Kamis, 27 Januari 2011

Boeing 757 runway excursion incident at Jackson Hole, WY

30 DEC 2010

The U.S. National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB ) has opened an investigation into an incident in which a Boeing 757 passenger jetliner departed the runway while landing at Jackson Hole Airport in Wyoming.


At about 11:38 am MT on December 29, American Airlines flight AA2253, inbound from Chicago O’Hare International Airport, ran off the end of runway 19 while landing at Jackson Hole Airport. No injuries were reported among the 181 passengers and crew on board.


The aircraft came to rest in hard packed snow about 350 feet beyond the runway overrun area. The weather was reported to be snowing at the time of the incident. No damage to the aircraft has been reported. Runway 19 is a 6300 ft asphalt runway. Â A video made by a passenger during landing shows the thrust reversers were deployed when the airplane was approximately abeam the terminal building, which is about 4000 feet down the runway.


The airplane involved in the mishap was N668AA.


More information:




Tagged: Boeing 757, excursion, Jackson Hole, N668AA, NTSB, overrun

2012 Pagani Huayra Official Photos and Info – Auto Shows


According to Pagani, its new supercar is about to whip up one hell of a storm.


Pagani has unleashed a maelstrom of photos and info on its new supercar, the Huayra. (And here we thought “Touareg” was hard to pronounce.) The name is taken from Huayra Tata—the god of wind among the Aymara people of South America—and here is the car in an electrifying nutshell: 690 hp, 738 lb-ft of torque, enough exotic materials to build five Ferraris, and looks that are, well, remarkably restrained for Pagani.



Keep Reading: 2012 Pagani Huayra Official Photos and Info – Auto Shows




Related posts:

  1. 2012 Ferrari FF Official Photos and Info – Auto Shows
  2. 2012 Buick Verano Official Photos and Info – Auto Shows
  3. 2012 Chevrolet Sonic Official Photos and Info – Auto Shows

2011 Lamborghini Gallardo LP550-2 Bicolore – Auto Shows

Lamborghini Gallardo LP 560-4 Bicolore

This two-tone, two-wheel-drive Lambo will come to the U.S.


While debuting a super-fuel-efficient VW concept may have seemed out of place in Qatar, using an auto show in the land of the oil-rich to unveil a special-edition Gallardo seems just about right. The two-tone Gallardo Bicolore will be offered only with all-wheel drive as an LP560-4 in other markets, but the version that makes it to us will drive just the rear wheels—à la Gallardo Valentino Balboni—and be dubbed LP550-2. (Yes, that means our cars will make 10 fewer horsepower.)


Keep Reading: 2011 Lamborghini Gallardo LP550-2 Bicolore – Auto Shows




Related posts:

  1. 2010 Lamborghini Gallardo LP550-2 Valentino Balboni – Short Take Road Test
  2. 2010 Lamborghini Gallardo LP550-2 Valentino Balboni – Car News
  3. 2012 Lamborghini Gallardo LP570-4 Spyder Performante – Auto Shows

Toyota Teases FT-86 II Concept Ahead of Geneva Show


Toyota has released a teaser image of the FT-86 II sports car concept, which the automaker confirms will debut at the Geneva auto show in early March. The FT-86 II is, of course, a sequel to the FT-86 that was shown at the 2009 Tokyo show, and it’s still officially in concept status. The same goes for its Subaru brother, a concept of which is also set to bow in Geneva, but bear in mind that neither is far removed from the production designs that will eventually arrive in dealerships.


Thanks to the magic of Photoshop, we’ve lightened Toyota’s teaser image for a clearer look at the car. The pic reveals squinty headlights and a big mesh lower grille that resembles our earlier rendering of the FT-86. The company promises this car demonstrates its “reborn passion” for sporty cars, something that has been missing from Toyotas of late.


Both the Toyota and Subaru versions of the car may bow in production form on their home turf at the Tokyo auto show this December—two years after the original Toyota FT-86 concept first saw the light of day. While we know the cars will use boxer engines and rear-wheel drive layouts, many questions remain, including whether turbocharging or all-wheel drive are on the agenda for either. For the Toyota, we’re expecting a final name that somehow includes the number 86, especially in light of the company’s recent trademark filing for a boxer-engined “86″ logo.


Keep an eye out during our coverage of the Geneva show for more information on the FT-86 II and Subaru concepts and—hopefully—the production versions, too.




Related posts:

  1. Toyota Teases Green (Literally) Dedicated Hybrid Concept Ahead of Detroit Show
  2. Cadillac Teases Concept Car Ahead of Detroit Auto Show
  3. Rinspeed Previews BamBoo Concept Ahead of Geneva Auto Show

Volkswagen XL1 Concept – Auto Shows

Volkswagen XL1 Concept

Volkswagen unveils a turbo-diesel plug-in hybrid that could return incredible fuel economy.


In the battle for the sky-highest fuel-efficiency figure, Volkswagen continues to hone its superweapon. The XL1 concept, unveiled today at the Qatar auto show—foolishly, we neglected to put a man on the scene—is a plug-in hybrid boasting triple-digit fuel economy. It builds on prior super-high-efficiency concepts from VW, namely the 1-Liter that debuted in 2002 and the L1 concept that appeared in 2009. The former used a tiny diesel engine and was designed to travel 100 kilometers on a single liter of fuel, hence the name; the L1 added a plug-in hybrid system in pursuit of a more marketable approach to the same goal.


Keep Reading: Volkswagen XL1 Concept – Auto Shows




Related posts:

  1. Volkswagen E-Up! Concept – Auto Shows
  2. Volkswagen L1 Concept – Auto Shows
  3. Volkswagen Concept BlueSport – Auto Shows

At Least You Aren't Shoveling Snow Today [Extra Extra]

At Least You Aren't Shoveling Snow Today [Extra Extra]

WSJ weekends in our town

Friday, Saturday, Sunday, and, yes, even Monday make a sojourn in Austin with a full schedule presented on the front page of the Off Duty section of today’s Wall Street Journal (“Take Monday Off: Austin,” byline Kate Bolick).

The on-line version is illustrated by ranks of boots from Allens, but the print version shows, in addition, a delectable entree from Fonda San Miguel, an exterior shot of the Broken Spoke, a western-themed suite in the Driskill, and a half-dozen more (view the slide show).


