Archive for November, 2007

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a jar of blended carrot soup
I mentioned before that I spent Thankgiving day out in the Philly burbs with my friend Roz and her family. Every year, Roz is assigned the job of making a roasted squash soup for the meal. I watched her as she made it this year and learned a few really terrific tricks. I am not a newcomer to blended squash soups, they are actually one of my favorites, but she introduced me to a two techniques in particular that have made me rethink my approach.

The first was that she cooked the onions in a bit of butter for the better part of an hour over extremely low heat. She didn’t really even caramelize them so much as melt them into a rich, sweet, nutty jam. When they were translucent and nearly dissolving, she added the roasted squash and veggie stock. She cooked it all until tender and the squash mashed down with the flat side of a spoon. That takes us to her second trick, the double blend.

I will be the first to admit that when it comes to blended soups, I get a bit lazy. I like to use my immersion blender because it means that I don’t have to pull out my blender or food processor and clean that too. However, having now tasted soup that was passed through a blender twice, I think I’m going to change my ways. What she does is put the pot on one side of the blender and a large bowl on the other. She works the soup through the blender in batches until it is all pureed and in the bowl. Then she washes out the pot so that there aren’t any lumpy bits left and purees the soup again in batches, until it is all back in the pot on the other side once more. It was some darn good soup. I think I know what I’ll be doing with the pumpkin and acorn squash that are currently on my kitchen counter!

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Pete Hickey is your average red blooded Canadian guy - the type of guy that Mom wants every girl to bring home for dinner:

Guy with axe

But Pete wasn’t content with just his charm and good looks - he had a burning question that had to be answered: “has anyone ever really tested [the theory that facial hair makes you warmer]?” Realizing that two people might have different sensitivities to temperature, Pete took it upon himself to be his own experimental control:

Half beard

His results? Facial hair makes you warmer, is more comfortable, and reduces wind resistance. I’m sure he also found that having half a beard vastly increased his dating prowess and social allure. Take it from me guys - ladies go for that look.

Read Pete’s whole ordeal at his Beard Site .

Monogrammed Heated Stadium Seat The Monogrammed Heated Stadium Seat is perfect for stadiums as well as other open places during the cold, cold winter. It comes with a lithium ion battery that is capable of keeping your rear end warm for up to four hours in a row, and more importantly, it will feature your name emblazoned across the back. At $99.50 each, I will probably think twice about this as I don’t think that I would sit too comfortably in a stadium - after all, part of the fun includes standing up and making yourself count for the entire team, screaming your lungs out to support your favorite player who is currently on the pitch.

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Jim Cramer on BloggingStocks TheStreet.com’s Jim Cramer says that Disney and The New York Times still have big trouble, and its name is still Google.

No price is holding for media stocks again. Even though Time Warner (NYSE: TWX) (Cramer’s Take) has some fabulous properties, properties that are doing well, even though it has a great growing business in telco-cable and, I believe, some momentum at AOL, this stock can’t get out of its own way. This is after a monster buyback and tons of restructurings, including the exit of the music division that now looks brilliant.

Comcast (NASDAQ: CMCSA) (Cramer’s Take) is little better, even with, again, a huge buyback. This despite the fact that the anti-cable people look like they are losing the FCC battle.

Then there is big-media entertainment. Disney (NYSE: DIS)’s (Cramer’s Take) pennies from a 52-week low despite having great numbers. CBS (NYSE: CBS) (Cramer’s Take) did an OK quarter, not great, but it is still the most watched network and it is also right off the 52-week low. These are good companies by all admission.

Finally, there is the ultimate casualty: newspaper stocks. The big print that went up, the give-up, by Morgan Stanley, of The New York Times (NYSE: NYT) (Cramer’s Take), has failed to hold. You are now down more than a dollar if you participated in that block. That 5.34% yield and the assets that are clearly worth more than the stock is trading for (not to the amount of money the company spent unwisely buying in stock at much higher levels).

McClatchy (NYSE: MNI) (Cramer’s Take) was once the cream of the crop, a great California growth story. But that market is a shambles now, and the spending spree has almost destroyed the company.

It might not even matter, though, because the very conservative Gannett (NYSE: GCI) (Cramer’s Take) is also bouncing along the lows.

