E310 ($929 direct, $746 without monitor) an entry-level entertainment PC. Though a little more expensive than what we ...more



PC Magazine - Dell Transitions MP3 Lineup To Flash


February 6, 2006 -- Dell Inc. has shifted its line of MP3 players to ones based solely on flash memory, discontinuing a pair of older models in the process. In January, ...more



Sing Out! The Folk Song Magazine - Paroplapi: La Finestra dell'Ultimo Piano


January 1, 2007 -- PAROPLAPI La Finestra dell'Ultimo Piano RadiciMusic 112 At first blush, there's a loving naivete about this disc, from the bucolic innocence of its ...more


Friday, April 20, 2007

Best LCD TVs

Buying an LCD TV is more of an art than a purchase. Originally LCD TVs were available in only smaller sizes, but now they are available in sizes as big as 50 inches. Whether big or small screen, LCD TVs suffer from certain flaws: they have lower contrast ratios, slower refresh rates and narrow viewing angles. Despite that, if certain precautions are taken, you could end up with the best LCD TV in the market.Currently Sony, LG, Samsung, Panasonic, Philips, Sharp are the bigger brands in the LCD TV market. Even computer monitor manufacturers like Dell and Gateway have made a foray into the LCD TV market. But a big brand name does not ensure that the TV is the best. Even reputed companies purchase monitors and other parts from other countries to save on costs. This affects the overall quality of the TV. It is essential to check out the TV while it is in the showroom before buying.One thing to consider is the aspect ratio. Some widescreen LCD TVs boast of an aspect ratio of 16 to 9. However, believing blindly in this could be a mistake. Some screens just stretch the image to fit the screen. In doing so, the images become jagged and washed out. Best LCD TVs are those that can retain their resolutions even when the image is stretched to fit a 16 to 9 screen. Trust your eyes to judge that.Another thing is the viewing angle. LCD TVs were big duds earlier regarding their viewing angles. Due to the pixel twisting principle of liquid crystal display monitors, LCD visuals would be almost invisible from more obtuse angles. But now, this problem is diminishing rapidly. Contemporary LCD TVs have viewing angles as obtuse as 160 degrees.LCD TVs are available in three varieties: standard definition (SD), enhanced definition (ED) and high definition (HD). High definition TVs are the best as they can be used both as computer monitors as well as regular TVs as they can produce both digital as well as analog signals. These TVs have higher freeze rates and so they can better reproduce moving visuals.These are basically the important features to check while considering a good LCD TV. Best LCD TVs could be those that have all the above features along with sleekness in design, lightness of weight and easy button controls.LCD TVs provides detailed information about LCD TVs, LCD TV reviews, LCD TV monitors, LCD TV wall mounts and more. LCD TVs is the sister site of Industrial LCD Monitors.
We also recommend: kenwood home theater receiver


Smart Guard Pro v2.0

Aims Migital Technovations Ltd Smart GUARD PRO For PDA

For Pocket PC 2003 and 2003 SE
Protects all your data like Messages, Contacts, Videos, Pictures etc. both in the Internal Memory and on the Memory Cards and hides it so that no one else Except the Phone Owner can ever see the Content without knowing the PASSWORD, & would not even know that there are some Data or Files inside which are infact, HIDDEN !!

Smart Guard is the Smartest ever way to safeguard your Private Information or Data that exists in your Mobile Device: CONTACTS, ALL MESSAGES, GALLERY & OTHERS.

Compatible Devices
Acer n10
Acer n30
AnexTEK SP230
Asus MyPal A620
Asus MyPal A620BT
Asus MyPal A716
Asus MyPal A730
Audiovox 5050
Audiovox PPC 4100
Audiovox PPC 6600
Audiovox PPC 6601
Audiovox VX6601
BenQ P50
Bouygues Telecom iPDA
Daxian Telecom CU928
Dell Axim X3
Dell Axim X30
Dell Axim X3i
Dell Axim X5
Dell Axim X50
Dell Axim X50v
Dopod 696
Dopod 699
Dopod 700
Dopod 818
E-TEN M500
E-TEN P300
E-TEN P300B
E-TEN Pocket PC P700
Fujitsu Siemens Pocket Loox
Garmin iQue M5
HP iPAQ h1930/1940/1945
HP iPAQ h2210/2215
HP iPAQ h4150/4155
HP iPAQ h4350
HP iPAQ h4350/4355
HP iPAQ h5100/5400/5500
HP iPAQ h5500/5555
HP iPAQ h6315
HP iPAQ h6320/6325
HP iPAQ h6340
HP iPAQ hx2100 Series
HP iPAQ hx2400 Series
HP iPAQ hx2700 Series
HP iPAQ hx4700
HP iPAQ hx4705
HP iPAQ rw6100
HP iPAQ rx3115
HP iPAQ rx3415
HP iPAQ rx3715
HP iPAQ rz1710
HP iPAQ rz1715
i-mate JAM
i-mate PDA2
i-mate PDA2k
i-mate Pocket PC
Mio 168
Mio 336
Mio 337
Mio 339
Mio 558
Motorola MPx
MoviStar TSM500
NEC MobilePro 250e
O2 Xda II
O2 Xda II mini
O2 Xda IIi
O2 Xda IIs
Orange SPV M1000
Orange SPV M2000
Packard Bell PocketGear 3025
Qtek 2020
Qtek 9090
Qtek S100
Qtek S110
RoverPC P1
RoverPC P4
RoverPC P7
Samsung i730
Samsung i830
Samsung M400/M4000
Siemens SX66
Symbol MC50
Symbol MC9000-G Series
Symbol PDT 8800
T-Mobile MDA Compact
T-Mobile MDA II
T-Mobile MDA III
T-Mobile Pocket PC Phone
Toshiba e350 Series
Toshiba e400/e405
Toshiba e800/e805
Toshiba e830
Verizon XV6600
ViewSonic Pocket PC V36
ViewSonic Pocket PC V37
Vodafone V1620
Vodafone VPA Compact


Best LCD TVs

Buying an LCD TV is more of an art than a purchase. Originally LCD TVs were available in only smaller sizes, but now they are available in sizes as big as 50 inches. Whether big or small screen, LCD TVs suffer from certain flaws: they have lower contrast ratios, slower refresh rates and narrow viewing angles. Despite that, if certain precautions are taken, you could end up with the best LCD TV in the market.Currently Sony, LG, Samsung, Panasonic, Philips, Sharp are the bigger brands in the LCD TV market. Even computer monitor manufacturers like Dell and Gateway have made a foray into the LCD TV market. But a big brand name does not ensure that the TV is the best. Even reputed companies purchase monitors and other parts from other countries to save on costs. This affects the overall quality of the TV. It is essential to check out the TV while it is in the showroom before buying.One thing to consider is the aspect ratio. Some widescreen LCD TVs boast of an aspect ratio of 16 to 9. However, believing blindly in this could be a mistake. Some screens just stretch the image to fit the screen. In doing so, the images become jagged and washed out. Best LCD TVs are those that can retain their resolutions even when the image is stretched to fit a 16 to 9 screen. Trust your eyes to judge that.Another thing is the viewing angle. LCD TVs were big duds earlier regarding their viewing angles. Due to the pixel twisting principle of liquid crystal display monitors, LCD visuals would be almost invisible from more obtuse angles. But now, this problem is diminishing rapidly. Contemporary LCD TVs have viewing angles as obtuse as 160 degrees.LCD TVs are available in three varieties: standard definition (SD), enhanced definition (ED) and high definition (HD). High definition TVs are the best as they can be used both as computer monitors as well as regular TVs as they can produce both digital as well as analog signals. These TVs have higher freeze rates and so they can better reproduce moving visuals.These are basically the important features to check while considering a good LCD TV. Best LCD TVs could be those that have all the above features along with sleekness in design, lightness of weight and easy button controls.LCD TVs provides detailed information about LCD TVs, LCD TV reviews, LCD TV monitors, LCD TV wall mounts and more. LCD TVs is the sister site of Industrial LCD Monitors.
We also recommend: avia guide home theater torrent