There’s that word “mosey” again, along with an anonymous reference to a person who can only be Leslie. This piece tries to cover all bases, from some C&W flavor to urban trendy. Coming in for mentions are Hotel San Jose, Uchi, Jo’s, Uncommon Objects, the Continental Club, Waterloo Records, and many, many more destinations.


There’s quite a lively page of commentary, some of it discouraging people from visiting Austin or contemplating living here. Someone cites two of my favorite disadvantages in this context (heat and respiratory allergies), but I don’t see mention of the third repellent, which is the giant cockroach, unfamiliar to people from many parts of our great nation and truly horrifying to them on first sight.


This is really one of the better Austin once-overs; in case inspiration should fail during SxSW, tear this one out and have your house guests play pin-the-tail-on-the-donkey to fill those little gaps in the schedule.

GTD This Weekend: The Brother and Sisterhood of the Traveling Pantless

Plenty of opportunity for beer, followed by an opportunity to go pant-less. In other words, start the new year off right.


SATURDAY



  • This one basically writes itself: at the Pancakes and Booze Art Show, over 50 “underground” artists will show off their art. In addition, there will be live nude painting, music, and an all you can eat pancake bar. A little beer to wash it all down, and you have the breakfast of champions. $5. From 8pm to 2am on Saturday and Sunday at 2441 Hunter St., Downtown.

  • If you want to cut straight to the beer, head out to Eagle Rock Brewery, which is celebrating its very first birfday. Ten bucks gets you a commemorative pint glass with four drink tickets. $10 at 3056 Roswell Street in Glassell Park, which really is right next to Eagle Rock.

  • 826LA hosts the 3rd Annual “I Work in Reality TV” benefit, with proceeds going to 826LA. Thankfully, you’re not going to be the next Snooki at the benefit (and I mean, “Thankfully” on behalf of the civilized and uncivilized world); rather, the benefit features photos taken by all the people behind the camera who create the reality that you think is television. Suggested donation of $10. Reality bites at 8pm at Lot 613, 613 Imperial Street, Downtown.



SUNDAY



  • ZOMG you’re either going to want to ride the subway today, or avoid it like the plague: GuerilLA Improv leads the charge in the No Pants Subway Ride of 2011. It’s the LA edition of Improv Everwhere’s No Pants Subway Ride, now in its 10th year. That’s a decade of riding the subway pantless, people. See the event stripped down and explained in detail here. Heh heh. The brother- and sisterhoods of the traveling pantless plan on boarding the 2:34pm train from Union Station. Pay your own train fare ($1.50/one way) and fines levied for indecent exposure, if any.

  • Resolve to really lose weight this year? Start it off right with Richard Simmons. Yes, you read that right: he of the shiny workout wear is offering Slimmons, a free motivatonal seminar and exercise classfor those who need to lose 50 pounds or more. Why? “Because you deserve it!” Yes, you do. Registration is at 12:30 at 9306 Civic Center Dr in Beverly Hills.

  • The Echoplex celebrates Elvis’ birthday a day late with a giant bash to benefit the Union Rescue Mission. Lisa Finnie, the Dusk Devils, and the South Bay Surfers will be covering some classic Elvis hits, including, I hope, “Suspicious Minds.” The King would have been 76 this year. In the words of Perry White, Great shades of Elvis. $20. 7:30 at the Echoplex, 1154 Glendale Blvd. in Echo Park.


Photo courtesy ~db~ via the Blogging LA Flickr pool.

Got Something You Want to Show the World? Open Screen Night is back!

Next Wednesday, we’re bringing back OPEN SCREEN NIGHT, one of our favorite, and most bizarre, Alamo traditions. At this event, we give YOU control over our screen. For this night only, you choose the programming, and we will project absolutely anything you bring (as long as it does not break the legal restrictions placed on us by the FBI, TABC, CIA, IRS, and/or USSR). Want to show off the new short film you just made? Perfect, bring it in. Wanna make everyone watch a particularly uncomfortable clip on YouTube? Just give us the URL and we’ll put it up. Have a favorite home movie or super embarrassing clip of your college roommate? Bring that in, too!

And even if you don’t have anything to show this time, come on out to have your mind blown. You never know what you’re going to see at OPEN SCREEN NIGHT, but somewhere in there you’ll definitely get a special treat. And if anything crappy gets shown you’ll only have to suffer through two minutes of it before our gonger can respond to your boos and get that garbage off the screen with one mighty bang on his gong.


Here’s a special note of encouragement from Chris Trew, the emcee of the evening: “The Stand-up comedy open mics in Austin are always packed with hungry performers looking for stage time in hopes of meeting new people to collaborate with or impressing people-in-charge to get some paid gigs. OPEN SCREEN NIGHT isn’t that different. If you’re a filmmaker (especially a comedic filmmaker) then you should be here with your DVD or YouTube link. It would be silly not to. Sure, you might get gonged, but if you do then take the note and come back next month with something better.”


Trew will be joined by his comedy theater The New Movement, who will be bringing their own special videos and will engage in entr’acte antics.


Do it! Doooo iiiittt! OPEN SCREEN NIGHT – Wednesday, January 26th, at 9:40 @Ritz.

Oscar nominations! Got some catching up to do? We can help.

As you’ve surely noted by now, the Academy Award nominations were announced this morning to the expected flurry of hype and controversy. While we may respectfully disagree with the exclusion of the likes of Christopher Nolan and Ryan Gosling from individual awards categories, the Best Picture slate is pretty solid. Check it out:

THE BLACK SWAN, THE FIGHTER, INCEPTION, THE KIDS ARE ALL RIGHT, THE KING’S SPEECH, 127 HOURS, THE SOCIAL NETWORK, TOY STORY 3, TRUE GRIT, WINTER’S BONE.


OK, so maybe they missed on BLUE VALENTINE but you can’t win them all. Looking over this list is especially satisfying because we have played all of these films in our theaters this year with the exception of WINTER’S BONE, which we couldn’t fit in at the time. And of these; THE BLACK SWAN is onscreen currently at South Lamar and Lake Creek, THE FIGHTER is playing at Village, THE KING’S SPEECH is packing houses at South Lamar and Lake Creek, and TRUE GRIT continues as one of the biggest attractions at South Lamar, Lake Creek and Village. It’s good to know that we have an audience that wants the best and we’re thrilled to provide it.


