Salarymen, get those contactless employee IDs set to swipe. Panasonic’s throwing your overcaffeinated ilk a bone with two Honeycomb-based enterprise slates for release this winter. Coming under the BizPad umbrella, these 7- and 10.1-inch Android 3.2 tablets are ruggedized for the road warrior treatment, offering the clumsy and sleep-deprived alike dust-, drop- and water-proof protection . Both tabs pack a dual-core ARM Cortex-A9 processor, 16GB of onboard storage, 1GB RAM, WiFi, Bluetooth and NFC capability (via its IC card reader), but the shared specs end there. While the larger tab certainly wins out with its higher resolution, digitizer-friendly WXGA 1280 x 800 IPS capacitive display (vs. WSVGA 1024 x 600 resistive LCD display), the more diminutive of the bunch gets the better 5 megapixel camera (vs. 1.3 megapixel) and optional 3G connectivity. No word yet on pricing or an actual launch date, but don’t let that stop you from petitioning your IT department right now. Panasonic’s 7- and 10-inch BizPads port the Honeycomb drizzle to Japan’s enterprise set originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 14 Oct 2011 01:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …The 2009 3D blockbuster Avatar ranks No. 1 on the list of most pirated movies, reports MovieFone via TorrentFreak . Despite director James Cameron’s prediction that 3D would discourage illegal copies, pirates still downloaded Avatar 21 million times. (It’s still the highest-grossing movie of all time.) Runners-up for most pirated…
Continue reading …The Academy of Athletic Advancement: Chicago Bliss heavy sled training The Chicago Bliss training at The Academy of Athletic Advancement in Schaumburg, IL Chicago Bliss scores on Heather Furr keeper 10.7.11 LeGagaSolis says: Lingerie football league ? No fucking way! I wanna join
Continue reading …Five Minute Football Fix – 10.13.2011 Brock and Salk’s Man Up Award – 10/13/2011 Aaron Curry traded to the Raiders. Terrelle Pryor joins today’s team practice SeahawkNewsNow says: Seahawks confirm Aaron Curry trade to Raiders http://t.co/nXEeb9HU
Continue reading …Angela Rypien LFL (Lingerie Football) debut highlights – 2 TD passes Mark Rypien Interview – full-pt1.mov Angela Rypien of your Seattle Mist DonGeronimoShow says: RT @ AbeC_209 : @ DonGeronimoShow @ CarmichaelDave Angela Rypien http://t.co/r6443FGz
Continue reading …Radiation level on Tokyo street was 17 times recommended limit but came from radium kept under house floorboards Concerns that contamination from the Fukushima Daiichi plant had spread to Tokyo subsided on Friday after high levels of radiation recorded along a street in the city were linked to old bottles of radium stored beneath the floorboards of a nearby house. Researchers had recorded radiation of 3.35 microsieverts per hour along a street in Setagaya ward, a higher level than in some parts of the 12-mile (20km) exclusion zone around the nuclear plant. An investigation traced the contamination to several bottles that had been stored in a cardboard box beneath an empty house. The bottles recorded radiation levels in excess of those measurable on a low-dose radiation counter, said Setegaya’s mayor, Nobuto Hosaka. Science ministry officials believed the bottles contained radium-226, a radioactive material used in fluorescent paint on watch faces and in medical devices, the Yomiuri Shimbun said. Radiation levels inside the house dropped significantly after the bottles were placed inside a lead container, reports said. The hourly reading in the Setagaya hotspot, located close to a nursery school, was equivalent to 17.6 millisieverts (mSv) a year, according to science ministry calculations, just below the 20mSv a year required to trigger an evacuation and more than 17 times the internationally recommended level for the general public. Officials said the area had been cordoned off, adding that the contamination levels did not pose a threat to health. The reading in Tokyo was taken a metre above the ground near a hedge, according to the public broadcaster NHK. Other spots along the same street showed lower readings. Although this recent incident is not connected to the Fukushima disaster, the discovery comes amid concern that fallout from the plant may have spread over a much wider area than previously thought. Kyodo News reported that a citizens’ group detected levels as high as 5.82 microsieverts an hour in a park in the town of Funabashi, Chiba prefecture, 130 miles from Fukushima. That is five times higher than the highest levels recorded in the city since the 11 March disaster. Earlier this week officials in Yokohama, just south of Tokyo, said they had found abnormally high levels