Sony laptop battery recall widens

Today

  • Sony is planning to replace up to 10 million laptop batteries
    • Toshiba Corp to recall around 830,000 batteries made by sony
    • Other companies recalling their laptop batteries made by Sony Corp. are Dell Inc., Apple Computer Inc. Lenovo.
      • I haven’t seen any news or updates regarding Sony recalling batteries used on Sony laptops..
  • From MSNBC : House approves wiretap law
    • WASHINGTON - The House approved a bill Thursday that would grant legal status to President Bush?s warrantless wiretapping program with new restrictions. Republicans called it a test before the election of whether Democrats want to fight or coddle terrorists.
  • Oliver Stone said, “I’m ashamed for my country”.
  • A Brazilian Plane with 140 - 150 passengers reported missing in the jungle. According to reports the airplane a Gol Boeing 737 went missing after a mid-air collision with a smaller executive jet.

Today is the 272nd day of the year
273rd in leap year.

In history

  • 1938 - Britain, France, Nazi Germany and Italy sign the Munich Agreement, allowing Germany to occupy the Sudetenland region of Czechoslovakia.
  • 1918 - The Hindenburg Line is broken by Allied forces during World War I.
  • 1907 - The cornerstone is laid at Washington National Cathedral in the U.S. capital.
  • 1864 - American Civil War: The Battle of Chaffin’s Farm is fought.
  • 1850 - The Catholic hierarchy is re-established in England and Wales by Pope Pius IX.
  • 1829 - London’s reorganized police force, the Metropolitan Police, becomes the first official police department in the world.
  • 1789 - The first U.S. Congress adjourns.
  • 1789 - The U.S. War Department first establishes a regular army with a strength of several hundred men.
  • 1650 - Henry Robinson opens his Office of Addresses and Encounters - the first historically documented dating service - in Threadneedle Street, London.
  • 1364 - Battle of Auray: English forces defeat French at Brittany; end of the Breton War of Succession. 1567 - At a dinner, the Duke of Alba arrests the Count of Egmont and the Count of Horne for treason.
  • 855 - Pope Benedict III becomes pope.
  • 48 BC - Pompey the Great is assassinated after landing in Egypt on his 58th birthday (records are unclear, may have occured September 28).
  • 61 BC - Pompey the Great celebrates his third triumph, for victories over the pirates and the end of the Mithridatic Wars on his 45th birthday.


More Hilarity From Microsquish!

Dell once again offers Windows XP

Dell Computers announced that it once again give buyers the option of Windows XP to be installed on certain computers.

“We heard you loud and clear on bringing the Windows XP option back to our Dell consumer PC offerings,” Dell responded in a Web posting Thursday.

The company said it will immediately offer XP again an option for four models of its Inspiron notebooks and two models of its Dimension desktop PCs.

This comes just weeks after Dell said it is also planning to offer PCs with
Linux, a free operating system that competes with Windows.

“This is really odd,” said Michael Silver, research vice president at Gartner. “On new PCs, consumers usually do want the latest and greatest.”

  Sick Vistugh jpg

Yes, Mr. Silver, consumers do usually want “the latest and greatest” but we’ve all had a lot of experience with the wonders of a new Microsoft operating system. Most people I hear are saying they would rather wait until after the first major patch before even thinking about sticking this bloatware onto their machines. What a ringing endorsement of your products, eh Microsoft!

 

Microsoft countered that Dell’s move was in response to a “small minority of customers” with a “specific request.” Michael Burk, a product manager for Microsoft’s Windows Client group, said in an e-mailed statement, “The vast majority of consumers want the latest and greatest technology, and that includes Windows Vista.”

Hahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha! 

I’m Listening To: Céline Dion - Tous Les Secrets - On Ne Change Pas

(Yeah, that’s right! Céline Dion! What about it? Get off my back, already. smile_wink )

 

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Dell Brings Back XP On Home Systems

This is a non stop content packed show from one end to the other. I talk about my upgrade scare tonight and a absolute pile of other stuff next show live from San Diego!

Sponsors:
[Save 10% off on any order at GoDaddy.com!] Use Code Todd
[Try GoToMeeting free for 30 days at GoToMeeting.com/techpodcasts. No credit card needed.]

Comments to 619-342-7365 e-mail to geeknews@gmail.com

Next Tech Podcast Round Table Saturday April 28th
Announcing Podshack

Listener Links:
Music Site
Froggle now Mainstream
Web 2.0 Social Media Session
DivShare Video Uploader
PR for New Mexico
Coke in Second Life
GetDemocracy.org
Happy Fish Podcatcher

Show Notes:
Black Cloud
Used Cars
Security Lemons
MySpace News (gag)
Microsoft Social
Widgets
Amazon Sues?
Vonage Saved by USR?

Google and Paid Links
Dapper
Octopz
FCC to Map Broadband!
Second Life Open Source Servers
Sony admits DRM Problem
Better Office Tips
365 Million Yr old Tree
iPodsMod.com
Heart Caterpillar
Google Feed API
Top 5 Web 2.0
SixApart 3.35 Upgrade
Resume on Blogs?
Dell and XP
Soyuz Homecoming Delayed
Lyrid Meteor Shower Saturday
Who is Sick?
No Tags in Wordpress



Online Media Daily: Havas' Media Contacts Signs Global Ad-Serving Deal With aQuantive's Atlas


Insisting the deal does not mean a move away from DoubleClick in the wake of the Google acquisition, Media Contacts, the interactive arm of Havas, has signed an ad-serving deal with the Atlas unit of aQuantive. It covers more than 400 clients -- including Dell, Nike and Air France.

Dell Brings Back XP On Home Systems


I honestly didn’t see this one coming.  I’m actually surprised Microsoft is allowing it.

Full Story


A Good Home Theater Isn’t Just About Your Picture, You Also Need A Quality Sound System

When you are making your first home theater it is natural to be mostly concerned with the image that you will be getting. Of course it is very important to make sure that the projector or TV is the best that you can get for you budget, but it is also important to think about the sound that will be getting as well. A good quality speaker system can make a huge difference to the quality of your home theater. Although the image is obviously the main component, a good audio will make sure that you get that big screen experience in your home theater. What you really need is a good surround sound system. This really allows you to get the full benefit of the movie soundtrack.If you do not have a good speaker system then it really can spoil the whole movie, so it is well worth spending a good portion of your budget on a really high-quality set up. You really need two or four speakers at the front of the cinema and two at the back to give you the surround sound. You will also need a sub woofer for the deeper tones and a center speaker. This should make sure that you get the full benefit of the soundtrack.But you do not only need the right speakers; you also need to make sure that they are of a good quality as well. There is no point in spending a large amount on a good projector and then having poor speakers. But you do not have to spend a lot of money to get a good quality system There are some really good systems by some suppliers such as Panasonic and Dell and you can get some really good deals if you look around. It is also possible to some good second hand systems that can give you good quality at a low cost. The best place to look for these are on eBay. You might have to have an older model but just because there is a newer model out, that does not mean that there are not some very good older models as well.If you get the sound system right then it can really add to your enjoyment of your home theater system and it is well worth doing a bit of research to make sure that you have got the best deal for your money.For more helpful advice and information on finding the best home theater speakers visit ShoppingForHomeTheaterSystems.com where you will find important tips and money saving home theater reviews you can trust.
We also recommend: bandera home theater


Al Pacino April 20, 2007 7:33 am

Tin Green posted a photo:

Unbelievable

When I was in Buenos Aires, a week ago, I saw on the TV, when laying in bed in my hotelroom, the Godfather. This scene. At arriving in my hotel in Santo Domingo I found my new hotel a typical 50’s maffia hotel. I told this to my collegues the following day. That the hotel made me think of the movie The Godfather and the scenes in Cuba when Roth gives away the casino’s and hotel’s to other families. Later that day I walked to the business-area of the hotel and saw black and white photos in the hallway… and yes, this photo, saying that those same scenes of the movie the Godfather, with Roth and Michael Corleone, were shot on the roof of my hotel around 1973!

