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We like heated seats and high-end stereos as much as the next car shopper, but some of today’s automotive features provoke more fright than delight. Take GM’s left-hand steering-column stalk: Until recently, this stalk housed the cruise controls in the form of a tiny, three-position switch plus a secondary button. The same stalk also managed high-beam headlights, windshield wipers and turn signals. Twist something the wrong way and the car could turn into a five-passenger R2-D2.
With things like that in mind, we chose 10 not-so-delightful features in today’s cars, from chairs that perform pneumatic jujitsu on your back to owner’s manuals that could qualify for a summer reading list.

10. Rain-Sensing Wipers

Rain-sensing windshield wipers have crept from high-end luxury cars to everyday models like the Toyota Avalon. They generally use infrared sensors to monitor a certain section of the windshield for moisture or dirt, then trigger the wipers to respond according to a threshold the driver sets. They usually work OK — until, invariably, they don’t. When one editor’s Volkswagen Jetta tester had its rain-sensing wipers suddenly spring to action one cloudless night, it was mildly frightening, to say the least.

9. Soda Can Cool Zone

Various automakers offer air-conditioned compartments to keep sodas and other sundries cool. Problem is, those cool zones get hot in the summer when the car is off; we had a couple sodas explode in a certain Dodge after a 90-degree weekend. A spokeswoman told us the car’s so-called Chill Zone is not intended to be used as a refrigerator. All the same, we came away a bit steamed. And sticky.

8. Smart Transmission

The Smart ForTwo deserves its own category. The minicar’s automated-manual transmission shifts gears with its own electronic clutch while the driver sees a traditional automatic setup. Drive the thing and you feel like you’re on a bucking bronco. Once you’re through first gear, the transmission stutters, shudders and very nearly takes a personal day before engaging second. The same thing happens on the way to third, and fourth, and fifth. Sorry, Smart, but this gearbox is anything but.

7. Power-Sliding Doors

Parents, rest assured the power-sliding doors on upscale minivans employ all sorts of electronic cutoffs to ensure they won’t eat your Brownie troop. But we’ll admit the prospect of power doors that can do their thing by remote 20 or 30 feet away can be a bit, um, dicey. They can also add hundreds of dollars to a car’s out-the-door sticker. If you’re feeling the pinch, go with manual sliders and open ‘em yourself.

6. Multi-Manual Owner’s Booklets

The thought of wading through an owner’s manual to figure out how something works is daunting enough. Try wading through 10 of them or more; that’s the number of pamphlets, manuals and quick-start guides included in some cars’ libraries. With online directories only a click away, do you really need a state-by-state list of dealerships? Memo to carmakers: Just because it goes in the glove box doesn’t mean it needs to be a box set.

5. Self-Parking Cars

 Ian Merritt, Cars.com
Ian Merritt, Cars.com

Lexus‘ self-parking feature is optional on the LS sedan. Line up the superimposed square in the backup camera with your intended parking spot, gently let off the brakes and the LS will slowly steer around adjacent cars as it backs into the spot. You have to press the brakes to bring the car to a stop at the end. We didn’t know Big Brother had a valet job, either.

4. iDrive

Even among the trio of similar dashboard interfaces from Audi and Mercedes, BMW’s iDrive is utter knobsense. Directional inputs send you to various submenus, but in most models there are no shortcut or previous-screen buttons around the knob. In many models, street labels sit on a horizontal plane no matter the direction of the street, and if you need to scroll along the map you have to spin the knob to move east/west, then click it down and spin it again to move north/south. If you get the hang of it, you’ll be ready for “Survivor” tryouts.

3. Voice Turn-by-Turn Navigation

Navigation systems have been barking out orders for years. With the exception of Land Rover’s charming Brit, most of them employ a female American voice whose intonations range from casually disinterested to downright annoyed. Some systems try gamely to pronounce street names, but the result is usually anything but clear: You’re cruising along, and she suddenly directs you to turn left on … what was that? Ah, Fockner Ave.

2. Heart-Rate Monitor

You read correctly. Volvo’s Personal Car Communicator monitors the cabin and pulses a light on your keyfob if your car has an unexpected visitor inside. TV ads show a woman approaching her S80 in a deserted parking garage, seeing the warning and hightailing it away. The thought of having this feature is scary in and of itself — not for fear of being carjacked, but because we wonder what sort of paranoia would drive you to want it.