There were some big surprises in the other categories. One of the major headscratchers is the exclusion of Christopher Nolan in the Directing category. While all of those nominated did an excellent job, Christopher Nolan seemed like an obvious inclusion.


Another notable name missing is Ryan Gosling in the Best Actor category, for his performance in BLUE VALENTINE. While his BV costar Michelle Williams was nominated in the Best Actress category, he didn’t make the cut.


One positive surprise was the nomination of DOGTOOTH in the Best Foreign Language Film Category. We sort of thought this one might be too weird for mainstream acclaim, but there you have it.


We were also happy to note that the consensus best movie of 2010 from the Alamo Programming Team, EXIT THROUGH THE GIFT SHOP was nominated in the Best Documentary Feature category.


As for all those Oscar Shorts, very few of us get too excited about these because so few have seen them, but as we’ve done in years past, we will be screening both the Live Action and the Animated Shorts nominated films at South Lamar starting on February 11. We’ll announce showtimes here when they become available.

Commerce Department and WAA Code of Ethics

Thanks to Tim Evans I was alerted to a report about the Commerce Department weighing in on privacy issues online. Suffice to say I agree with the direction Commerce is giving the Obama administration. Specifically the idea that, according to CNN’s Money, “the government ‘enlist the expertise and knowledge of the private sector’ to create ‘voluntary codes of conduct that promote informed consent and safeguard personal information.’”

More or less exactly what John Lovett and I proposed back in September of this year.


I have started reaching out to the media on this point — that we in the digital measurement community are already taking matters into our own hands and stepping up — but we could use your help! Please, if you know anyone in the press, send a link to this blog post along to them and help spread the word that as a community we can take responsibility for our own actions and we are willing to do what is right for consumers around the globe.


This issue affects all of us in the digital measurement sector — vendors, consultants, and practitioners alike. Please help us create awareness about our efforts.


Here are links to the relevant background materials:



Here is the link to the near-final draft of the Web Analysts Code of Ethics:




The Standards sub-committee for the Code of Ethics met yesterday and as I publish this blog post John Lovett is presenting the final version to the Web Analytics Association Board of Directors. We expect the Code to be available to sign at the WAA web site in the coming weeks.





© 2010 Web Analytics Demystified | www.webanalyticsdemystified.com



Looking for a new job in web analytics? Check out the Web Analytics Demystified Job Board!

EaselJS / Canvas Generative Graphics Flickr Set



Just a quick note, but I have created a Flickr set which contains some of the generative graphics I have been creating using canvas, JavaScript and EaselJS.



You can view the set here.


I havent released all of the code used to create all of the examples, but I will release the code / examples as I finish them. Ill post new images on the set whenever I create something I think is interesting.

Even More Web Accessibility Jobs

Great to list even more accessibility jobs!

Web Accessibility Specialist at Modis in Wilmington, DE (long-term contract). Modis is seeking aWeb Accessibility Specialistfor a long term contract position with their industry leading client.The Accessibility Specialist will be responsible for identifying and suggesting potential solutions for accessibility violations based on W3C WCAG 2.0 standards.

Web Accessibility Specialist at DeVry University, Wood Dale, Illinois. The primary purpose of this position is to consult with course developers on the guidelines and application of web accessibility to online courses created in Kinect. This includes researching section 508 and determining enhancements needed to course structure and media.

Accessibility Product Manager at RIM (BlackBerry) in Canada (Waterloo, Toronto, Ottawa). The Accessibility team is responsible for ensuring BlackBerry products and services are usable and accessible by the widest possible audience. This includes researching, specifying, designing and driving through to implementation various internal and external accessibility solutions. The successful candidate will be the voice of the customer and responsible for driving, from concept to implementation, emergency access BlackBerry solutions that meet the needs of persons with disabilities, wireless carrier partners and applicable legislation.

Accessibility Practice Lead, Atlanta, GA, 6-month contract. Collaborate with the User Experience and Development teams in planning, documenting and testing usable accessibility compliant interfaces. Proactively determine process, efficiencies, patterns, training and communication opportunities to improve our online experience for all users. Present and conduct training sessions for various teams on web accessibility process, planning, documentation and testing. Complete audits and test current and new products for compliance. Draft and maintain standards documents and remain abreast of trends and developments in the area of web and software accessibility.

The Zen of HTML5 presso video

I did a talk last week for London Web on the history and philosophies of HTML5, largely prompted by recent developments like Google Chrome dropping support for H.666 video, the renaming of “HTML5″ to plain “HTML” and the silliness of the HTML5 logo.

Watch “The Zen of HTML5″ on the Opera Developer Network, with loads of resources to get you going. (“Get you going” in a “get you started” way, not in a viagra way.)

Blender wins PortalProgramas Open Source award

The nominations and voting can be read here:

http://www.portalprogramas.com/software-libre/premios/software-libre-revolucionario


Blender download and info page:
http://gratis.portalprogramas.com/Blender.html

The award - 300 euro - has been received and will be spent on our documentation project, especially for improving our wiki.blender.org website.


Thanks!


Ton Roosendaal
23-1-2011


http://www.portalprogramas.com/software-libre/premios/software-libre-revolucionario

How green are the Oscar nominees?

by Holly Richmond.

This morning Mo’Nique, last year’s best supporting actress, announced
the Oscar nominees for next month’s 83rd annual Academy Awards. While there’s
no Inconvenient Truth nor anyone
bragging they’re the
greenest director of all time
, we managed to find some sustainable messages
in the contenders for best picture.


127 Hours: James
Franco stars in this grisly film about the mountain climber who had to cut off
his own arm since it was stuck under a rock. As long as he packed it in and
packed it out (his litter, not his arm, silly!), this sounds pretty green to
me. (For reals, though, Franco’s 2008 New Year’s Resolution was
to walk more
and rely less on his car.)