Google News

Student says he likes Al Pacino movies, Persian food and Pursuit
USU The Utah Statesman (subscription), UT - Apr 16, 2007
Ghaemi: Probably Al Pacino. I like Italian actors. I like his movies and he's a very good actor. US: What would you say is your favorite food?

On Ebay

AL PACINO SIGNED AUTOGRAPH 8X10 FRAME

US $14.95 (0 Bid)
End Date: Friday Apr-20-2007 5:04:44 PDT
Bid now | Add to watch list

AL PACINO SCARFACE SIGNED AUTOGRAPH 8X10 FRAME

US $14.95 (0 Bid)
End Date: Friday Apr-20-2007 5:12:10 PDT
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AL PACINO SIGNED AUTOGRAPH SCARFACE FRAME 8X10

US $14.95 (0 Bid)
End Date: Friday Apr-20-2007 5:13:15 PDT
Bid now | Add to watch list

Recent Blog Posts

Insomnia
Può andare avanti da solo, vivendo la situazione dell’agente Dormer (un Al Pacino fenomenale) che lo porta pian piano a fare i conti con se stesso. Robin Williams nel ruolo del cattivo/psicopatico (prova che aveva già superato in “One

Thursday 13 #6
Devils’ Advocate Al Pacino plays an excellent devil and of course Kneau Reeves does an awesome acting job in this one too. 4. Dark Crystal This one started off slow, but it is still a classic that I remembered watching as a kid.

Al Pacino April 20, 2007 4:57 am
What can one say about the arch-fiend that hasn?t already been better said by me or Al Pacino? I?m starting to forget what I?ve written about him, so if it starts getting repetitious, just let me know and I?ll mention it to Petey.

"B? già" tái xu?t
Sau thành công vang d?i cùng “B? già”, “bi?u t??ng ?i?n ?nh c?a n??c M?”, Al Pacino s? tái xu?t trong m?t b? phim tâm lý rùng r?n ???c d? ?oán s? làm r?t nhi?u khán gi? c?ng th?ng t?t ?? mang tên: “Ch? ngày hành quy?t”.

Quickly Slow Down.
In the movie, Scent of a Woman, there?sa scene where Al Pacino asks a girl to dance and she replies, ?I can?t, my boyfriend will be here any minute now?. To which Al responds, ?A life is lived in an instant?. Then they dance to a tango.

La vida es un cabaré
Ashley ordenó las bebidas y encendimos, los tres, cigarrillos (en el 2000, todo mundo fumaba en Londres con singular abandono, igual que Al Pacino sobreactúa en casi todo desde hace veinte años). Anunciaron elshow y tras un redoble de

Some of my favorite movie lines
Al Pacino, as Tony Montana, in Scarface. “It?s just a flesh wound”. The Black Knight, Monty Python and the Holy Grail. The Dude: Hey, careful, man, there?sa beverage here! The Big Lebowski:. ?Geoff Montgomery: It?s worse than horrible

Yahoo News

e C e n t r a l (The Star Online)
LET the game begin … again. The whole gang is back for more wheeling and dealing in Las Vegas. The main cast ? George Clooney, Brad Pitt, Matt Damon, Bernie Mac, Casey Affleck, Scott Caan, Elliott Gould, Shaobo Q, Don Cheadle and Andy Garcia ? are joined by Al Pacino and Ellen Barkin.

Disturbia director does Vancouver a lot (Vancouver Province)
Los Angeles-based director D.J. Caruso got his feature start in Vancouver as the second-unit director on 1993’s Another Stakeout, and he’s been coming back frequently ever since, most recently for 2005’s Two for the Money with Al Pacino.

Kevin Nolan column (BBC News)
“Paul Scholes got my vote for the PFA Player of the Year”


Thursday, April 19, 2007

FTD: Nasdaq bleibt hinter Blue Chips zurück

Today's "Behind the Headlines" from Schaeffer's Investment Research focuses on Barnes & Noble (NYSE:BKS), Dell (NASDAQ:DELL), Sears Holdings (NASDAQ:SHLD), and Stein Mart (NASDAQ:SMRT)

Dell Among Wall Street's Big Movers


NEW YORK - Stocks that were moving substantially or trading heavily Thursday on the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq Stock Market: NYSE Clear Channel Communications Inc., up $1.24 at

Schaeffer's Today's Market Features: Dell, Wal-Mart Stores, Williams-Sonoma, Halliburton, and Clear Channel Communications


… Dell (NASDAQ:DELL), Wal-Mart Stores (NYSE:WMT), Williams-Sonoma (NYSE:WSM), Halliburton (NYSE:HAL), and Clear Channel Communications (NYSE:CCU)

Dell Delays Results As Inquiry Launched


By NO BYLINE TROUBLED US computer giant Dell has delayed the reporting of its third quarter results, as US regulators announced they had begun a formal investigation into the firm

HP verkauft mehr Rechner als Dell


Der PC-Hersteller Hewlett-Packard [HP] konnte im dritten Quartal Gewinn und Umsatz steigern und hat erstmals seit 2003 den Konkurrenten Dell beim PC-Absatz überflügelt

Australian Government Wins Patent Claim On WiFi; Demands Everyone Pay Up


… Dell, HP, Intel, Apple and Netgear teamed up to attack the validity of the patent, but CSIRO continued to focus on suing a smaller firm to get royalties first. Not

FTD: Nasdaq bleibt hinter Blue Chips zurück


Schlechte Nachrichten kamen dagegen von Dell und Applied Materials, deren Kursverluste den Technologiehandel lange bremsten. Die Nasdaq blieb mit einem Plus von 0,3 Prozent entsprechend hinter den Gewinnen


Wednesday, April 18, 2007

Dell Computer Hardware

Posted by paulxty (who is an author) to X60t Z60t T60p Toughbook D820 D620 M1210 (internal) evdo lenovo thinkpad VAIO dell panasonic TX xps Sony latitude computing mobile on Thu Mar 15 2007

evdomanuals.com » EVDO Modems


Posted by paulxty (who is an author) to Minimax Axesstel 5700 Maxon Inc. AirLink BlueTree evdo sierra dell modems broadband data mobile wireless on Thu Mar 15 2007
more...



Dell PA15 AC Adapter for Inspiron 9100 9200 XPS Laptop


Posted by d3f2hucH (who is an author) to Meiers Battlefield Villians F.E.A.R. Darwinia Warhammer Brothers Z5450 G7 G15 XFi Blaster 7800 XT X1800 Radeon M170 barbarian MYST duty NVIDIA guild warcraft serious wars Logitech pirates civilization quake dell ATI SID scrolls elder winter Call city sound arms xps 2 G5 invasion 4 movies pc Rome II IV the V SAM of in world on Wed Mar 28 2007

Dell Inspiron e1505 Review and Information


Posted by kornjosh to e1505 dell review on Mon Apr 02 2007
more...