1. Overly Aggressive Seats

Driver’s seats run the gamut, from flat benches to the sort of hip-huggers you’d get in an F-15, and some of the more extravagant ones don’t sit so well with us. The BMW 7 Series offers a massaging driver’s seat, but its throbbing motions feel downright Frankensteinian compared to a real massage. In some of Mercedes-Benz’s pricier models, active side bolsters automatically inflate to hold you in as you take a corner. They’re convenient on highway offramps and winding roads, but 90-degree city turns can result in sudden rib pinching as the seats go hog-wild to keep up. Avoid large spicy meals beforehand — or wade through the Benz’s onboard computer menus to turn the feature off.

Back in January there was a story of Netflix updating their “Watch Now” service to unlimited streaming movies.  If you missed that story then read it here.  This was a huge thing for myself since a large portion of my life is sitting in front of computer screens.  While streaming music is nice, it is also nice to have a movie playing in the background on the monitor instead.

 

roku20netflix.jpg

 

Well, now we can expand that service to our television sets.  And no, not you tech-e wise ass’s with a svideo extension from your video card. (Although I did at one time)  Now they are offering a $99 Netflix Player by Roku, which offers unlimited streaming of 10,000 Netflix titles, assuming you’re on a Netflix subscription plan of $8.95 or above. There’s no HD yet, but it’s coming down the road.

 

Now this sounds great, and more than likely I will indulge myself with the new technology. Yet this streaming service is starting to make me raise a few questions. 

Here are my thoughts:

  • The “Watch Now” service needs to have a more current selection of movies.  While the selection is good for most, it would be nice to see some weekly/monthly updates to the service.
  • While I subscribe to NetFlix and am still using the mail service, I feel they are attempting to save money on postage.  This is fine by me, but if this service is free will they be raising prices on the subscription packages if this is successful?
  • A question which raises most eyebrows.  Does your ISP have a bandwidth cap?  My guess is that is does.  Comcast has its horrid unexplained “Invisible” cap and almost all DSL providers have a contract to stay within your usage cap.  This would also be a direct competition to Comcast’s “On Demand” while using their internet service. 
  • Since a good quality movie may stream at maybe an amount of 1.5gb, that will add up on a weekend movie binge while sucking up your household bandwidth and effecting that oversold node down the street.

See reviews: CNET and Wired

In order to deal with the flood of DMCA letters from the entertainment industry, many college campuses have blocked access to P2P services altogether. But according to Inside Higher Education, Missouri University of Science and Technology in Rolla has a different idea. They force students interested in using P2P to take a copyright quiz to get six hours of P2P use. School sanctions for violating copyright include network bans, community service and academic probation. As far as DMCA letters are concerned, it seems to be working:

Last academic year, Missouri University of Science and Technology, in Rolla, received some 200 Digital Millennium Copyright Act “takedown” notices from the recording industry, notifying the institution that users of its network had made copyrighted works available for download. This academic year — at a time when colleges across the country have been experiencing sudden spikes in copyright complaints — the university received eight.

I’m guessing one or two students game the quiz, download what they want using encryption, then everyone else there simply transfers films and music among themselves off network. So while the University dodges liability and conserves bandwidth, it’s probably not doing much for overall piracy levels. At least students don’t have to take classes taught by the Copyright Crusading Ferret or Captain Copyright, so that’s something.

 

Source: dslreports.com

Microsoft’s next-generation web browser, Internet Explorer 8, has arrived. In a surprising move, after the demo of IE8 and its new features at today’s session of the MIX08 conference, the startling announcement was made: “It’s available for download now”. The new browser showcases many new features and improvements, like Facebook and eBay integration, standards compliance, and the ability to work with AJAX web pages. What’s most notable about IE8, though, is more than a sum of its parts. If anything, this launch shows that Microsoft is not taking Firefox’s creep into browser market share lightly.