Black Swan: Natalie
Portman, star of this creepy ballet flick, is a longtime vegan and green
darling
, and she said
the same of director Darren Aronofsky
: “Darren is a huge environmentalist
and talks about it all the time.” He forbade plastic water bottles on the set,
and Kleen Kanteen provided the cast and crew with reusable ones. Because it’s
important to be hydrated before any self-mutilation.


Inception: Sleeping
is a great way to save energy, right? But seriously, the Prius-driving Leo DiCaprio is uber-green.
(Remember The Eleventh Hour? Yeah ...
unfortunately we do too.) Juno darling Ellen Page is no slouch, either—she appeared
in a video promo
for 350.org’s day of climate action last year.


The Fighter: I’ll
admit it, there aren’t a lot of green connections with this boxing flick ...
although aforementioned green director Darren Aronofsky was once at its helm.
And you can count Marky Mark as yet another knock-out with an awful
eco-thriller in his past (The Happening).
Co-stars Christian Bale dabbled
in vegetarianism
, and Amy Adams took
reusable bags with her
to the grocery store (hey, I’m trying here, people!).


The Kids Are All Right:
Annette Bening (who played a green activist in 1995’s An American President) and Julianne Moore star in this comedy-drama
about a lesbian couple and their kids—and a recent
study
suggests the LGBT community is greener than its hetero counterparts. And
star Mark Ruffalo’s recently been in the news for his anti-fracking
activism
.


The King’s Speech: This period drama chronicles how King George VI
overcame his stutter. It stars Colin Firth, who just might be one half of a new
green power couple: “With friends he opened an
eco-friendly store in west London,” reports Financial Times. And his wife Livia Guggioli has promised to only
wear sustainable fashion
on the red carpet.


The Social Network:
Justin Timberlake brought sexy back, climbed Mount Kilimanjaro in
the name of clean water
, and opened a “green” golf
course
? Add him as a friend already. (Same for Rashida Jones—her 2011
New Year’s resolution is to start
composting
.) And in real life, Greenpeace gave Facebook a not-so-friendly
poke for using
coal
to power its data centers.


Toy Story 3: Clearly
the take-home message of this animated blockbuster is that reusing and
recycling unwanted crap is way better than sending it to the scary incinerator.
Did I say “clearly”? In any case, Tom Hanks (the voice of Woody) volunteers for The Nature
Conservancy
, making him our favorite deputy.


True Grit: The Coen brothers directed this John Wayne remake. (Perhaps
you remember their maybe-it’s-a-metaphor-for-climate-change film from three years ago, No Country for
Old Men
, or their definitely-mocking-clean-coal video from last year?) The Coens have made composting
and recycling
a priority on sets before—they composted 74 percent of the
waste from A Serious Man and recycled
another 6 percent. Keep it up, bros.


Winter’s Bone:
This “haunting
yet beautiful
” drama is set in a poor rural community in the Ozarks, “where
drug production and trafficking [are] just as lucrative as livestock and
farming,” writes
one reviewer
. With zero farmwashing—instead, broken farm equipment sits in front of houses—perhaps it shines
a dull flickery light on the downsides of Big Ag?


Best Supporting Actor


The Town: This bank-heist
action flick features Ben Affleck as both star and director. As one-half of the greenish Bennifer,
he’s campaigned for Defenders of Wildlife, been in a Live Earth PSA, and dressed
like an ear of corn to promote flex fuels. Co-star (and Mad Men hottie) Jon Hamm voiced green Mercedes-Benz ads during
last year’s Oscars
and made the regrettable career decision of starring in
an eco-flick.
Finally, Blake
Lively shops green
and has urged her Gossip
Girl
co-stars to switch to reusable mugs.


Best Feature Documentary


Gasland: This puppy started getting buzz at Sundance almost a year ago. It’s a scary, compelling look at fracking (hydraulic fracturing), a chemical-intensive method of extracting natural gas, and its negative health effects on the people who live nearby. If “flammable tap water” sounds familiar, it’s probably thanks to Gasland.


Inside Job: Tesla-driving
Matt Damon narrates this documentary about the current economic meltdown. Damon’s
dulcet tones have also graced
green docs
Running the Sahara and
Journey to Planet Earth, and he
started Water.org, which aims to get clean drinking water to people in
developing countries.


Waste Land: Trash? Art? Global issues? Yes. Photographer Vik Muniz went to the world’s biggest landfill in Rio de
Janeiro to create mixed-media portraits of the locals who pick through trash there. Then he photographed the portraits—which he made with trash from that very landfill—and sold them, donating his profits back to the locals. For a topic that sounds smelly and ugly, the film sounds uplifting and personal.


Related Links:



Flava Flav opens fried chicken chain, threatens the Colonel






‘Portlandia’ recap: Farming is magic!






‘Cracking the Carbon Code’—Can the movie be far behind?

Yo quiero lots of weird and unpronouncable ingredients

by Tom Philpott.

All this talk about Taco Bell’s beef-spiked stew of fillers and flavor “enhancers” got me to wondering: what other weird stuff lurks in the fast food giant’s delicacies? Luckily, Taco Bell provides a convenient online ingredients list for its products. Let’s peruse it, shall we?


Let’s start with a rather straight-forward dish: steak. On the rare occasions I cook steak, here’s what I do.
Ingredients are pretty basic: steak, sea salt, pepper, a high-quality
cooking fat, and a few simple substances (wine, garlic, shallots) for
sauce. Here’s Taco Bell’s version:


Beef,

Water, Seasoning [Modified Potato Starch, Salt, Autolyzed Yeast

Extract, Dextrose, Maltodextrin, Carrageenan, Paprika, Garlic Powder,

Onion Powder, Spices, Hot Sauce (Aged Red Peppers, Vinegar, Salt),

Citric Acid, Sugar, Dehydrated Vinegar, Soybean Oil, Natural Flavors,

Soybean Lecithin], Sodium Phosphates. Sauce: Water, Seasoning (Salt,

Caramel Color, Modified Food Starch, Autolyzed Yeast Extract,

Maltodextrin, Dextrose, Garlic Powder, Xanthan Gum, Onion Powder, Beef

Stock, Vinegar Solids, Natural Flavors, Citric Acid, Sugar, Thiamine

Hydrochloride, Succinic Acid, Soy Lecithin, Beef Fat, Potassium Sorbate)

Partially Hydrogenated Soybean Oil, BHT. CONTAINS SOYBEANS


Wow
—not just dehydrated vinegar, but also vinegar solids. Both concepts
blow my mind. You can turn vinegar into a solid substance? You can
dehydrate it? And the two things are different? Who’s Taco Bell’s head
chef, Ferran Adria?


