Monday, December 31, 2007

Redskins Beat Cowboys 27-6

The stadium announcer's voice boomed: "The Redskins are in the playoffs!" Linebacker London Fletcher held his helmet aloft, pointing to the Redskins insignia on the side. Wide receiver Santana Moss held his hands above his head -- thrusting his index, middle and pinkie fingers up in a "21" as a tribute to slain teammate Sean Taylor. And grown men in the stands all around pumped the air with their fists like teenagers.

Behind them the scoreboard said: Washington 27 Dallas 6, and maybe they all needed to keep looking at those numbers to believe it was really true. The Redskins are heading to the playoffs, and will open the postseason on Saturday at 4:30 p.m. when they travel to Seattle to play a first-round game against the Seahawks.

In recent weeks players have talked about the strange circumstances that occurred -- a gale force wind in New York that blew a punt 20 extra yards, missed opponents field goals in which the wind blew the kicks wildly to one side, passes that seemed to hang in the air an extra second until Redskins could catch them -- and said they believed Taylor was at work for them.

Then as the demolition of the Cowboys, their hated rival began and the score grew from 7-0, to 10-3, to 20-3 and finally 27-6, the players noticed something strange in the numbers. Moss said something first, grabbing Fletcher's arm, imploring him to do the math: subtract 6 from 27 and you get 21. Taylor's number.

"We don't think it was by accident we won by 21," Gibbs said after the game.

Asked about this, Fletcher smiled. "I don't believe in coincidences," he said.....Read article here...

Monday, December 17, 2007

Redskins Still in Playoff Hunt

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The Washington Redskins kept their playoff hopes alive with a great 22-10 win over the New York Giants last night in blustery and cold Meadowlands, New Jersey. Running back Clinton Portis led the way with 126 yards rushing and second string quarterback Todd Collins completed enough passes in the gusting wind to keep drives alive.

The Redskins(7-7) still need to win their last two games against Minnesota and Dallas and have New Orleans lose a game, but their is hope for a season that seemed over just a couple of weeks ago.

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

TJ - America's Best High School

Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology("TJ" for short) draws applicants from across five counties and two cities in Northern Virginia, selecting 500 students from a pool of several thousand applicants. Admission is based primarily on a general achievement test and prior grades. To give a sense of student caliber: Of the 432 seniors in the Class of 2007, 158 were National Merit semifinalists, more than any other school in the nation. And the average student SAT score was a 2155 (on a 2400 scale). When they aren't shouldering their science-heavy course load, TJ students participate in a slew of extracurriculars, choosing from some 25 varsity sports and 85 clubs, including the Investment Club, the Neuroscience Society, the Entomology Club, and the Forensics Sciences Society.

After they've graduated, many TJ alums keep up a network, and even if they lose touch, they say they know where to find one another. "Lots of TJ kids are running around elite academic institutions and also major new economy centers like Silicon Valley, New York, Washington, and Boston," says alum Andrew Winerman, class of 2000. He explains that TJ connections are like college connections, only perhaps deeper, because high school is even more formative and emotionally weighty than college for a lot of people.

Whatever the criticisms of TJ's admissions process, one thing is true: Once they get in, these kids work hard. And there's no better example of this than in their athletic programs. Unlike some private high schools that recruit athletic as well as academic talent, TJ can't rely on stars. The students find ways to win nevertheless. TJ particularly excels in endurance sports like cross country, crew, and swimming. ...Read full report here...

Wednesday, December 05, 2007

Skills Every Man Should Know

25 Skills Every Man Should Know: Your Ultimate DIY Guide

1. Patch a Radiator Hose

2. Protect Your Computer

3. Rescue a Boater Who Has Capsized

4. Frame a Wall

5. Retouch Digital Photos

6. Back Up a Trailer

7. Build a Campfire

8. Fix a Dead Outlet

9. Navigate with a Map and Compass

10. Use a Torque Wrench ...Read full article here...

Friday, November 16, 2007

Washington DC Baseball Stadium

The sod has been completed, and the new Washington DC baseball stadium is really starting to look like a real baseball field. It will be reay for the start of 2008.