IE8 New Features Shown At MIX08

I’m sure there are more features to be discovered, but the ones that were highlighted just now in the demo at MIX08 included the following:

Standards Compliance: There were hints that IE8 would be a remarkable offering on the IE Blog as they released tidbits about the browser’s capabilities. For example, the announcement of IE8’s passing of the Acid2 test (a test for standards compliance) marked a milestone in IE8’s development. The standards mode was originally going to be turned off by default letting web developers code for it by including a “meta” tag to make use of IE8’s new standards compliant mode. Later, Microsoft came to their senses and made the default the standards-compliant mode. Meanwhile, Firefox also claims to have passed the Acid 2 test, but an open bug on bugzilla.mozilla.org seems to say otherwise.  One commenter on the thread notes, “So, we essentially do pass the test. However, in some situations, it might still fail, that’s why this bug is open.”

Facebook Integration: Yes, seriously! With a Flock-like feature as an unexpected surprise, Microsoft capitalized on their partnership with the popular social networking site, Facebook, to allow IE8 users the ability to get status updates from Facebook right from their browser toolbar.

eBay Integration: Like Facebook, this feature also uses IE8’s new technology, called “WebSlices”, which introduces a new way to get updates from other sites via the browser itself, without having to visit the web site. With WebSlices, IE8 beta users can subscribe to portions of a page that
update dynamically, in order to receive updates from that page as content
changes. EBay will offer webslices, too, letting you track your auctions from the browser toolbar. Basically, WebSlices look like Favorites on your Links toolbar but they have a little arrow next to them – clicking on this arrow will show you a small window of live web content.

Live Maps Integration: Another WebSlice was integration with Live Maps. It appeared that you could even highlight text on a page, like an address, and then right-click and choose Live Maps from the context menu to get a WebSlice preview of that location on a map in a small pop-up window. How convenient!

Integration with Me.dium: Me.dium integration will be supported in IE8 via WebSlices. Me.dium will now help web surfers discover and view WebSlices directly from the sidebar. The Me.dium sidebar will alert users to the presence of WebSlices on any page – and even allows users to read each WebSlice, without leaving the Sidebar. In addition, Me.dium will make real-time recommendations for other WebSlices on other relevant web pages and provides direct links to them based on the real time activity of other Me.dium users.


Me.dium Activities in Action

Working with AJAX Pages: IE8 will offer better functionality when it comes to AJAX web pages. The example showed a page where you could zoom in using AJAX technology. Previously, hit the IE “Back” button would take you back to the last page you were on. Now, “Back” will zoom you out.

We can now find out what other features IE8 has to offer, since the beta is now publicly available for download. To get IE8, you can download it from here: http://www.microsoft.com/windows/products/winfamily/ie/ie8/readiness/Install.htm.

The Wall Street Journal discovers that cable’s answer to FiOS will be DOCSIS 3.0. While the article doesn’t offer anything we haven’t been talking about for ages, it does offer up the reminder that Comcast, for all their faults, is the only major cable operator who’ll be seriously upgrading to DOCSIS 3.0 this year. Even then, the company plans to have only 20% of their footprint wired with DOCSIS 3.0 by the end of the year, though they should have 50Mbps tiers available to some before 2009. Other cable operators are even less enthusiastic:

Other cable operators, including No. 2 operator Time Warner Cable Inc., Cox Communications Inc. and Charter Communications Inc., say they’re experimenting with Docsis 3.0 technology and plan on putting it into play in one form or another over the coming years. Just how aggressively they roll it out will partly depend on Comcast’s success, predicts Soleil Securities analyst Laura Martin.

 

Apparently many U.S. cable operators think that most Americans will be perfectly happy, for at least a few more years, by the speeds currently provided by DOCSIS 1.x (or in Cablevision’s case 2.0) networks. Smaller operators like Mediacom, with only Qwest to worry about, have publicly stated they’re taking a “back seat” on DOCSIS 3.0 deployment. In Canada, Videotron recently was the first North American cable provider to offer 30Mbps & 50Mbps pre-certification DOCSIS 3.0 speeds (albeit with caps and overage charges).

source:  www.dslreports.com

When The Pirate Bay was raided back in 2006, three men were brought in for questioning, and the interrogations continued in the months that followed. The police’s goal was obviously to let the people behind the site confess to something they didn’t do. This led to a series of the most hilarious interrogation transcripts.
Not surprisingly, “the confessions” of the Pirate Bay three didn’t help the police much. Earlier this week, the Swedish prosecutor Håkan Roswall charged four individuals involved with The Pirate Bay for “assisting copyright infringement”. Actually, this is a surprisingly mild accusation if you consider that he called the Pirate Bay “terrorists” only a few months ago. The response of Brokep’s lawyer sums it up quite nicely: “My client will plead not guilty, but i’m not sure if what he’s being charged with, is a crime at all,” he said.
Below you can read some of the transcripts of the interrogations of Brokep, Anakata and TiAMO, translated from a Swedish article published by IDG.se.
Brokep