Then there’s the presence of dextrose, a form of sugar. By itself, dextrose
evidently doesn’t do the trick for Taco Bell’s food engineers, so they
have to add maltodextrin. What is malodextrin, you ask? Here’s Wikipedia:



Maltodextrin is a polysaccharide that is used as a food additive. It is produced from starch by partial hydrolysis and is usually found as a creamy-white hygroscopic spraydried powder. Maltodextrin is easily digestible, being absorbed as rapidly as glucose, and might be either moderately sweet or almost flavorless. It is commonly used for the production of natural sodas and candy.



Sodas,
candy, and ... steak?


Then there’s that lashing of heart-ruining partially hydrogenated soybean oil in the steak sauce. Nice job, guys!
Clearly, my pedestrian steak-cooking style needs a kick in the pants
from those Taco Bell kitchen wizards.


Now let’s move to “southwestern chicken”: now, with mixed triglycerides!



Chicken
Breast Meat With Rib Meat, Water, Seasoning [Salt, Maltodextrin,
Spices, Garlic Powder, Chili Pepper, Paprika, Onion Powder, Carrageenan,
Disodium Inosinate, Disodium Guanylate, Natural Flavoring, Mixed
Triglycerides, Yeast, Modified Corn Starch, Corn Syrup Solids, Yeast
Extract, Alginates (Sodium, Calcium And/Or Ammonium), Cellulose, Calcium
Chloride, Sodium Benzoate Used To Protect Quality, Not More Than 2%
Silicon Dioxide Added To Prevent Caking, Soybean Oil], Modified Food
Starch, Sodium Phosphates Soy Lecithin (Used As A Processing Aid).
CONTAINS SOYBEANS



Again,
we get something usually thought of as liquid—this time, corn syrup— in solid form. And again, we find echoes of one ingredient in another:
not just disodium inosinate, but also disodium guanylate—both of
which seem to be normally used with some form of monosodium glutamate (MSG). I
think my favorite ingredient of all is this: “Sodium Benzoate Used To
Protect Quality, Not More Than 2% Silicon Dioxide Added To Prevent
Caking.” Because, you know, I think we can all agree it sucks when southwestern
chicken starts caking. Forget that research suggests that sodium
benzoate may cause “serious cell damage.”


I
could go on for a while like this. In a pork dish, we find “Roast Pork
Flavor,” which consists of “Water, Flavor, Salt, Autolyzed Yeast
Extract, Sunflower Oil, Propylene Glycol, Natural Smoke Flavor, Xanthan
Gum.” (I salute the use of “flavor” as an ingredient.) That same dish
contains “Pork Conditioner” (Modified Food Starch), and “Grilled Flavor”
(Maltodextrin, Salt, Grill Flavor [from Vegetable Oil].”


But
perhaps the biggest engineering triumph of all lies in the dessert
menu. Taco Bell does feel the need to include actual pork amid
the “Roast Pork Flavor.” Even its inamous “seasoned beef” contains 34 percent beef. Truth-in-advertising attorneys take note: Taco has successfully engineered the strawberries
out of the “Strawberry Frutista.” I’m not sure what a frutista is; the
word doesn’t exist outside the confines Taco Bell-world. But I know what
a strawberry is, and I don’t see even one on this ingredient list.



Treated
Water, Sugar, Citric Acid, Natural Flavor, Yucca Extract, Salt, Red Dye
#40, Sodium Benzoate (Preserves Freshness), Potassium Sorbate
(Preserves Freshness)



The engineers failed miserably, though, with tomatoes. Ingredients:



Tomatoes



Perhaps since agreeing to pay an extra penny a pound for tomatoes from Florida after a boycott from the Coalition of Immokalee Workers, Taco Bell execs found some grudging respect for the ingredient and waved its engineers back. Would that other common foodstuffs got similar treatment from the fast food industry.



Related Links:



Flava Flav opens fried chicken chain, threatens the Colonel






Is Taco Bell’s beef ‘filler’ the healthiest thing it sells?






Taco Bell ‘beef’: mostly not beef [UPDATED]

Rock stars, lesbians, and probably some Icelandic elves team up for geothermal power

by Christopher Mims.

Two rules for industry in Iceland: Don’t
piss off the elves,
and do NOT mess with Bjork. She is the Hugo Chavez of Iceland, and if you take
her country’s geothermal natural resources, she will threaten you with expropriation
of nearly half a billion dollars
of your company’s assets. Also, she
is friends with the first openly gay head of state
in modern times, Johanna Sigurdardottir, who recently stood shoulder to
shoulder with the pop queen to sing protest songs outside of Iceland’s
parliament building. Their bird-like caterwaul was specifically aimed at
Canadian geothermal company Magma Energy, which is trying to seal a deal on
Iceland’s largest private geothermal company, HS Orka.


A fountain of blood in the shape of a
girl:
Bjork’s on a quest to see Iceland take back its geothermal resources, after
selling off 9 percent in a deal authorized by Iceland’s previous (now extremely
unpopular) government. Her latest move: a petition signed by
47,000 people
—nearly a sixth of the entire population of her
adorable little Christmas village of a country.


Nature forges a deal to raise wonderful
hell:
Iceland could be the only developed country in the world to skip the
industrial revolution and go straight to whatever sustainable post-carbon
paradise lies beyond it
, says Bjork, but only if they keep their
geothermal resources intact. The country already gets the overwhelming
majority of its primary energy
from clean, renewable geothermal
power. This wellspring of heat has also been proposed as a way to help
the country rebuild its shattered economy
, which won’t work if they
auction off the underlying resource off like some kind of resource-cursed
developing world basket case
.


If you complain once more, you’ll meet an
army of me:
Bjork
publicly threatened Magma Energy with expropriation
of its assets
—that means the Icelandic government would just take
back the geothermal power plants, but maybe pay for them if they’re feeling
charitable. Iceland has
no navy
, though, so this might not be the best idea.