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Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Great Win and Bad Loss

Sophomore Chris Turner went 21-27, threw for 337 yards and three touchdowns to lift the injury-plagued Maryland Terrapins (5-5, 2-4) to a thrilling 42-35 victory over No. 8 Boston College (8-2, 4-2) Saturday evening. Senior tight end Jason Goode playing in his final home game, caught two TD passes as the Terps rolled up a season-high 466 total yards.

At game's end, the fans rushed the field to celebrate the Terps' second win this season over a top-10 team. Maryland beat then-No. 10 Rutgers on Sept. 29. It marked the first time in school history Maryland has defeated two top-10 teams in the same season. The Terps play their last two games on the road and need a couple of wins to go to a bowl.

The Washington Redskins lost a game thaey should have won 33-25 to the Philadelphia Eagles on Sunday, leaving the Redskins at 5-4 and a long way to go to make the playoffs this year. And the Redskins go to Dallas this Sunday to play the first place Dallas Cowboys.

The Redskins had this game in the win column with a two point lead, 22-20 and a first and goal on the Eagles two yard line wih less than 5 minutes left in the game. The Redskins could not score a touchdown had to settle for a field goal, for a 25-20 lead. The Eagles scored and then forced the Redskins into a turnover and scored again. The Eagles scored 20 pints in the fourth quarter.

This was the 13th time in the past four seasons, the Redskins have lost a game when they led going into the fourth quarter. This is something the Redskins rarely did during Hall of Famer's Joe Gibbs first tenure as Redskins coach.

Tuesday, November 06, 2007

Green Side Up

The infield sod has been laid at the new Washington DC baseball stadium. Most of the seats have been installed, and the stadium is starting to look like a real baseball park and ready to open in April 2008.

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Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Boston - Wins Yes, Respect No

Yes, the Patriots whipped the Redskins. But I have no respect for their coach anymore.

New England Patriot's coach Bill Belichick had little response to the comments of Washington Redskins linebacker Randall Godfrey , who criticized the coach for going for it on fourth down twice in the fourth quarter of New England's 52-7 victory.

Godfrey told NBCSports.com that he approached Belichick after the game and told him he needed to "show some respect for the game."

"You look at all the great head coaches . . . I'm just disappointed," Godfrey told NBCSports.com. "You got to show some class, show some respect. Joe Gibbs? We wouldn't have done that. Bill Walsh? You wouldn't see those types of guys doing that stuff. I've never seen nothing like that. Most teams, you get up like that you sit on the ball and try to run the time out. They're up 30-some points and they're throwing deep. That was blatant disrespect. . . . This isn't like college going for power rankings. This is the pros, you show some respect, show some class."

Yes, the Boston Red Sox won the World Series(again), but I lost respect for the organization in it's cockiness. Very easily could have lost to the Cleveland Indians and never made it to the World Series. And all this talk of "building a team within" - the Red Sox payroll was $147 million this year!!!

Because the plan called for it, and to the Red Sox, baseball is just that: a task, a philosophy, a process – and one they seem close to perfecting. For the second time in four years, the Red Sox hoisted the World Series trophy, sprayed champagne and kissed their wives with the passion they haven't since their wedding day. Joy abounded at Coors Field, where the Rockies slinked off the field embarrassed by a Red Sox team that, like the group that assembled it, went about its business ruthlessly.

The Red Sox throttled the Los Angeles Angels in the first round and overwhelmed the Indians, outscoring them 30-5 in the final three games of the series. And the World Series was even more lopsided: a combined 29-10 score that, even in its disparity, does not illustrate the difference between the teams.

Personally, I will take the class acts of the Redskins and Rockies over the two Boston teams.

Friday, October 19, 2007

DC Baseball Stadium Getting There

A current picture of the new Washington DC baseball stadium, which will open next April 2008.

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Friday, October 12, 2007

Beta Bridge's Colorful History

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It was a slab of used paint – coats and coats and coats of it.

Oft-painted Beta Bridge, next to the University of Virginia campus in Charlottesville, Virginia, lost some of its latex armor recently as a sheet of paint about 4 feet high, 10 feet long and three inches thick, separated from one side of the bridge and peeled off.