of strontium-90 in sediment on the roof of a block of flats. The radioactive isotope, which has a half-life of 29 years, can accumulate in the bones and cause bone cancer and leukaemia. In September officials in Yokohama said they had detected 40,200 becquerels of radioactive caesium per kilogram of sediment collected from a roadside ditch. The task of identifying how far the contamination has spread, and in what quantities, is proving difficult. Wind direction and topology can cause radiation to spread unevenly, and particles are more likely to gather in ditches and other places that accumulate dust and rainwater. Setagaya ward officials said they would screen more than 250 other locations in the area over the next month. Radiation levels in the neighbourhood, which has a population of more than 840,000, have not dropped despite decontamination efforts. Children have been warned to avoid the recently discovered hotspot, now blocked off by several plastic cones, on their way to and from school. “I thought the reading must have been a mistake when I first saw it,” Hosaka told the broadcaster TBS on Thursday. “Once we have confirmed the readings as high we will push ahead with decontamination efforts.” Japan Japan disaster Nuclear power Justin McCurry guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Nature Check report assesses government’s progress on pledges to protect the natural environment The government is failing to deliver on most of its commitments to help wildlife and the countryside, a coalition of leading conservation groups said on Friday. An assessment backed by 29 organisations has used a traffic light system to see whether 16 government pledges on the natural environment are being backed by policies which are well-designed and on track. The Nature Check report criticises the government over a number of controversial policies which conservationists say show ministers are failing to keep their promises on protecting nature. They include the reliance on a badger cull to tackle bovine TB , attempts by ministers to dispose of publicly owned forests to businesses and charities and the current row over changes to the planning system which opponents fear will lead to a return to damaging development in the countryside. Just two of the promises outlined in the government’s coalition agreement have been given a green approval rating in the report published by the Wildlife and Countryside Link umbrella group today. The government has earned the backing of the conservation groups for its action on pledges to oppose the resumption of commercial whaling and to press for a ban on ivory sales . A further seven commitments have been given an amber rating because the groups say ministers are failing to support positive ambition and rhetoric with effective policies. Seven more pledges are given a red light, including promising to reform the planning system to give neighbourhoods more of a say in their local area and to create a presumption in favour of sustainable development in planning. Other areas where the conservation groups say the government is failing to deliver well-designed policies on time include preventing unnecessary building in flood plains and ensuring measures to look after the seas and open access to the coast are implemented effectively. Martin Harper, conservation director of the RSPB, one of the groups in the coalition, said: “These are 16 policy areas where the government has promised tough action, but that is not what we are seeing. “In these financially straitened times politicians may be tempted to ignore the natural environment in favour of economic growth – but this kind of short-termist attitude won’t wash with a British public which expects the government to protect the countryside and wildlife we all hold dear.” He said a healthy natural environment was not “an aspirational luxury for times of plenty”, but was vital for the future wellbeing of the economy and society. Neil Sinden, policy and campaigns director for the Campaign to Protect Rural England, said the government would not be the greenest ever, as it claimed , if it continued with a “business as usual” approach to economic growth. Wildlife Conservation Green politics guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Amid reports of severe eye pain, CooperVision “continues” its recall of 600,000 Avaira Toric contact lenses.
Continue reading …A crazy story about a waitress getting gipped and insulted by a customer just may have a happy ending: The tale began last weekend when Seattle waitress Victoria Liss collected a bill from a customer who wrote in “0″ on the tip line and added, “P.S. You could stand…
Continue reading …