Regardless, the latest development is
that Iceland’s government is about to give Magma Energy a talking to.
The obviously frustrated company has said it was “promised” that the
deal would undergo no more reviews, but they should have known not to tangle
with a woman who controls a robot tank
with teeth
.


You shouldn’t let poets lie to you: After her
meeting with the prime minister, Bjork told reporters: “Basically we are
in agreement on the issue, but it’s always a question of methods. In plain
language—it’s a question of how to deal with the system, the
bureaucracy.”


We’re just hoping she understands
“the issue” and “the bureaucracy” better than she
understands the magic of television:



Related Links:



Carnivorous plant goes batshit for bat shit






Listen up, hipsters: Your next home will arrive on a truck






EPA: A human life is worth $7.9 million

Gmail Labs Search

Gmail Labs Search: "There are so many Labs features in Gmail that's difficult to find one of them. There's always Ctrl+F to the rescue, but you shouldn't have to use a browser feature for this.

To solve this problem, Gmail added a search box that performs some simple text matching and it's not another Labs feature, so anyone can use it. Start typing docs, chat, labels and you'll see a list of Labs experiments that match your keywords.


My favorite feature is that you can now link to a Gmail Labs experiment by adding /keywords to the URL: http://mail.google.com/mail/#settings/labs/apps search.

{ via Gmail Blog }

Google Geonews: Geometry GM API Library, Games in Google Earth, Maps in China Update, and more

Here's recent Google-related geonews.

From the official sources:



From other sources:



VerySpatial: A VerySpatial Podcast – Episode 288

A VerySpatial Podcast

Shownotes – Episode 288

January 23, 2011


Main Topic: Our conversation on Internet/Web mapping for managers


  • Click to directly download MP3

  • Click to directly download AAC

  • Click for the detailed shownotes



    Music


  • This week’s podsafe music: “Washburn Love Song” by Krista Baroni

  • News


  • Esri FedUC announcements

  • Esri Community Analyst

  • China map licensing

  • FortiusOne’s Acetate

  • Galileo’s costs keeping rising

  • Mapping Kibera

  • Web Corner


  • Spatial Epidemiology

  • Main topic


  • This week we discuss some of the issues related to Internet mapping and web mapping from a manager’s perspective

  • Tip of the Week


  • FME 2011

  • Events Corner


  • TUgis: 23-24 March, Towson, MD

  • AAG Annual Meeting: 12-16 April, Seattle, WA – prelim program now available

  • ASPRS: 1-5 May, Milwaukee, Wisconsin

  • GI Forum: 5-8 July, Salzburg, Austria
  • Google Geonews: New Content Widget in Maps, Hotpot-enhanced Searches, Floods in Earth, and more

    Here's recent Google-related geonews.

    From the official sources:



    From other sources:



    Slashgeo.org: Google Geonews: New Content Widget in Maps, Hotpot-enhanced Searches, Floods in Earth, and more

    Here's recent Google-related geonews.

    From the official sources:



    From other sources:



    Slashgeo.org: GDAL / OGR 1.8.0 Released

    At the core of many open source and commercial geospatial software, there is GDAL/OGR. And version 1.8.0 just got announced.

    The 1.8.0 release is a major new feature release with the following highlights:



    Bad News for Texas Libraries

    The following notice was posted by the Texas Library Association at http://www.txla.org/texline-265

    I. Proposed Budget Demolishes Statewide Library Programs

    The first draft of the State’s budget proposal for 2012-13 affects every statewide library program. The proposal:


    • Eliminates Loan Star Libraries (direct aid grants to public libraries)

    • Eliminates all state funding for TexShare databases (replaces state funding for databases with increased fees to member libraries)

    • Eliminates the K-12 Database program

    • Eliminates the Library System Negotiated Grants Program (the new competitive grant program started last session for systems)

    • Eliminates state funding for consulting services to libraries (program/staff based at the agency)

    • Eliminates state funding for state depository program and TRAIL program

    • Eliminates state funding for records management (replaces state funding with increased fees)

    • Assumes an overall loss of over $8 million in IMLS funds (Note: federal funding is the source of funding for the regional library systems, the TANG program, and interlibrary loan.)

    • Eliminates the Technology Allotment at TEA.

    • Eliminates funding for the State Law Library (updated item: 1/20/11)




    This budget shows a 99% decrease in state funding for statewide local library aid programs and a 93% state cut to library resource sharing programs at the State Library. Overall, the agency cuts amount to about a 70% cut in state funds and an all funds reduction about a third of the agency’s budget.

    From the perspective of investing in communities, helping kids learn, spurring job placement, and maintaining a dynamic infrastructure for research and digital literacy through our libraries, this budget completely fails the people of Texas. For libraries, these recommendations not only potentially destroy almost every facet of critical statewide library services; they speak to a philosophy dismissive of supporting individuals and communities.

    While this budget is just the starting point for deliberations, it is a frightening portent of the potential implosion of our state’s infrastructure for learning and economic development.

    We must not let this stand. It is not just our funding over the next two years that is in danger -- it is the vital understanding of libraries and their role in offering education, providing meaningful and proven support to our economy and institutions of learning, and speaking to a state of vitality.

    We need everyone to speak out for libraries. We need every library supporter to inundate their state representative and senator, the Governor, and the Lt. Governor with letters expressing the incredible damage these cuts would cause. We have a long and hard fight ahead of us, but it is one we must undertake.

    II. What You Can Do

    Here is what you can do…

    1. Call your state representative and senator and tell them not to cut library funding. Be prepared to make the case for your library and the impact it has on your community and students. For more information on library programs, see Issues and Taking Action [4].

    2. Develop an awareness campaign within you community. See the “What My Library Means to Me Campaign [5].” Start marshaling your resources and get your army of supporters mobilized for action.

    3. Inform people around you -- administrators, community powerbrokers, student groups, PTAs. Show them how they can save state funding for libraries. Ask them to speak and write to elected officials.