The paint seemed to separate along a green layer of paint, which landscape superintendent Richard Hopkins thinks was either a base coat of paint or a layer to cover up another message. There were about six to 12 layers of paint left on the bridge, though Hopkins said one small corner of the original bridge was exposed briefly. It was soon painted over.

Alexander Gilliam, secretary for the Board of Visitors and unofficial University historian, said painting messages on the bridge began "in earnest" (meaning several times a week) around 1978. The tradition of bridge painting started with students painting messages, particularly sports scores and exhortations to athletes, on the metal railroad bridge that passes over University Avenue at the Corner. Gilliam said the liablity-conscious railroad tried to discourage that practice. The messages then migrated to Beta Bridge, named for the Beta Theta Pi fraternity house, then located at the intersection of Chancellor Street and Rugby Road. That fraternity location was closed in 1971; later, Delta Upsilon fraternity took over the house and unofficial monitoring of the bridge — thus explaining the "THX DU" ("thanks Delta Upsilon") message appended to most paintings, believed to ensure that each masterpiece will not be painted over by the fraternity brothers.

The current bridge, which is owned by CSX railroad, was built in 1923, replacing two smaller wooden bridges, one for horses and one for pedestrians, that spanned the tracks.

Friday, October 05, 2007

Where Have All the Honeybees Gone?

Now I know where all the honeybees have gone - drafted into the Army!!!

Sniffer bees with a nose for explosives are set to make a major breakthrough in the war on terror. An extraordinary invention by a small British company is being praised by American scientists who have been testing it.

Researchers at Inscentinel Ltd, which has just three employees at its Harpenden, Herts, HQ, have developed an amazing "sniffer box" to harness the bees' incredible sense of smell. Now Inscentinel is set to cash in when its box full of computer technology that turns honeybees into bomb detectors goes into mass production.

They trained the bees to only extend the proboscis when smelling a particular explosive, conditioning them by giving them a reward of sugared water when they responded correctly.

DARPA has a billion dollar a year budget and hands out millions for 'off-the-wall' ideas that could turn into major defence projects. They asked the Los Alamos National Laboratory, which has 9,000 employees and an annual budget of $2.2 billion, to test Inscentinel's ideas. And Los Alamos thinks the sniffer bees are one of DARPA's most successful investments.

Like all the best projects at the New Mexico lab where the first A-bomb was developed, the bee squad has a code-name - SISP, for Stealthy Insect Sensor Project. Inscentinel showed the Los Alamos scientists that the bees can be trained to sniff out anything from home-made fertilizer bombs, through demolition dynamite to C-4 plastic explosives.

Unlike sniffer dogs which require three months training, it takes 10 minutes to train the bees. ...Read more here...

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Beirut and "Nantes' Video

It appears that the creators of the 'take away show',La Blogotheque, have teamed up with Zach Condon and the rest of Beirut to create a video for every song off of their new album 'The Flying Club Cup' which is due out on October 9th. So far they have vidoes up for 'Nantes' and 'The Penalty'. All videos are/were shot in Brooklyn over the summer:

This is a video of "Nantes' which was shot in Paris.

Monday, September 24, 2007

Terps and Redskins Suck

The weekend began with both the Maryland Terps(2-1) and Washington Redskins(2-0) in high hopes for the season. By the end of the weekend, both the Terps and the Redskins had suffered more than horrible defeats.Losing is one thing, but to loose the way both teams did was truly demoralizing for the teams, their fans and myself. As long-time supportes of both teams, this had to be the worst "football weekend" ever.

On Saturday Maryland had a 24-3 lead late in the third quarter and had the ball on the Wake Forest 3 yard, ready to score again. A play later the score was 24-10 on a 100 yard pass interception for a touchdown on a pass by Jordan Steffy in the flat. Maryland never recovered and Wake Forest scored the tying touchdown on a fourth and three pass as time expired in regulation. Wake then went on to score the game winning touchdown in overtime. Final score was a Wake Forest win, 31-24.

