Monthly Archives: August 2011


I know that there are still some diehard Saab fans out there but frankly it's…

I know that there are still some diehard Saab fans out there but frankly it's time to just stick a fork in the brand. Saab has not turned a profit since the 1980s and frankly there has never been anything that compelling about the brand. It's too quirky to appeal to a mass audience but not special enough (like a Ferrari, Lamborghini or Aston Martin) to command really premium prices. That means that without a major brand like VW behind it to provide platform engineering resources, it can't possibly generate enough revenue to develop modern cars.

Unless a major automaker is prepared to step up and support Saab right now, it's just throwing more good money after bad.

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Saab Reportedly Seeking Court Protection | TheDetroitBureau.com
With the walls ready to come tumbling down, it appears Swedish automaker Saab is ready to file for court protection hoping to keep its doors from closing. As TheDetroitBureau.com reports, Saab has als…

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As usual the Onion nails it again with the real inside scoop about the post Steve…

As usual the Onion nails it again with the real inside scoop about the post Steve Jobs Apple.

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New Apple CEO Tim Cook: 'I'm Thinking Printers'
SAN FRANCISCO—Following the resignation of Apple founder Steve Jobs, incoming CEO Tim Cook called a meeting of shareholders and members of the press Thursday morning to announce that he envisioned pri…

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Phil from Android Central takes a look at Chevy's new MyLink infotainment system…

Phil from Android Central takes a look at Chevy's new MyLink infotainment system that's coming to the Volt, Equinox and Malibu in the coming months with more to follow soon after.

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AC on the Road: A couple days with GM, Chevy MyLink and a wealth of Android potential | Android Central
Chevy MyLink Image courtesy of General Motors and Wieck Media Services General Motors wants you to use your phone in the car. No, really. And it's got a way for you to do so more easily. With the ad…

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"To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited…

"To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries."

That single sentence from Article I, Section 8, Clause 8 of the U.S. constitution has enabled so many creators and inventors over the past 200+ years to earn a living from their creations. Unfortunately the patent and copyright laws that arise from that clause are no longer benefiting the progress of science and useful arts.

Big corporations and "non-practicing entitities" (aka patent trolls) now abuse both copyright and patents to line their pockets at the expense of society without adding anything useful.

In just the past few weeks Google, Microsoft, Apple, Oracle, RIM and others have spent $17 billion to acquire portfolios of thousands of patents that will be used to either beat up on competitors or defend against such lawsuits.

What that $17 billion won't do is create a single useful job aside from the lawyers that perpetuate this travesty. That's one hell of a tax on productivity and innovation. We deserve better.

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TechCrunch | The Terrible Cost Of Patents
The cost of patents is going up, and that is not a good thing. After all, Google is paying $12.5 billion for Motorola largely for its huge mobile patent portfolio. In July, an anti-Google consortium…

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India ranks in the middle of the pack for corruption sandwiched between the likes…

India ranks in the middle of the pack for corruption sandwiched between the likes of China and Colombia one side and Egypt and Mexico on the other. While the United States does much better on the Transparency International index of 178 nations, ranked 22, it could be much better.

http://www.transparency.org/policy_research/surveys_indices/cpi/2010/results

Reshared post from +Jeff Jarvis

India's culture of bribery and petty corruption explained by the Guardian in light of Anna Hazare's protest against it.

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Corruption in India: 'All your life you pay for things that should be free'
As Anna Hazare leaves prison to continue his protest, residents in Delhi explain how bribery forms part of everyday life

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My friend and former co-worker Sean Patrick has just posted a new demo reel of his…

My friend and former co-worker Sean Patrick has just posted a new demo reel of his work. Sean's a very talented and creative videographer, editor, graphic designer, musician and photographer. He's done professional work for a wide variety of clients including Audi, BMW, Bosch, Jaguar, Land Rover the University Musical Society in Ann Arbor, the Ann Arbor film festival, and many more companies and organizations. Check out the video compilation he's put together and give him a shout if you need some work done. Watch carefully and you'll even see my mug behind the wheel in a bunch of the shots in there. You can find Sean over on that other network https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=539337305 and at his site
http://cargocollective.com/theattemptedtheftofmillions/

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It should come as no surprise to anyone that the hypocrisy of the US government extends… 2

It should come as no surprise to anyone that the hypocrisy of the US government extends to "freedom." While the US has always espoused freedom here and abroad, it has long propped up dictators around the world including Mubarak, Suharto, the Saudi Royals, Ferdinand Marcos and so many others.