    4. Participate in Legislative Day [6]. (There is still time to get a hotel room through tomorrow!)

    5. Write letters to the editor; contact your local media about library funding.

    6. Above all: show up for duty! This is a cause for each and every one of us, regardless of political affiliation. We all want the same thing – a strong Texas with strong libraries. If there was ever a time we needed library supporters to be proactive and aggressive in their support for libraries, THE TIME IS NOW.


    Fight for our libraries.

    Let’s not undo a generation of progress!

    Links mentioned above:


    1. http://www.addtoany.com/share_save?linkurl=http://www.txla.org/texline-265&linkname=Texline 265: Proposed Budget Demolishes Statewide Library Programs

    2. http://www.txla.org/texline-265#one

    3. http://www.txla.org/texline-265#What you can do

    4. http://www.txla.org/take-action

    5. http://www.txla.org/what-my-library-means-to-me

    6. http://www.txla.org/../../../../../../../../legislative-day


    My thanks to Susie Perkins for telling me about this issue.

    Across My Desk: 26 Jan 2011

    DearREADERS,
    Some days are so perfect, you just have to sit back and enjoy what others have written. Here are a few of today's highlights:
    • A nostalgic look at her childhood home, Elizabeth Powell Crowe describes her father's super-high quality electrical system, and we get a glimpse of his personality. Glad to see the Crowe's Nest blog is back! What would we daughters be without the influence of our fathers?
    • Via Facebook, Bill West let me know that Walmart has abandoned efforts to build a the Wilderness battleground. Glad to hear this as the project was utterly distasteful to my sense of humanity, not to mention my sense of history.
    • Great to hear the younger set is getting involved in FamilySearch Indexing! Note fellow geneablogger A. C. Ivory's post Give Them Food and They Will Index. This isn't a one shot deal. This group is holding indexing parties 'Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday evenings and during Sunday School' throughout the coming year. Can you say as much for your local genealogy society?

    AND ANOTHER THING...
    Last night during our Second Life chat at Just Genealogy, my avatar Clarise Beaumont pointed to the availability of the archived FamilySearch 2011 January Bloginar. Someone asked 'What's a bloginar?' I thought it was a word coined by FamilySearch combining the term 'webinar' with the term 'bloggers', the latter being those invited to participate in the webinar. Since then I've looked to see if Wikipedia has 'bloginar' listed. (It doesn't.) A Google search for the word returned 54,000 hits including a definition from the Urban Dictionary which reads:
    A bloginar is a webinar hosted specifically for bloggers, and may include promotion of specific social media tools designed for bloggers, such as online graphics, widgets, or online video. Bloginars provide a way for bloggers to get accurate, credible information to write blogs about current topics of interest. (CDC)
    Hey man, [what's] a bloginar? It's what the rest of the world calls a webinar, or web chat.

    Happy family tree climbing!
    Myrt :)
    DearMYRTLE,
    Your friend in genealogy.

    Goat Town: Solid Bistro Food, Hold The Excitement

    From Serious Eats: New York






    VIEW SLIDESHOW: Goat Town: Solid Bistro Food, Hold The Excitement





    [Photographs: J. Kenji Lopez-Alt]




    Goat Town


    511 East 5th Street, New York NY 10009 (b/n Avenues A and B; map); 212-687-3641; goattownnyc.com

    Service: Refreshingly friendly, if unevenly paced

    Setting: Oyster bar meets barn meets subway platform; small and modern-funky

    Compare It To: General Greene, Marlowe & Sons, Walter Foods

    Must-Haves: Burger, sauteed squid

    Cost: $8-13 apps, $18-24 mains

    Grade: B



    There are any number of reasons to go to Goat Town, the new East Village restaurant from the folks behind Brooklyn's General Greene—if you're in the neighborhood.



    It's be a nice spot for a date, or a long chatty dinner with a friend, or few oysters and a drink. For an unusual cocktail (lacking a liquor license, the Goat Town's are crafted entirely of wines, beers, and wine-based aperitifs and digestifs) or a very drinkable glass of the $7 house Cotes du Rhone. Come summer, it's easy to imagine the back garden-to-be will be an exceedingly pleasant place for a beer.



    And the food, for the most part, is quite enjoyable. A meal of bread crumb-topped sauteed squid and crisp-skinned roast chicken, or a shared plate of chicken liver mousse followed up with a burger, with maybe a scoop of salted caramel ice cream for dessert are meals I'd eat again. I just don't know that there's any reason to go to Goat Town to get them.



    In many locations in the city, Goat Town would be a real find: a reliable, friendly neighborhood restaurant serving some French, some American bistro fare. But in a corner of Manhattan with such a vibrant and ecclectic restaurant scene, Goat Town doesn't do all that much to stand out; and the entree prices—$18-24—just don't seem justified. There are plenty of good meals in the East Village for under $20. A thirty-dollar dinner needs to be a great one.


    The space is designed from mostly reclaimed materials by Evan and Oliver Haslegrave, whose look you might recognize from Motorino, Paulie Gee's, and Elsa. They've got that modern-vintage Brooklyn look down; reclaimed furniture, rough wood, funky touches. Here, we don't quite know what to call it: oyster bar meets '50s subway meets ranch? It's an attractive joint, though the booths—made of strange tiled benches so deeply curved that your bottom sinks lower than your legs—aren't exactly what one would call comfortable.



    20110126-goat-town-01.jpg



    'The Goat Town.'



    Even in the absence of hard liquor, 'The Goat Town' ($9)—Cardamaro and Carpano Antica vermouth, plus lemon, Muscadet, and red wine—was quite impressive, more complex than you might guess given the lack of hard liquor. Sweet but balanced by bitter elements, it was something like a winter sangria, though the wine didn't figure quite as prominently.



    20110126-goat-town-02.jpg



    Sauteed squid.



    We'd stop back in for that and a plate of sauteed squid ($12); the slim rings and tentacles maintain a tender bite, enlivened by lemon and parsley. It's a pretty expected combination and was served a little cool, but made a bit more exciting by crunchy mustard bread crumbs.



    Other apps worth having? The Kale Waldorf ($9) is better than any traditional celery-based Waldorf salad, with crisp apples, well-distributed walnuts and raisins, and a dressing that's admittedly mayonnaise-y but not too heavily applied. One part American indulgence, one part happy locavore. And the chicken liver mousse , served with cornichons, grainy mustard, and (not quite enough) sourdough toast, is very well done: boozy and a little sweet, but with a pronounced liver taste.