On Sunday the Washington Redskins held a 17-3 lead as the third quarter began. The New York Giants took the second half kick-off and drove for a touchdown to make the score 17-10. The Redskins played conservative on offense and did several "3 and out" series and the Giants went on to tie the score and take the lead at 24-17. The Redskins had one last chance to tie the game with one minute left in the fourth quarter. The Redskins had a first and goal at the one yard line and could not score on four attemps. Pathethic, to say the least. Final score was a New York Giants win, 24-17.

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Fastest Aging Counties

Table below shows the fastest aginging counties in the USA from 1990-2005.

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Monday, September 10, 2007

"Dick in a Box" Wins Emmy

The Emmys Awards got edgy as an off-color "Saturday Night Live" video featuring Justin Timberlake and strategically placed gift boxes was honored at the creative arts ceremony.

"Dick in a Box," last December's music video performed by Timberlake and "SNL" cast member Andy Samberg, is about wrapping a certain part of the male anatomy and presenting it to a loved one as a holiday present.

"I think it's safe to say that when we first set out to make this song, we were all thinking 'Emmy!'" Samberg said in accepting the award Saturday for best original music and lyrics.

"The other thing we were thinking was, 'Hey! Here's this young up and comer, Justin Timberlake, who is clearly very talented and could clearly use a break,'" Samberg said. "So, Justin, if you're out there, congrats to you, kid.'"

Saturday, September 01, 2007

Sharapova Defending US Open

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Maria Sharapova off to a good start in the 2007 U.S. Open, winning her first two matches 6-1 and 6-1. Maria is the defending U.S.Open Champion.

Maria Sharapova

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

American Internet Lags

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Americans invented the Internet, but the Japanese are running away with it.

Broadband service here is eight to 30 times as fast as in the United States -- and considerably cheaper. Japan has the world's fastest Internet connections, delivering more data at a lower cost than anywhere else, recent studies show.

Accelerating broadband speed in this country -- as well as in South Korea and much of Europe -- is pushing open doors to Internet innovation that are likely to remain closed for years to come in much of the United States.

The speed advantage allows the Japanese to watch broadcast-quality, full-screen television over the Internet, an experience that mocks the grainy, wallet-size images Americans endure....Read full article here...

Thursday, August 16, 2007

Radio Streaming Jukebox

...Free, interactive music sites like Pandora and Last.fm are a hybrid of radio station and jukebox. They provide a selection of streaming music to match your tastes, but they don't let you request a particular artist or song...

You might expect such a wealth of new music to come at a price, but these sites are free. They rely on advertising and affiliated links to online music stores. Some also offer subscription services with additional customization options or better sound quality...

But if the royalty rates recently set in the United States remain intact, rates that hit $500 per listener per year by some estimates, some of these sites say they can't carry on...

I, for one, would hate to see these sites disappear. I use both and like them a lot in helping me discover "new" music which I then go and buy.

Monday, August 13, 2007

Thursday, August 09, 2007

Sharapova Wins Classic

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Maria Sharapova of Russia beat Eleni Daniilidou of Germany to win the East West Bank Classic at the Home Depot Center on August 8, 2007 in Carson, California.

Saturday, August 04, 2007

The Nationals are Contenders since May11th

Since May 11th, the Washington Nationals have a 40-35 record. If the season had started May 11th the Nats would be just 1/2 games behind the Mets and 4 1/2 ganes ahead of the Braves. I know you have to count the first month and half of the season but this trend certainly has to bode well for next year. If we can finish the season playing above .500(which I beleive we can) then the "near future"(next year) does look brighter than most ever thought it would in April.

Go Nats!!!

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Goodbye CompUSA

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CompUSA, which has long been struggling against rivals Best Buy and Circuit City, and who seem to have lost the geek market to more specialty chains like MicroCenter, is in the process of closing 126 stores, which is more than half of their store fleet. They’ll be pulling out of many major markets, including Dallas, Boston and Washington, D.C.

Over the years I have bought many products from CompUSA at stores in Rockville, Alexandria, Tyson's Corner and Woodbridge., including the computer I am currently using. Sad to see another favorite store go under.

Saturday, July 14, 2007

Trail of Tiramisu

We Sift Legend From Fact In Search of an Answer: Did a Baltimore Baker Create Italy's Most Famous Dessert? "It's not a big invention," said Carminantonio Iannaccone in a lilting Italian accent. "It's not like the telephone. It's just a dessert."