These are all ad-supported plays. That alone means that Google (NASDAQ: GOOG)’s (Cramer’s Take) stealing business from them. But these companies also relied a great deal on real estate and auto ads, and both are being pared back dramatically.

I have no solace for holders of these properties. They are going to be tax-loss candidates for the next month. But they are, in my view, uninvestible given the trends, with the exception of Disney, which is far less ad-driven than people realize.

Just the worst group save, of course, the banks!

Jim Cramer is a director and co-founder of TheStreet.com. He contributes daily market commentary for TheStreet.com’s sites and serves as an adviser to the company’s CEO. At the time of publication, Cramer had no positions in any of the stocks mentioned in this post.

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Despite retiring as CEO of Sony Computer Entertainment earlier this year, Ken Kutaragi is still being praised throughout the industry. A couple months ago, Kutaragi was honored at the Entertainment Software Association’s “Night to Unite” event, and now the Father of the PlayStation has been given the Academy of Interactive Arts & Science 2008 Lifetime Achievement Award.

The honorary SCE chairman will receive the award at the Interactive Achievement Awards ceremony Feb. 7 for his “contribution to the global in-home entertainment market with the success of the PlayStation, according to Gamasutra.

“Ken Kutaragi’s passion, innovative thinking and business savvy sparked a monumental movement that was unstoppable,” said AIAS president Joseph Olin. “If it wasn’t for Ken and his concept of the original PlayStation, there wouldn’t be the billion dollar industry there is today. His contributions have clearly set new standards for developers, publishers and consumers worldwide.” Although many gamers like to joke around at all the crazy things Ken has said and done throughout the years, no one can deny his important role in pushing the industry to new heights.

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Courtesy Rimistyle.com

Transform your old frocks into shiny ones by adding the right accessories and let Rimi Style be your destination. With earrings, bracelets, bags, belts and more all hand picked by a wardrobe stylist, accessorizing has never been this easy — or affordable! Now you can get 20% on everything — except sale items — by using the discount code “Peoplemag”. Offer will expire December 17th, 2007.

What we love at Rimi Style:

Sapphire Sea Stone Hoops; $13 with discount.

Click here to see more of our Exclusive Deals!

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Ok everybody, here goes round sixteen. This time we’ve got a Xbox 360 Limited Edition Halo 3 wireless headset. Ready? Here’s the deal.

Some big ticket gadgets we’ll leave open through the weekend, but the rest you can only enter until the next gadget lands (usually within a couple of hours). If you miss your shot, sorry, we’re moving on to the next gadget. Good luck!

Oh, and don’t forget the rules. (Yeah, there are always rules.)

  • Leave a comment below. That’s it! Who loves you, baby.
  • You may only enter this specific giveaway once. If you enter this giveaway more than once you’ll be automatically disqualified, etc. (Yes, we have robots that thoroughly check to ensure fairness.) You can enter different giveaways in today’s Black Friday giveaways, but you can only enter this one once.
  • If you enter more than once, only activate one comment. This is pretty self explanatory. Just be careful and you’ll be fine.
  • Contest is open to anyone in the 50 States, 18 or older! Sorry, we don’t make this rule (we hate excluding anyone), so be mad at our lawyers or US contest laws if you have to be mad.
  • Winners will be chosen randomly.
  • Entries can be submitted until the next contest goes up. After that we’re all done. Good luck!
  • Full rules can be found here.

 

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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

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Woman Accidentally Starts Internet Business Selling Tumbleweeds

Like many a person who found their way online in the ’90s, Linda Katz is a Web entrepreneur. The thing is, she joined the ranks by accident. Back in 1994, Linda was teaching herself how to build a Web site. As a joke, she assembled the Prairie Tumbleweed Farm page. To Linda’s surprise, people began ordering tumble weeds — thats right, giant, dried-out dead bushes.

The Prairie Tumbleweed Farm web page hasn’t changed much since 1994, and it shows. But there is something charming about the extremely basic page that should have died more than 10 years ago as the joke of an HTML novice.