Dell Coupon Codes


"Get the latest Dell Coupons and Dell Coupon Codes free at Cheapstingybargains.com." Posted by jimbo1 to dell deals coupons on Tue Apr 03 2007
more...



Dell Computer Hardware


"Dell Computer Hardware" Posted by herbthree to dell computer hardware on Tue Apr 17 2007
more...


Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Michael Shayne - Return To Huxley

itunes pic
Originally aired November 5, 1946 One of the most popular private detectives ever, red-haired Miami P.I. MICHAEL SHAYNE has had a long, successful, multi-media career. Shayne was created and first appeared in the 1939 novel, Dividend on Death, by Davis Dresser, published under the pseudonym Brett Halliday. Dresser wrote fifty Shayne novels (with a little help from ghostwriters such as Ryerson Johnson) and twenty-seven more were written by Robert Terrall and published as paperback originals by Dell, still under the pseudonym Brett Halliday. So that's 77 novels, over 300 short stories, a dozen films, radio and television shows and even a few comic book appearances. Because of his omnipresence, more than one wag has ventured to call Mike the "Generic Private Eye" but that may be missing the point. A radio show featuring Mike debuted on Mutual as a West Coast regional in October 1944 with Wally Maher in the lead. Although mystery writer Brett Halliday got the credit for creating this detective and bringing him to radio, he never wrote any scripts but was happy enough to pick up the royalty checks. There were three separate versions of this show over the years. In October 1946 it went coast-to-coast, lasting until November 1947. It was resurrected on Mutual in July 1948, under the title of "New Adventures of Michael Shayne" with Jeff Chandler in the lead, and it ran for two years. The last version began in October 1952 on ABC, first with Donald Curtis playing Shayne, and later with Robert Sterling. This third and last series went off the air in July 1953. In all versions, Shayne was "that reckless, red-headed Irishman" Halliday originally described, who used brain and brawn equally, though the writers tended to have Mike take the physical approach to solving most problems. Easier to write, I guess. His assistant, a lovely blonde named Phyl Knight, was not prominent in most of the episodes. About 30 programs (most starring Chandler) are in trading currency today.


Podcast: Delving into Dell's possible misdoings

There's a credit card commercial that has become part of our American culture. There are three things mentioned with two having a cost basis and the third being "priceless." Here Doug Bassett, one of Thomson NETg's Sr. Technical Instructors (video bio / class calendar), tells his journey in developing an island in Second Life. His suggestions might make your experience "priceless" too! Archive this as a podcast for future reference Download wherearethepeople.mp3

Here's a credit card-like commercial, but with a less than happy ending.

(Queue Announcer)

Terraforming Islands - $60,000, Big Opening Party - $50,000, Zero Traffic – Worthless!

Oops!

Companies like Sony, Toyota, Dell, Cisco and Sun have spent tons of money in the virtual reality world of Second Life and wished the ending was Priceless. But no one stays past the first big party. What's wrong?

I've created an island for my employer, Thomson NETg. We have more than 3,000 people come and spend an average of 30 minutes per visit each month. We don’t pay campers; in fact, we don’t pay people to come at all. What are we doing to drive traffic? I'm not going to bore you with what didn't work or take you through my learning curve, but will share what I've done that works and causes people to come back!

The big companies have spent a lot of time and effort to make amazing facilities. Dell has a giant computer that you can walk inside. Cisco has wonderful vistas all connected with bridges made of the corporate logo. Heck, some of the car companies give away free cars you can drive around in while on your quest to trick out your avatar with the latest in pixilated fashions. Some “GRAND OPENING” parties have included concerts with big-name artists. Many do simulcasts with huge corporate stars on the stage to a capacity, read 80 person, crowd. But time and time again, once the initial event is over and the last free virtual t-shirt has been handed out, no one comes back. Lovingly rendered shops are empty. Huge campuses with jaw-dropping features that took months to develop are like the ruins of the ancients, completely void of life. Why?

Let me give you just a touch of my journey in Second Life. I know, nothing as riveting as watching someone’s vacation videos, but I think it'll help as I attempt to unravel this dilemma and explain how Thomson NETg’s Island has become so popular.

I've been in Second Life for more than a year. I've spent some of that time doing the normal noob stuff like camping, buying junk and generally wandering around. At an innovation summit hosted by my employer, Thomson NETg, it finally clicked. We at Thomson teach over the web. How cool would it be to teach in a three-dimensional environment? Foaming at the mouth and with visions of what could be, I pitched the idea to my boss, and to my surprise, he told me to pilot the idea.

Hours and hours and days and days of near non-stop work later, I had put together a proof-of-concept video and showed it to my boss.

Here's the video. It is a 48 meg mov file and may take a bit to download.

http://media.knowledgenet.com/live/sl/netginslversion.9.html

As you can see, I put together a fairly pretty building and some interesting ideas. Nothing that was quite show stopping, but enough to pique some interest. My boss then asked, “How do we go to the next level?”

I proposed an entire island. "You get full control, extensive security and you don’t have to be next door to a strip club. They're a bit pricey, but you can’t accuse me of thinking small," I said. Again, to my surprise, he agreed.

So I took several months, taught myself Second Life design, building techniques, scripting, multi-media streaming and security. After several false starts, I created Thomson Island.

For the quick tour, less than a minute, check out:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LvH1wMXaFFk

For the in-depth tour, around 10 minutes, check out:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4HYiHOmaFyk

Big deal, you might say. You put together something that a lot of other companies have done, and done a bit better. But it is a big deal - because folks come back time and again! Sure, it's focused towards education, but how do I get people to come? We didn’t have a huge rollout. We didn’t spend tens of thousands in marketing, but we have more than 3,000 people come and spend around a half an hour EVERY MONTH. This volume has increased an average of 33% each month since we've been keeping track. Many times, the island is so full that Second Life refuses any additional people entrance for fear of a server meltdown!

How do we do it?

Secret #1 – Make it Safe

Our customers range from the individual looking to better their careers in Real Life to the Fortune 500. These folks are looking to have a location that's free from some of the seamier sides of Second Life. Nothing will kill a corporate presentation or disrupt a class like a naked man running around, shooting all your attendees. We've implemented a strict ban on weapons and non-PG actions. We've included the ability for all presenters and security personnel to permanently ban individuals that violate the code of conduct. We understand that some people are new to Second Life and don’t know how to be a good citizen. These folk are warned and the vast majority comply. Those that are still a bit rebellious are permanently removed from access.

You may ask, doesn’t that encourage griefers (someone who takes perverse pleasure in causing havoc)? As long as you don’t feed their need for seeing how annoyed you are, they usually go off for easier and more vocal prey. If they're gently told why they're removed and that there's a process for appeal, the ones that are truly sorry will make amends. The others, deprived of the fun of watching someone turn red in the face, go make trouble elsewhere. Strict adherence to a code of conduct for both staff and customers is key.

#2 Have a Customer Orientation

There's so much to see and do in Second Life. People won't waste much time on things that are just silly. They may come by once to see the great whiz-bang thing your creative team has developed, but if there's not an ongoing reason to keep coming back, they'll never return. You can cram a bunch of "things" on your land and it may take them time to go though it all. But most people, especially those immersed in the short attention world of the Internet, aren't prone to be very tolerant of wasting time with "things" that aren't useful for them. Remember, it doesn’t have to utilitarian. It can just be a nice place to sit and think or a cool place to bring a friend or a relaxing location to hold a quick meeting. Remember, they're not here to find things that appeal to you, but to them. You need to have a variety to match a diversity of tastes.