Even here on home ground, the Hoover-era FBI regularly monitored enemies like JFK and John Lennon. Today, the feds are fighting to require back doors in encryption tools and trying to suppress the spread of information through WikiLeaks and other channels.

Thankfully there are limits to what authorities can achieve even if they do manage to pass new laws because important technology like Truecrypt is already in the wild. Truecrypt like many of the best tools is open source and if used properly, it's virtually impervious to cracking. Use the tools and fight back at the polls by voting against any politician that doesn't support true freedom.

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Glenn Greenwald: A prime aim of the growing Surveillance State
As economic anxiety and social unrest increase, control over Internet technology and communication becomes vital

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My eBook Recharging the Car

In December 2006, I was given a preview of a concept car that Chevrolet would reveal in a few weeks time at the Detroit Auto Show. Those of us in attendance didn’t get to see the car’s styling but we did learn about the interesting new powertrain architecture that Bob Lutz and Jon Lauckner had sketched out as a follow-on to GM’s last electric car, the EV1.

Over the next couple of weeks I wrote a series of articles that would be published at the same time the car was unveiled but that was just the beginning. Over the next four years, as engineers , designers and technicians at General Motors and its suppliers worked around the clock to transform the concept into the first mass-produced extended range electric vehicle, I wrote hundreds of thousands of words about the process on AutoblogGreen, Autoblog and GreenFuelsForecast.

Following the production launch of the Chevrolet Volt in late 2010, I began to compile most of those articles along with relevant articles about other similar vehicles into an e-Book. I’ve now published that anthology as Recharging the Car. It’s available now from Amazon’s Kindle Store, Barnes & Noble’s Nook store and as soon as Apple finishes its approval process it will be in the iBooks store.

Update: It’s now in the iBooks store for those of you using iPads, iPhones and iPod Touches


Back in December 2006, I was still relatively new on the automotive journalism scene… 4

Back in December 2006, I was still relatively new on the automotive journalism scene but I got invited to a General Motors background briefing in New York City. Jon Lauckner, Beth Lowery, Tony Posawatz and others from GM spent the next two hours describing a new kind of electric (please, please don't call it a hybrid) car that was designed to overcome the problem of "range anxiety."

Three weeks later Bob Lutz rolled onto the stage at Detroit's Cobo Hall in the original Chevrolet Volt concept. Over the next four years I had the opportunity to talk many of the leaders on the Volt development team, and drive various prototypes while writing hundreds of stories for AutoblogGreen, Autoblog and GreenFuelsForecast. I've now compiled much of that material along with articles about related technology and concepts into a new eBook.

Recharging the Car is now available on the Amazon Kindle and Barnes & Noble Nook (http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/charging-into-the-future-sam-abuelsamid/1104806909?ean=2940013095755&itm=1&usri=abuelsamid) stores. As retail availability of the Volt expands nationwide over the next few months, it might worth reviewing how the Volt came to be and how it works.

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Amazon.com: Recharging the Car eBook: Sam Abuelsamid: Books
Amazon.com: Recharging the Car eBook: Sam Abuelsamid: Books

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If you want to know about how to build wealth and grow the economy who would you…

If you want to know about how to build wealth and grow the economy who would you take advice from? Political ideologues llike Paul Ryan and Michelle Bachmann or one of the most successful investors of the past century, Warren Buffet?

Buffett has frequently spoken out against Republican tax policy over the past decade, particularly payroll and estate taxes. In an op-ed today in the New York Times Buffet lashes out against the idea that the wealthy won't invest if they have pay taxes on their winnings.

Buffett acknowledges that despite paying nearly $7 million in taxes in 2010, it was not nearly enough. His tax payments amounted to just 17.4 percent of his taxable income at the same time that the 20 people that work in his office paid out an average of 36 percent of their income. Buffett calls for an immediate tax increase on all incomes over $1 million and an even larger increase on incomes over $10 million.

This country would be a lot better off we listen Warren Buffett right now than anyone in the GOP leadership.

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Stop Coddling the Super-Rich
We mega-rich should not continue to get extraordinary tax breaks while most Americans struggle to make ends meet.

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