    Unfortunately, some of their more promising-sounding counterparts didn't fare quite as well. Goat meatballs ($11), the only instance of the namesake animal on the menu, were dramatically underseasoned; they tasted of goat for the first moment in the mouth, but as you kept chewing, the flavor fell flat. The paired sauces didn't do much to add interest. A steak tartar ($12) similarly needed salt and acid—more capers and pickles would've helped. (It also had bits of connective tissue in it, as if the beef weren't quite trimmed properly.)



    20110126-goat-town-09.jpg



    Burger.



    True to its modern bistro leanings, Goat Town has a burger on the menu, and it's a great one ($14). Made with ground beef from Creekstone Farms, it was cooked a good bit past the requested medium rare, but was still plenty juicy and flavorful, amply seasoned and improved by a fully melted blanket of white cheddar (blue and Gruyere are also available). We didn't think it needed the 'house sauce,' a vinegary mayo, served on the side. The skin-on fries are well-salted and have a good potato taste, but they were a bit limp and a bit cool by the time they got to the table.



    Timing and heat seemed like an issue elsewhere, too; like the squid appetizer, the roast vegetables ($6; tasty, if unremarkable) weren't all heated through.



    Of the other entrees, the best-executed was a pan-roasted baby chicken ($18)—super-crisp, well-seasoned skin, moist meat both white and dark—though we'd expect a nearly twenty-dollar plate of poultry to be either larger or more original or both. Served over the same roasted vegetables, it's the dish that best represented our overall impression of the restaurant: solidly executed, but somewhat staid. The kind of dish you'd be proud to make at home on a weeknight, but seems a bit underwhelming at a restaurant. A Grilled Berkshire pork chop ($24) was similarly enjoyable, but not remarkable—a bit drier than it should have been. The sauteed arctic char ($22) was a better bet, sporting a fantastic crisp skin smothered in a nicely pungent rouille that flavored the fennel, potato, and leeks beneath; that said, given the softness of the fatty fish, a bit more textural contrast wouldn't have hurt.



    Desserts followed a similar spread of homey, tasty, and slightly puzzling. A chocolate torte ($9) was appealingly dense and packed a chocolate punch; the crème fraiche with it seemed an odd pairing (We don't like super-sweet whipped cream, either, but this strayed too far into sour territory). A cookie plate ($9) featured excellent pecan sandies, nicely salty chocolate chip cookies, and an enormous, unwieldy lavender-scented meringue. Though the pineapple sorbet in the pineapple knickerbocker glory ($10) was tart and refreshing, the promised burnt honey ice cream was nowhere to be found—or just so overwhelmed by the pineapple thatwe couldn't find it. A house-made salted caramel ice cream ($6), if not quite as tongue-coatingly rich as ice cream can be, had just the right sweet-salty balance; it was the first dish to go.



    The General Greene, the Goat Town owners' other restaurant, offers a few clues as to where there's room for improvement. There, entrees are a bit more original, with a slight but not pronounced Southern bent; prices are lower across the board; desserts are large, homey, and irresistible.



    There are no real misses on this menu, though some plates could certainly be improved; there are quite a few dishes we enjoyed to the last bite; and service is friendly, casual, and eager to please—not always the case in this sort of young restaurant. The strength of the drinks and that burger might have us come back. But otherwise, we were left a bit wanting.



    At Goat Town the menu reads like the greatest hits of bistro food. One of each type of major protein—chicken, steak, pork chop, salmon—in this case char—a burger, tartare, calamari. Dishes that, like the LP's spinning on the soundtrack and the reclaimed decor are good, reliable, but unmistakably old. It left us asking, where's the spark?









    Master Password Plus

    Master Password Plus: "

    Trying this out now. If nothing else I will be glad to get rid of the multiple prompts.


    ” Firefox only: If you’re not using Firefox’s Master Password to lock down your saved passwords, that’s a mistake. Then again, the Master Password itself could be more secure and less annoying. The Master Password+ extension fixes its subject on both those fronts… “



    Jan 5, 2011


    http://lifehacker.com/5725385/master-password%252B-vastly-improves-firefoxs-password-security

    "

    The List of Cities and Details for Kevin Smith’s “Red State USA Tour”


    Kevin Smith is going to make back the money his own way for his newest film Red State. Part of that involves taking the film out on the road and making that profit off of willing audiences, city by city. Smith will be there for post-film Q&As at each location, and he’ll be bringing lead actor Michael Parks along with him. Sounds good, right? The price, however, may be higher than you’ll be willing to pay.


    For all the details of Smith’s “Red State USA Tour,” including which cities it will visit, just hit the jump.


    The Red State USA Tour sounds like a fun time, but it’ll cost a pretty penny. According to Smith, you are probably going to pay “probably 6, 7, maybe 10 times” what you normally pay to see a film at a multiplex. Smith also promises that “we’re going to give you some cool shit,” although it’s not clear if this is separate from the Q&A with Parks and Smith himself (my guess is no). It’s worth noting that while this price initially sounds outrageous, it isn’t too much more than a regular Smith Q&A and, to my knowledge, he usually doesn’t even screen movies at those things.


    Here is the full list of dates and locations:


    March 5th – Radio City Music Hall

    March 6th – Wilbur Theater in Boston

    March 8th – Harris Theater in Chicago

    March 9th – State Theater in Minneapolis

    March 10th – Michigan Theater in Ann Arbor

    March 11th – Indianapolis, IN

    March 12th - Midland Theater, Kansas City

    March 14th – Springfield, OH

    March 22nd – Paramount Theater, Denver

    March 26th - McCalister theater, New Orleans

    March 28th – Paramount Theater, Austin

    March 29th – Cobb Energy Center, Atlanta

    April 4th – McCaw Hall in Seattle


    If the tour does well, Smith will reopen the tour later on. But either way, he hopes to pay back the entire $4 million budget of the film by the time it opens in October 2011. See all the details here.


    Discuss: What do you guys think? Would you pay $50-100 to see Red State early and the ensuing Kevin Smith Q&A?