On Thomson NETg Island, we offer streaming audio and video podcasts in several different formats. Not the video content, per se, but where students sit to get the stream. We have an outdoor theater, several conventional classrooms, and simulated cubicles. For more variety we also have outdoor locations. They may choose to relax in a wicker chair under a nice canopy next to our huge fountain. Or, perhaps they would prefer to watch and listen at our aquarium bar, at a Japanese table, or in several comfy over-stuffed chairs and couches. The idea is to let the customer decide where they want to consume your offering. Your job is just to provide the choices. The cool thing is the behind-the-scenes plumbing is pretty much the same. With some interesting tricks, you can even have two people sitting on the same couch looking at the same video monitor while watching two different video and audio streams.

#3 Keep it Fresh

I love Disneyland. The rides, the food, the excitement, the food, the colors, the food and, of course the food. But with a 5-day pass, even the Magic Kingdom gets a bit old. How much more stale is content that can be accessed 7x24x365.25 and hasn’t been changed or updated in a meaningful way since the big rollout?

If you have videos, rotate them. If you do audio, mix it up a bit. It's okay to have a library that people can access, but have some things that are new and fresh and highlight different aspects. You want people to come back to see what's new.

On Thomson NETg Island, we offer a variety of live classes. We have presentations on everything from how to build things in Second Life, to scripting, to Women’s studies, to astrophysics. This is besides our normal offering of Microsoft, Cisco and business development skills classes. These offerings are constantly varied, based on demand and seasons. During Halloween, we offered free classes in spooky trees. Preceding Valentine’s Day, we taught them how to make animated cards. For Easter, we host huge Easter egg hunts. You need things to keep it relevant, interesting and useful. I am not saying to have a bunch of silliness and avoid your main business, but I am saying feel free to spice it up a bit. Second Life is a fun environment. You can have fun, but not lose an ounce of professionalism.

The biggest problem that businesses have in Second Life is they figure if they make a big splash, people will come. The problem is that, without a compelling reason, people will not return and all that money is wasted. Mix it up. Make it fun. Make it useful. That'll build loyalty by providing a needed service. Give people a reason to come back and they'll return often and bring friends!

- Doug Bassett

Do you have any tips, tricks or techniques in your quest to develop a project in Second Life? Please click on the Comments link below to share the brilliance!



Podcast: Delving into Dell's possible misdoings


Implications of the Dell investigation, Microsoft starts beta testing Office 2008 for the Mac, and Apple's iPhone gets a release date.
more...


L'energia del futuro è il carbone

Carbone Nel mondo, ogni settimana, vengono messi in rete due nuovi generatori elettrici a carbone: in futuro, saranno di più. Lo dice la Platts, gigante mondiale dell'informazione energetica (gruppo McGraw-Hill).
Mentre negli ultimi cinque anni le emissioni di CO2 provenienti dalle centrali a carbone sono aumentate di 1 miliardo di tonnellate l'anno, per i prossimi cinque anni si prevede invece un aumento 1,2 miliardi di tonnellate l'anno.

Si tratta di un quadro poco confortante, dato che già oggi le centrali elettriche a carbone sono responsabili di un terzo delle emissioni totali di anidride carbonica di origine umana e che il carbone è una delle fonti energetiche più inquinanti che si conoscano.

Il maggior produttore mondiale di energia elettrica da carbone è la Cina, con 112.613 GW di capacità aggiunta negli ultimi cinque anni. In futuro invece il maggior incremento percentuale di capacità ed emissioni verrà da Stati Uniti ed Unione Europea. Per gli Stati Uniti in particolare si prevede una performance impressionante: dovrebbero passare dagli attuali 17,5 milioni di tonnellate/anno di anidride carbonica proveniente dagli impianti a carbone (media degli ultimi cinque anni), ai 248 milioni di tonnellate/anno.
In termini assoluti invece i maggiori costruttori di nuovi impianti a carbone saranno - nell'ordine - Cina, USA e India. L'Europa segue a notevole distanza.
La Cina rallenterà la sua corsa al carbone, dimezzando la costruzione di nuovi impianti rispetto a quanto è accaduto nel quinquennio passato, ma - in virtù delle sue enormi dimensioni - resterà comunque il maggior inquinatore per quanto riguarda il carbone.

Com'è possibile che l'era di Kyoto e del riscaldamento globale si distingua per massicci investimenti nel carbone?

La ragione fondamentale sta nel basso prezzo e nell'ampia disponibilità di riserve di carbone, equamente distribuite in tutto il mondo e sufficienti almeno per i prossimi 180 anni. Non solo le grandi potenze, ma anche paesi più piccoli - come lo Sri Lanka, il Laos e addirittura l'Iran, un paese petrolifero - si stanno infatti avvicinando al carbone. L'aumento dei prezzi del petrolio e del gas naturale e l'instabilità politica mediorentale non hanno fatto che accentuare questa tendenza. Tanto che nel 2011 potremmo trovarci ad avere 7.474 centrali a carbone in 79 paesi per un totale di 9 miliardi di tonnellate di CO2 emesse in atmosfera ogni anno.

In questo senso, purtroppo, l'Italia non è "in leggera controtendenza" come scriveva tempo fa Beppe Grillo: se infatti è vero che Scaroni, AD dell'ENI, punta su carbone e nucleare, bisogna dire che non si trova certo solo.

Sia come sia, queste pessimistiche previsioni non sono fortunatamente incise nella pietra. Persino Steve Piper, analista della Platts, in questo podcast in inglese ha detto che gli investitori internazionali stanno cominciando a prendere in considerazione le normative sulle emissioni di gas serra: in Texas ad esempio alcuni investitori hanno rivisto al ribasso le loro previsioni di investimento nel carbone. Allo stesso modo, alla Platts pensano che la Cina non potrà sottrarsi all'infinito alle numerose pressioni internazionali che chiedono una riduzione della sua impronta ecologica.

[Matteo Razzanelli]

Via | Christian Science Monitor

» Coal: a clean energy source for the future? su EurActiv.com
» L'Europa taglia il carbone su Ecoblog
» International Energy Outlook 2006 su Ecoblog


Apr 3, 2007 Phone call

This is an unusual podcast insofar that I use Twitter to let people call in LIVE to ATS via skype (jaffejuice). Audio comments and reactions to this format and the conversation to +1 206 203-3255

Direct download here

Subscription via iTunes here

1m - The MVB's (Most Valuable Blogs), an initiative I started to highlight the 5 blogs which provide the most consistent strategic direction and thought leadership to those trying to make sense of all the changes in marketing

2m25 - The first live caller, Mitch Joel from Image

15m45 - Back to the original MVB thread

22m20 - An Audio promo from Terry Fallis for "The Best Laid Plans"

24m50 - Letters, letters, we get lots of letters.....but it is interrupted by a LIVE call-in

25m30 - Christopher Penn from the Financial Aid Podcast and crayonista CC Chapman from Accident Hash and Managing the Gray in a three-way. We discuss Scott Sigler's Ancestor that - as we speak - is being bumrushed up the Amazon charts (It was #1,076 when we recorded and #7 when I uploaded - holy crap!)

30m19 - Jay Moonah joins in...

32m - Plugging Podcamp NYC at the New Yorker Hotel (481 8th Street) on April 7th

38m50 - We discuss future marketing and business applications for Twitter (with gratuitous plugs for Lionel Ritchie and Chuck Norris)

48m30 - CC, Jay and Chris participate in a new segment on ATS called WTF via Technorati. Hopefully Technorati will sponsor this (as opposed to sue me :))...or I'll just have to go to Google's Zeitgeist. Basically, it's word/phrase assoction meets "the conversation".