Iannaccone tugs at his black suspenders and shifts in his chair in the cramped office above Piedigrotta, his even more cramped Baltimore bakery. He's being modest. Because it's not any dessert that Iannaccone (pronounced yahn-a-CONE-ay) claims to have created. It's tiramisu. If Iannaccone actually invented Italy's most famous sweet -- and there's reason to believe he might have -- then I am sitting in the presence of gastronomic greatness, the Italian equivalent of the Earl of Sandwich.

Iannaccone's story is simple. He He trained as a pastry chef in the southern city of Avellino, then migrated to Milan to find work at the age of 12. In 1969 he married his wife, Bruna, and opened a restaurant also called Piedigrotta in Treviso, where he cooked up a dessert based on the "everyday flavors of the region": strong coffee, creamy mascarpone, eggs, Marsala and ladyfinger cookies. He says it took him two years to perfect the recipe, which was originally served as an elegant, freestanding cake.

Tiramisu, which means "pick me up" -- a reference to its shot of espresso -- was an instant hit. Chefs, Iannaccone says, came to taste it, and soon they were either making their own versions or he was supplying them with his. By the early '80s, tiramisu had become ubiquitous throughout Italy and beyond. Miami Beachhad a restaurant called Tiramisu, and the dessert was considered a status symbol among the Toyko elite.

Iannaccone's tiramisu is tremendous, a sophisticated and boozy rendition that has little in common with the soupy mush that too often passes as the original. "Today, it's a mess," said Iannaccone, sounding somewhat defeated. "But if you like it and your grandma made it that way," he shrugged, "fine."

Still, the whole thing seemed awfully unlikely. Why would the creator of tiramisu be operating a tiny bakery on the outskirts of Baltimore's Little Italy? And would the inventor even be alive? Italians pride themselves on their culinary traditions, not newfangled innovation (like those crazy Catalonians). Surely, a classic like tiramisu would date back to the Renaissance. Catherine de Medici gave us artichokes, truffles, gelato, even the fork. Surely, she would have had a hand in tiramisu, too.

In an age when chefs are busily copyrighting recipes, patenting new cooking techniques and suing one another for ripping off restaurant concepts -- as New York chef Rebecca Charles did last month -- you'd think it would be easy to track down who served up the first tiramisu.

But 40 years ago, in a small Italian town, no one, especially Carminantonio Iannaccone, apparently thought to boast about a new dish or save a menu that might prove when it was first served. He didn't know tiramisu would become an icon of Italian gastronomy, breeding such bastard children as "berrymisu" and pumpkin tiramisu trifle. He didn't know that in 2007 it would pull up 4.9 million hits on Google vs. just 792,000 for the mighty cannoli.As Iannaccone likes to say, it's just a dessert.

Iannaccone, who still struggles with English and recounted much of his story in Italian, says he doesn't have the time, or the energy, to prove that he is tiramisu's inventor. So I decided to do some legwork on his behalf. First, I examined the historical legends: One says the dessert was invented in the 17th century in honor of the grand duke of Tuscany, Cosimo III de Medici, but soon became the favorite of courtesans who used it for a little extra energy before performing their duties and gave it the nickname "pick me up." Another says it was invented in Turin in the mid-19th century at the request of Italy's first prime minister, Camillo Cavour, a renowned gourmand who needed a pick-me-up for the trying task of unifying the Italian peninsula.

Good stories, both. But neither is true, Italian food experts agree. Mascarpone, one of tiramisu's key ingredients, is native to the northern Veneto region and wouldn't have been found in Tuscany hundreds of years ago. Even in the 19th century, without refrigeration, a dessert made with uncooked eggs would likely have sickened more people than it pleased.

Next, I scoured authoritative cookbooks for a recipe that would predate Iannaccone's claim. But, as he predicted, niente: British cookbook author Elizabeth David makes no mention of the dessert in her 1954 "Italian Food," nor does Marcella Hazan in "The Classic Italian Cookbook" (1973).