I: Interrogator
B: Brokep (Peter Sunde)
I: You are under suspicion of assisting copyright infringement between 2005-07-01 – 2006-05-31 by running and maintaining The Pirate Bay, and thereby assisting in other peoples’ copyright infringement. Another accusation is conspiracy to commit copyright infringement during the same period of time. This has been done through The Pirate Bay where a large amount of so called torrents of copyrighted files or content are made available. It’s customary to ask the person being interrogated if he admits or denies committing a crime?
B: I deny.
I: You deny.
B: Definitely!
I: Yes. And this thing with The Pirate Bay. I don’t know your position on anything about what you have been accused of, but I say you are one of the people who run this site, The Pirate Bay. What do you say about that?
B: I have no comment.
I: Why not?
B: I don’t want to make a statement about it.
I: What do you want to make a statement about?
B: I’ll probably not make statements about very much.
I: Okay. Then what are we doing here?
B: Well it was you who wanted to (not recognizable, laugh) interrogate me.
I: Yes, because you have the opportunity to explain you ideological position.
B: But I think…
I: ..the purpose of The Pirate Bay etc.
B: Oh, well I don’t think my ideology has anything to do with an interrogation. My ideology and my views on things are… Well it’s my political opinion and I can keep that to myself.
I: I’m not asking about your political opinion, I’m asking about your stance on….
B: But I think copyright is a political issue. So if you ask me about my opinion on a copyright policy issue, I will answer that I don’t wish to make a statement on my policy and my political views.
[…]
Anakata

I: Interrogator
A: Anakata (Gottfrid Svartholm)
I: Well! What do you know about this site, The Pirate Bay?
A: Well it is a site.
I: Yes…what is it?
A: Yes bits and trackers and related services.
I: What is your part in this site?
A: No comment!
I: No. Anakata – Who is that?
A: No comment!
I: No. Do you know how long this has been going on, The Pirate Bay?
A: Like a couple of years!
I: Were you involved in starting it?
A: No comment?
I: No, I will ask a lot of questions!
A: Okay, you will have to annoy me then!
I: Do you have any idea how many users per day The Pirate Bay gets?
A: No comment!
I: Do you have any idea who maintains the homepage?
A: No comment!
I: How can one translate the word tracker? (Note: same in Swedish)
A: It is not possible to translate.
[…]
I: Okay! Is there anything else that you want to say, that we might find valuable to know?
A: No! Yes… there… you can tell Roswall that he is a damn clown, he can … can stop abusing the judicial system!!!
I: You have said this before!
A: Yes. It is the third or fourth time i have said it!
I: Okay!
A: I said it in the media earlier!
I: Well! Then I will end the interrogation at 12.25.
[…]
In a later interrogation Anakata was questioned about an interview with IDG.
I: Okay. During last year, or maybe it was this year, there was an interview in the Hot chair at IDG where you talked openly about The Pirate Bay’s operation. Have you got any comments on..(interrupted)
A: No! No comment.
I: Is it correct that you where in this..(interrupted)
A: No comment!
I: …interview. Okay.
I: We have been talking about this nickname Anakata, and we still claim that is you.
A: No comment!
I: You don’t want to comment on that either. Okay, then lets move on and make this effective instead!
[…]
TiAMO