The top 10 searches are: Kathy Sierra, Avalonstar, Iran, YouTube, Twitter, Dell, Joost, Ritalia, MySpace, and Paris Hilton

Send in your jingles for the segment if you like...

54m15 - Winners & Losers: Loser comes courtesy of Matthew Ebel - it's Alka Seltzer's Plop Plop Fizz Fizz. Winner is Vote for the Worst (www.votefortheworst.com) and Sanjaya Malakaer for "checks and balances" - keeping Simon Cowell and the music industry honest (somewhat)

1h04 - Playing out with BMTC and Black Lab's "Mine Again"



Lesson #096, Monday


Il libro di Mike = Mike's book (The book of Mike)

La lezione di Mike = Mike's lesson (Lesson of Mike)

di + il = del

La signora del lago. = The lady of the lake.

di + lo = dello

Che e' il colore dello specchio? = What is the color of the mirror?

di + l' = dell'

La lezione dell'insegnante. = The teacher's lesson.

di + i = dei

La canzone dei bambini e' bella. = The children's song is beautiful.

di + gli = degli

Il presidente degli Stati Uniti = The president of the United States

di + la = della

Il marito della donna e debole. = The woman's husband is weak.

di + le = delle

Le gonne delle ragazze. = The girls' skirts.

www.LetsSpeakItalian.net



Apr 3, 2007 Phone call



Marching Order: Johnson & Johnson's new CIO, LaVerne Council - Part 1

Less than one year ago, LaVerne Council joined Johnson & Johnson, charged with crafting a new IT strategy to drive the global enterprise. In part one of this two-part podcast, join host John Gallant and Council, who takes audience questions and shares:

  • How she created her initial 90-day strategy
  • Ways in which she bridges the gap between business and IT
  • Strategies for helping Johnson & Johnson leverage information across its diverse, global businesses.

    LaVerne Council Bio
    LaVerne Council is Vice President and Chief Information Officer of Johnson & Johnson. Mrs. Council is responsible for the management of information technology and related systems for Johnson & Johnson's worldwide enterprise which includes more than 200 operating companies and more than 3,500 information management employees with a budget of $1.6 billion.

    Prior to joining Johnson & Johnson in June 2006, Ms. Council served as global vice president, I/T, for Dell Inc., with responsibility for technology development, global business solutions and development services. Her career also included serving as partner, global leader for supply chain for Capgemini (formerly Ernst and Young LLP), and positions at Mercer Management Consulting, Accenture, Tennessee Valley Authority and State Farm Insurance.

    Ms. Council is a graduate of Illinois State University and holds an M.B.A. in operations management. She also received a bachelor of business, highest honors, in computer science from Western Illinois University.

    Among her many community and professional associations, Ms. Council is a member of the National Board of Trustees for the March of Dimes, the Foundation Board for the Children’s Hospital of Austin, the Board of The Executive Leadership Council, the American Production and Inventory Control Society, Inc., and Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc.

    In January 2006, Ms. Council was featured in Eenadu Newsmagazine. In November/December 2004, she was selected by Profiles in Diversity Journal as one of 45 “Women Worth Watching.” Ms. Council was also in a 2003 Austin Business Journal profile as a “Power Award” winner.

    She resides in Mendham, NJ, with her husband and son.

    Transcript:
    John Gallant: Hi, and welcome to Stories from the Trenches: The Change Artists Spotlight. I'm your host, John Gallant, and today we're joined by LaVerne Council, who is the CIO of Johnson & Johnson. Welcome, LaVerne.

    LaVerne Council: Hi, John, thank you.

    JG: I recently spoke with LaVerne, as well as J&J CEO Bill Weldon in our Change Artists program. And LaVerne, I very much enjoyed that conversation. You've got a great new job, having been in the position for about six months now, I believe, and a lot of exciting things on your plate. And I think the folks who listened to the program found it interesting as well, because we've gotten a lot of questions to ask you today. LaVerne, I have a question from Sam with Atlas Systems. And Sam asks, 'Could you give us a sneak preview into a day in the life of a CIO? You have various business entities and so many changes you're planning to bring into the organization. Can you elaborate on how you're spending your time each day?'

    LC: Every day is a little different, but if I just sort of thought about the various interfaces that I have during the day and broke it up into a percentage of time, looking at it on average, a big part of my responsibility is leadership and leadership of the team. So, I would say that probably a good 25% of my time is spent talking to people, meeting with them, having one-on-ones with them and assuring them about what's next and what they should be thinking about, doing mentoring as well as some career guidance. But it's, frankly, any day, that can range from 25% to 80% of my time, just depending on what day it is. I think the other big part of the day is really working with my direct leadership team, probably another 30% or 25% of the time. And what I'm doing with them is really trying to add that last 5% of value. And as they're looking at issues with the large teams that they support, how can I bring synergies to them based on what I know of the other sectors and my other direct reports and making sure that we're communicating properly and leveraging the knowledge that each of us has in what we're doing in our various areas? And then I would say another 25% of my time is spent working with the leadership and the various business leaders in one way or the other. Tomorrow, just take an example, I will be with the executive committee pretty much the entire day. That's not the norm, but it is a chunk of the time, and purpose in there is going to be really sharing and communicating on behalf of the entire team, listening and understanding where the business is going and challenges they're facing, as well as new horizons we might be interested in entering, and really getting an assessment on how we can best utilize our talents in support of those business objectives. And then I think the part that's left, I spend time learning. I spend time meeting people in other organizations, understanding what they're doing, understanding what their challenges are, reading. Of course, there's the dreaded email that comes in from all over the place. But frankly, just making sure that I'm helping other people be effective, answering those questions as I can and keeping the process going. So, it's a challenging job, but actually is an incredibly fun job because no two days are alike.

    JG: I'm fascinated with how you begin the process of developing the kind of strategic plan that you talked about on our program, a new strategic plan around IT. How did you begin those discussions with your team, as well as with senior business leaders?

    LC: Actually, it was a number of phases to get to a point that we were prepared to even have the dialogue around the strategy. And a lot of people will come up and say, 'well, we're going to develop a new strategy.' My style is really more to learn more about the organization first, and I would say that initially I came in with a set of questions about the organization, about what was driving the organization, and really tried to spend some time getting to know the leaders. Not so much talking about the technology, but also talking with the team, understanding what was important to them as information technologists and where had they seen opportunities and what kinds of things did they like doing? So, it was a lot of learning, listening, but also dialoging, ensuring that the team understood my drivers, understood what was important to me as a leader. What were the kinds of things culturally that I felt excited about? And so it meant that I had to make myself somewhat vulnerable to them, for them to understand who I was, where I'd been. So, I spent time introducing myself and, frankly, I think for some people that was a little odd. I did it on a timeline of technology, and so I put myself on that timeline and my life on that timeline so they would understand what drives me, what was happening in my life at particular times in my life. And sort of how'd I get here. And I think that creates a different kind of connection with people, but also the conversations that I started having with people were much richer. And I sort of asked my team to come back and tell me what they were learning, what they were hearing. And so that process of that open communication was critical. I met IT leaders and business leaders all over the world, and I took it upon myself to go to them and meet with them. And then in about the October timeframe, I said, okay, we're ready. We're ready now to start this process of talking to them about our new strategy and getting the input from them. But also the input from the healthcare industry and what the trends were going to be, looking at every single initiative that we were doing in each of our three sectors and dissecting those. Meeting some team members who could work with us, who were directors and VPs in other teams that were willing to share what they had learned, and then bringing that all together. But I think it did require me sort of going out on a limb and giving people understanding of a brief assessment that I had. I called it the 90 days to the future. And I gave them my assessment of what I had picked up in the first 90 days, and really asked for their input on that. And that became a big input into the ultimate strategy.