$15 for a small tumbleweed, $20 for a medium, and $25 for a large have let the likes of Barney the Purple Dinosaur, Johnny Depp’s ‘Neverland,’ and even NASA help this accidental business woman, as they have all needed her wares for props. Linda won’t divulge how much she makes, but she says her site makes more than $40,000 a year.

From People of the Web

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The Big B of Bollywood Mr. Amitabh Bachchan will soon be seen as a cool god in Rumi Jaffrey’s new film “God, Tussi Great Ho”. “Big B plays a spunky, funny, doughty and dude-like god, not your average god-in-costume but a very funky character, who has this on-going dialogue on life with Salman (Khan),” said […]

The following is republished from the Design View #39.

Ah, you’ve got to love those wonderful geeks at Stanford.

Lock ‘em in a room with a computer, a case of Red Bull, and two bags of Skittles, and they’ll invent Google before lunch, then go on to solve one of the most intractable problems of graphic design software in the afternoon.

Whatever you call it — Autotrace, Live Trace, PowerTRACE — the ability to convert bitmap images into vector artwork software has been around since at least Adobe
Streamline
’s release in the early 1990s. In fact, I remember spending hours experimenting with Streamline’s many dials and sliders trying to get the perfect result back in the day.

How often have I put the practice to work? Not often.

The problem was always twofold:

Problem A. The vector artwork produced was always spectacularly chaotic, inefficient and tangled — the design equivalent of spaghetti code
and generally took much longer to clean up than it would have taken to draw the artwork from scratch.

Problem B. The algorithms used to produce the vector shapes invariably impose the same blocky, woodcut effect on all artwork. This was fine if you were looking for a rough-cut, medieval look, but if not… well…

With Creative Suite 2, Adobe mostly eliminated the first issue. LiveTrace now does a slick job at cookie-cutting its art into a single-layered, interlocking collection of vectors.

However, it’s taken the input of the Stanford geeks to finally nail the second issue.

Vector Magic in action

Vector Magic is an online, Flash-powered tool designed to convert bitmaps to vectors. Operating it is a no-brainer — everything’s handled via a simple wizard.

Using Vector Magic

After uploading your GIF, PNG, or JPG, you need to answer four simple questions.

1. What type of image is your original (i.e. photo, antialiased logo or non-antialiased logo)?

Select image type

2. How degraded is your original?

Has your image been damaged or degraded by earlier compression?

Rate the compression/degradation level

3. Does your original image employ a limited color palette?

Obviously many logos get their power from the very limited range of colors they use, while photographic images depend on a more granular approach to color in order to maintain realism.

Limited palette or full color?

4. If so, which palette is best suited to the result you require?

The application gives you the option to either increase or reduce the color palette before processing begins.

Limited palette or full color?

At each step, Vector Magic makes an educated guess at the correct path to take, so if you’re unsure, accepting the defaults will work for most images.

When you’re happy with the set up, click Finish, and Vector Magic works its … er … magic!

The Result

To this point, there hasn’t been a whole lot to get excited about — the interface is more workman-like than elegant — but the results are simply breathtaking.

Smart companies like Adobe, Macromedia, and Corel have spent much time and money working on the bitmap-to-vector problem, but none have really got close to the perfection of this Stanford solution.

That’s a big statement, perhaps, but I stand by it. This is spectacular work!

Take a look at some of the examples and try some experiments yourself.

Compare and contrast

The impressive thing with this new process is that the Stanford guys seem to be employing some form of big picture mathematics — using an algorithm that’s able to spot the bigger, simpler vectors in the logo that are usually lost and scrambled beneath the artificial pixel grid.

Vector Magic seems to work to the theory that the simplest way of describing the largest area will most likely be the best way, too. In most cases, this is exactly how the designer was thinking when he or she created the original logo.

This means the shapes Vector Magic generates are not only flat and well-organized, but they are made up of far fewer points. The resulting vector shapes are naturally both more elegant to look at and infinitely easier to manually edit.

If that wasn’t enough, Vector Magic provides you with a suite of post-processing tools that let you edit, tune, and polish your output without leaving the browser.

When you’re satisfied with the result, you can download an EPS, SVG, or PNG version of your finished art.

Amazing work by very smart people!

And, of course, best of all, it’s free — as in “beer” and “love.”

This article provided by sitepoint.com.

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