I: Interrogator
T: TiAMO (Fredrik Neij)
I: This has been a police investigation for a long time. The prosecutor’s case is one of copyright infringement, assisting in copyright infringement and conspiracy to commit copyright infringement. What is your position on this?
T: That he is wrong. That if we are guilty, then Google is guilty too.
I: You mean you can compare Google to The Pirate Bay?
T: Almost.
I: What the difference between them?
T: Well… One difference is that you can upload torrents on The Pirate Bay, but it’s really the same thing because if you have a site with copyrighted material, you can add the link to be indexed on Google. It’s the same level as both sites are handling user-generated material. We don’t have any views on what the content is, we just provide a search engine.
I: But these torrents.. Uhm.. I don’t know what it is in plural (ED: The word “torrent” sounds weird in plural in Swedish)
T: Files of meta data..
I: Yes, I know but what… torrents. If we talk about torrents as more than one, they actually end up on The Pirate Bay’s servers. That’s different to Google?
T: But in the same way it’s… we have a torrent file that is a reference to the material. Someone who only uses a meta link and doesn’t host the file but the file is still available on the filesharing network. Should that be less illegal or more legal? Just because you store the binary data for the hash file locally on a server?
I: But that’s more than Google provides. They only provide a link in that case. While a user or a specific computer in another network provides with the actual… meta data. That has nothing to do with…
T: But then you had to decide whether meta data in itself is illegal or not.
I: But surely it’s not!
T: No.
I: I don’t believe so either, but the summary I mentioned, assisting to commit a crime, that is supplying or owning certain things that can be used for a crime. In this case, it’s providing a tracker, providing a collection of torrent files, you have… It’s about a search engine and so on. That’s more than Google does?
T: Yes
I: And furthermore there was a change of legislation July 1 2005, which means the copyright law has been made tougher than before. I don’t know if you are familiar with the mp3 trial that many refer to in this context, that it is not permitted to link to copyrighted material?
T: Yes.
I: That sentence may be obsolete now, it’s not relevant anymore since the legislation has changed. That’s the foundation of the crime we investigate today. So this thing with Google, it isn’t quite the same thing.
T: I still don’t believe the way we have interpreted it, and we have consulted law people on this. They say that torrent files are not illegal and providing them is not illegal. Since we haven’t actively encouraged the users to upload copyrighted movies and not (not recognizable). We haven’t said anything. We have created an empty site where the only condition was that you cannot upload something where content doesn’t match the description, or if it blatantly is criminal in Sweden.
I: But at the same time, you ridicule Microsoft etcetera on another page of The Pirate Bay?
T: That’s because they try to apply US laws to Sweden.
I: Yes, but what they are really doing is making you aware that there is copyright infringing content on the site.
T: Yes.
I: It comes as no surprise to you that such content is available there?
T: No..
I: So you are not unaware that there is copyright infringing content, but still you chose to remain passive and not remove it?
T: There are links to copyrighted content!
I: Yes exactly, there are links to copyrighted content!
T: Yes.
I: And you are aware of this?
T: We have always had the policy not to interfere with the content on the site.
I: Ok.
T: Since the site was created by Piratbyrån, who stand for free speech and freedom to share without some bully trying to interfere, the policy (not recognizable)
I: That’s what we have left here (not recognizable). You say yourself that Piratbyrån is not a part of it anymore and that the ideological thing has faded during later years?
T: Yes, but I believe Gottfrid for example is ideologically in line with Piratbyrån. Peter as well.
I: And you aren’t?
T: I agree with much of what they say, but it’s not like I would go out on a cold rainy autumn day and protest with a sign against something (not recognizable)
[…]
This is an article from: TorrentFreak
The Pirate Bay Interrogations

A new study cited by the UK’s Independent claims that using a cell phone before bed delays and reduces the quality of sleep, with the potential for “headaches and confusion” in some users. The study was published by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Progress in Electromagnetics Research Symposium and funded by the Mobile Manufacturers Forum, which represents a number of large handset companies.

The scientists studied 35 men and 36 women aged between 18 and 45. Some were exposed to radiation that exactly mimicked what is received when using mobile phones; others were placed in precisely the same conditions, but given only “sham” exposure, receiving no radiation at all. The people who had received the radiation took longer to enter the first of the deeper stages of sleep, and spent less time in the deepest one.

Of course the Independent has a history of penning ultra-scary wireless health-fear stories, but the study is also getting media attention elsewhere (BBC, Sky News). The study itself can be found here.

I do not know about you but I have a Netflix account. With your account you can sign in online and instantly watch excellent quality movies. It only takes a minute to download their application and now its unlimited movies you may view in a month!

Prior to today, you could only watch a select amount of hours per your subscription tier. Only customers on the $4.99 tier (two DVDs per month) won’t be provided unlimited downloads for now.

You can read about the announcement here: Announcement

Enjoy your Netflix!