    JG: LaVerne, I have a question from Leonard Centio, who has a consultancy business, and he's really talking about one of the core issues.

    [Caller] The question I have for LaVerne is how do you bridge the gap between the IT organization and the business? In other words, how do you create and maintain business intelligence with your own IT department?

    LC: That is a critical factor and, frankly, makes the information technologist's job a little tougher because it doesn't just require that you know technology. It does require that you have a good understanding of the businesses and the business direction. That's not always easy while you're trying to do your day job. And also ensuring that the business is comfortable where you're going with that information. So, it does require that you have a level of relationship with the business leaders, that they understand why you need to know what you need to know. Because what will start to happen is, they'll start to feed you the information. They'll start to make sure that you're on that distribution or that you're included in that meeting when they're having that dialogue. It becomes an important point that when the business understands the value of having their information technology leader at the table, they won't have the meeting without them being there. And so it's critical that as IT technologists and leaders, you really have to verse yourself on the business. You really have to understand what the numbers are saying, what drives the top level, what drives the bottom level? Not just from technology's point of view, but from an overall point of view. Because then, when the conversations start, you can understand it, but then when the conversation continues, you could be part of it.

    JG: An interesting angle on that is you have access to people at a level within the corporation that most of the team members probably don't, so how do you encourage people who are at different levels within the IT organization to gain that business intelligence?

    LC: I have to base it on my experience and growing into this job. I would like to say I was born a CIO, (but) I wasn't. I started out as a programmer analyst many moons ago. And even then, I can remember finding who my peers were in the business that I was supporting. And as peers, 'what were you doing? Why were you doing that?' And I started out in insurance, and so they were actuarials and doing different things that, frankly, I didn't study in school. I studied business, but not that kind of business. And so it's building those relationships from the very beginning and then, guess what? Those people become managers, and you become managers. And those relationships carry you through. And…

    JG: Because you're building a network on the way up.

    LC: Yeah, you build your network on it. And I think people forget that, and you also are involved in professional organizations where other people have insights that they're willing to share. And so, frankly, it's something you naturally should do as part of your career growth. But if you're going to be in IT, it starts from the very beginning, and frankly those relationships sort of go along with you. I mean, to share with you a real-life story, I had investor relations send me an email and said, 'We get calls all the time about somebody that says they know you and here's the guy's name and he says he knows you.' And I looked at the name and I said, 'I recognize it, but I can't remember him.' And then I asked my assistant, I said 'Would you call and find out who this is?' So she called — she didn't get him, but she got his voice mail. At the point that I saw the voice mail and what it was, I knew immediately who he was. I remembered having conversations with him. He's one - he actually is a CEO of a very premiere gaming area now, and he just probably wants to touch base. But I remembered him finally, but I also remember his good business sense. So, I will follow-up with him and continue that dialogue - probably where we left off. It had to be 15 years ago.

    JG: That's great.

    LC: So it is real and I think sometimes we forget. You don't have to talk to the VP. Sometimes it's just the person sitting across the hall from you.

    JG: That's makes sense. LaVerne, a question from Philip McCrea, who is Executive Vice President with Exceed Global.

    [Caller] Recognizing that on a major technology initiative, adoption by people is one of the biggest success factors, but also one of the hardest factors to manage consistently, does J&J have an approach or methodology to organizational change management that you can share? Do you have any resources or suggestions in this area for our company?
    LC: We actually do have an approach, and people that actually help to train the team members that I have on my team, as well as help us in engaging change and driving change. But he really hit the nail on the head. Change is the hardest part of what we do. People have an emotional attachment to the way that they do things they do and the tools that they use to get it done. And when I say emotional, it is emotional. It sometimes gets very personal when you tell someone you're going to retire something they've been using for 10 years and move to something new because it will enable the business, but they never quite understand that. And so being able to articulate that and being able to give the person the time and explain to you what's important to them and why they love this other product, but at the same time being able to give them the training and get them over that emotional hurdle to use the new one is a major effort. And so, yes, we do have methodology for that. We do have people that work with folks that I have on my team, as part of my communications effort, as well in the process methodology and approach that we use. And it's just viable. And the fact is you really can't underestimate what it takes to drive change, and I think sometimes we do that and it's the worst thing we can do.
    JG: I have a question from what appears to be one of your colleagues, Assan Hami, Chief Architect at Information Architecture at J & J.

    [Caller] One of the areas of discussion in the context of enterprise architecture has been that mass customization that has happened in the manufacturing and compute industry is being forecast as a major trend in healthcare to help reduce costs and drive innovation. This would need an infrastructure capable of sustaining the complexity of personalized medicine, similar to how in the auto industry GM has done with the OnStar system. Could you share your thoughts on the same?

    LC: I think it's quite interesting. In fact, I think it sort of leads itself right into the area of bio-pharm, where we will be developing products to the individual. I really feel that that is inevitable and where we're going. And from an IT point of view, it's going to drive us to really having a high-level use of information as we gain it from molecular discovery, information as we gain it from pharmaco-vigilance and how a product works or did not work well for certain types of patients or work for certain types of needs. And bringing that information together and then taking someone else's gene information and creating the right drug for them - I fundamentally believe that's the next frontier of pharmaceuticals. I think that's the next frontier of healthcare. And as the genomics get smarter, as our ability to map the human genome, it's clear, I really think that's where it's going to go, and I think fundamentally that the big driver in helping the scientists to be able to get information faster is going to be using information technology. I do not think it's going to be different technologies. I do think that the technology is going to have to step to whole 'nother level of intelligence and learning, and that's going to require a different kind of learning agent and different kinds of ways that we map information together. I don't even think at this point we clearly have an understanding of where this is going to go.

    JG: LaVerne, a question from Myron Lascher, who is the President of Common Sense IT.

    [Caller] I can imagine with 200 operating companies, why standardization is a core part of her strategy, and how this could be a major change for both of them. I was wondering if she could elaborate on how she's executing this strategy? Is she centralizing certain functions? Is she implementing a framework like ITIL?

    LC: I know Myron from my days in my previous employ, and I'm glad he's doing well. I think that it will require a number of different things. One, we don't necessarily correlate standardization with centralization. And I think many times centralization fundamentally is an organizational constraint, where standardization is a methodology and really is an alignment view. And from our strategy point of view, we're going to try and really - what we're leveraging is an enterprise capability that any of the 200 operating companies could use and should use in order to create a competitive opportunity for themselves. We are actually, at an enterprise level, defining the architecture, defining the security posture, defining the compliance stature. All those things so they don't have to do it for themselves, in order to allow them to use their time for other things that would be more beneficial. Also in defining our platform for growth. Frankly, by doing that, we're giving them the computing power and the capability to compete at a whole 'nother level by having a platform that will allow them to interface with the customer better, and that's where the customization really should occur. So where we're looking at it more standardization, where we're looking at it more as around the various strategies being in our improve and transform and innovate bucket and ensuring that we tie, from an enterprise level, to each of our different sectors, to enable them. So it's the complexity here when you have 200 operating companies, but it certainly is not - it is something I think we can solve, and it's important as we execute this strategy that everyone understands where we're going. And we are using frameworks like ITIL. We are standardizing around our development framework, so of course, those kinds of things help us to get this kind of synergy faster.

    JG: Thank you, listeners, for tuning into this podcast.

  • Tags: , ,


    The Hobson & Holtz Report - Podcast #229: April 5, 2007

    Content summary: Add your comments via Twitter; the pros and cons of live blogging; more listener comment on the value of podcasting, and Dan York’s report adds even more; one sponsor campaign ends; employee benefits communication and the ‘Google effect’; Jeff Jarvis meets Dell: relationship-building and the real power of blogging; white paper says PR must stand up to the search industry; Technorati’s latest state of the Live Web; David Phillips reports on the physical and digital landscape around Stonehenge; listeners’ comments discussion; promo: the Blubrry Jam and Podcamp NYC are coming; the music; and more. [Message from our sponsor: Save time with the CustomScoop online clipping service: sign up for your free two-week trial, at www.customscoop.com/fir.] Show notes for April 5, 2007 Welcome to For Immediate Release: The Hobson & Holtz Report, a 60-minute podcast recorded live from Wokingham, Berkshire, England, and Concord, California, USA. Download the file here (MP3, 27.4MB), or sign up for the RSS feed to get it and future shows automatically. (For automatic synchronization with your iPod or other digital player, you’ll also need a podcatcher such as Juice, DopplerRadio, iTunes or Yahoo! Podcasts, or an RSS aggregator that supports podcasts such as FeedDemon). In This Edition: #229 show notes at The New PR Wiki Links for the blogs, individuals, companies and organizations we discussed or mentioned in the show are posted to the FIR Show Links pages at The New PR Wiki. You can contribute - see the home page for info. If you have comments or questions about this show, or suggestions for our future shows, email us at fircomments@gmail.com; or call the Comment Line at +1 206 222 2803 (North America) or +44 20 8133 9844 (Europe); or Skype: fircomments. You can email your comments, questions and suggestions as MP3 file attachments, if you wish (max. 3 minutes / 5Mb attachment, please!). We’ll be happy to see how we can include your audio contribution in a show. So, until Monday April 9… (Cross-posted from For Immediate Release, Shel’s and my podcast blog.)


    © 2007 - visit the author for more great content.


    Linux News Log Podcast #121

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    Apr 7, 2007 Phone call

    Su invito di Giuseppe Carcereri, l'enologo della cantina Canoso (in Brognoligo, frazione di Monteforte d'Alpone, Verona), Aristide e l'ottima Elisabetta Tosi alias Lizzy (VinoPigro) hanno assistito alla pigiatura del Vin Santo di Brognoligo. Data la modesta quantità delle uve di...



    Benzoid Report #71 - Banjo Music (sorry)




    Apr 7, 2007 Phone call



    Week #020 Review, Friday

    Il libro di Mike = Mike's book (The book of Mike)

    La lezione di Mike = Mike's lesson (Lesson of Mike)

    di + il = del

    La signora del lago. = The lady of the lake.

    di + lo = dello

    Che e' il colore dello specchio? = What is the color of the mirror?

    di + l' = dell'

    La lezione dell'insegnante. = The teacher's lesson.

    di + i = dei

    La canzone dei bambini e' bella. = The children's song is beautiful.

    di + gli = degli

    Il presidente degli Stati Uniti = The president of the United States

    di + la = della

    Il marito della donna e debole. = The woman's husband is weak.

    di + le = delle

    Le gonne delle ragazze. = The girls' skirts.

    a + il = al

    Lui e' al parco. = He is at the park.

    a + lo = allo

    Io sono caduto allo zoo. = I fell at the zoo.

    a + l' = all'

    Andiamo all'ufficio. = We go to the office.

    a + i = ai

    Voi cantate ai bambini = You (plural) sing to the babies.

    a + gli = agli

    Il cane e' ritornato agli uomini. = The dog returned to the men.

    a + la = alla

    I giovani ragazzi camminano alla scuola. = The young boys walk to the school.

    a + le = alle

    L'uomo ha dato le borse alle donne. = The man gave the purses to the women.

    da + il = dal

    Il cibo viene dal negozio. = The food comes from the store.

    da + lo = dallo

    Ho imparato una lezione dallo studente. = I learned a lesson from the student.

    da + l' = dall'

    Questo dottore e' dall'ospedale. = This doctor is from the hospital.

    da + i = dai

    Abbiamo ricevuto il denaro dai ragazzi. = We received money from the boys.

    da + gli = dagli

    Ho letto un libro dagli uomini italiani. = I read a book by the Italian men.

    da + la = dalla

    Roberto e' tornato dalla banca. = Robert returned from the bank.

    da + le = dalle

    Ho ricevuto una lettera dalle sorelle. = I received a letter from the sisters.

    in + il = nel

    Quelle parole sono nel dizionario. = Those words are in the dictionary.

    in + lo = nello

    I gatti non sono nello zoo. = The cats are not in the zoo.

    in + l' = nell'

    Davide e' nell'ospedale. = David is in the hospital.

    in + i = nei

    Gli alberi sono nei parchi. = The trees are in the parks.

    in + gli = negli

    C'e' carne negli spaghetti? = Is there meat in the spaghetti?

    in + la = nella

    Il piede grande e' nella scarpa piccola. = The big foot is in the small shoe.

    in + le = nelle

    C'e' denaro nelle borse. = There is money in the purses.

    su + il = sul

    Il ragazzo dorme sul letto. = The boy sleeps on the bed.

    su + lo = sullo

    Che cosa e' sullo spazzolino? = What is on the toothbrush?

    su + l' = sull'

    Gli uccelli sono sull'albero. = The birds are on the tree.

    su + i = sui

    Le camicie sono sui ragazzi. = The shirts are on the boys.

    su + gli = sugli

    I pomodori sono sugli spaghetti. = The tomatoes are on the spaghetti.

    su + la = sulla

    Il libro e' sulla scrivania. = The book is on the desk.

    su + le = sulle

    I limoni sono sulle arance. = The lemons are on the oranges.

    www.LetsSpeakItalian.net


    Engadget Podcast 106 - 04.13.2007

    Filed under: ,


    Finally, some answers! Yes, Sony is killing the 20GB PS3. Yes, Xbox 360 will get a QWERTY keyboard device. Yes, Leopard is actually delayed. Yes, Palm is developing its own mobile Linux OS. And yes, we're definitely still holding the 2006 Engadget Awards. All this and more on Engadget Podcast 106, enjoy!

    Get the podcast
    [iTunes] Subscribe to the Podcast directly in iTunes (enhanced AAC).
    [RSS MP3] Add the Engadget Podcast feed (in MP3) to your RSS aggregator and have the show delivered automatically.
    [RSS AAC] Add the Engadget Podcast feed (in enhanced AAC) to your RSS aggregator.
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    Hosts: Peter Rojas and Ryan Block

    Producer: Trent Wolbe

    Music: Solvent - Instructograph (Ghostly International)

    Program:
    01:26 - 20GB PlayStation 3, RIP: 2006 - 2007
    06:28 - Xbox 360 Spring 2007 Dashboard update
    13:07 - How-To: play DivX and Xvid on your Apple TV
    17:14 - Apple's Leopard delayed to October, iPhone blamed
    24:16 - Apple sells 100 millionth iPod, deems experiment a success
    27:45 - Palm prepping its own Linux-based OS
    35:46 - Dell Axim, RIP: 2002 - 2007
    40:12 - Hands-on with the SanDisk Sansa Connect
    46:33 - The Engadget Mobile Interview: Sky Dayton, CEO of Helio
    47:55 - The 2006 Engadget Awards - vote!

    LISTEN (MP3)
    LISTEN (AAC)
    LISTEN (OGG)

    Contact the podcast: 1-888-ENGADGET, Engadget (Gizmo Project) or podcast at engadget dawt com

     

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