Indeed, it wasn't until the 1980s that published references to tiramisu began to appear. Two Treviso restaurants get the credit: El Toula (from cookbook authors Claudia Roden and Anna del Conte and Saveur magazine) and Le Beccherie (from several Italian magazines and cookbooks).

El Toula "was after us," Iannaccone said. "They print it because it's famous. We're not famous. And we don't care."

Piedigrotta, 319 S. Central Ave., Baltimore, 410-522-6900, and 1065 S. Charles St. (in Cross Street Market), Baltimore; 410-244-5543. (In several months, the South Central Avenue shop will move to a larger space at 1390 Bank St.)http://www.piedigrottabakery.com. ..Read more here...

Monday, July 09, 2007

Imogen Heap's "Just For Now"

My last post of KT Tunstall "creating" her own harmony for "Black Horse and The Cherry Tree" reminded me of this Iomgen Heap song "Just For Now", where she does the same thing. Both are incredible performers.

Saturday, July 07, 2007

Live Earth

Live Earth - great concerts all over the world for a great cause. We have to get a handle on our environment before it is too late.

Just one of the great performances today was KT Tunstall and "Black Horse and The Cherry Tree".

An earlier version of this song, where KT creates a complete song using her own voice for background sounds and harmony. Shows just how talented she is.

Friday, June 29, 2007

Studio 60 On the Sunset Strip

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Studio 60 On the Sunset Strip had it's farewell show last night on NBC. The show only lasted one season as NBC did not renew it for next year. Too bad. It is truly a great drama and is so well written by Aaron Sorkin. The cast is unbeleivable for a TV show with four legitimate stars in Bradley Whitford, Matthew Perry, Amanda Peet and Sarah Paulson.

Last night's last show was the best episode of the season. It had everything you could want in a drama. Happy endings all around with Matt and Harriet back together. I am going to miss this show. NBC was wrong in taking this show off the air. It was a show that epitomizes what a good drama should be that is enjoyable but also full of intelectrual content. Sorkin has never shied away from controversy, as demonstrated by his previous show "The West Wing". Photo Sharing and Video Hosting at Photobucket

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Washington Nationals Better Than Expected

With that victory the Nats completed an 8-7 record in a 15-game stretch against the American League in which they were supposed to be utterly overmatched and now boast the same 32-43 mark as last year's team at the same point. Yet they've done the job without Alfonso Soriano, Nick Johnson, Jose Vidro, Jose Guillen, Livan Hernandez, Ramon Ortiz and a half-dozen other veterans while surmounting a ludicrous number of injuries.

"Everybody laughed at our rotation on Opening Day, then we lost four of them," Manager Manny Acta said. "When I hear about other teams having injuries, I don't have a lot of sympathy for them."

In a season that began with countless questions, the resilient Nationals have continued to find unlikely and pleasant answers. With 23 wins in their last 41 games, the Nats have played miles above expectations for a quarter of a season. Yet their current altitude is as scary as it is inspiring. They're baseball's plucky but endangered high-wire act. And it never gets easier.

On Tuesday, the Nats were clubbed, 15-1, as part of a three-game sweep in which the Tigers scored 32 runs on 41 hits, including nine doubles and five homers. "They just kept hittin', hittin' and hittin'," said Jason Simontacchi, a 10-run avalanche victim in three innings on Tuesday. Then, on Saturday night, in the sport's other type of Most Demoralizing Loss, closer Chad Cordero gave up a three-run, game-losing home run in the ninth inning in a 4-3 Indians win.

As if anything could be worse, that Saturday loss ended with a bonehead play as wandering Nook Logan was trapped off third with Ryan Zimmermandue to bat with the bases loaded. As the crowd gasped, Logan was not only tagged out to end the game but also pinned to the ground by Casey Blake, still a yard from the base, like a gruesome entomology display.

Yet the Nationals' response yesterday was, as usual, ridiculously resilient. Did a building just fall on us? Can't remember. Same score, same situation: Cordero got a save against the same heart of the Cleveland order that crushed him just hours earlier. Simontacchi, following the worst game of his career, allowed only one run in six innings to get the win. And the Nats held the Indians -- the second-best hitting team in baseball -- to a .202 average as they won two of three.

How can a end Saturday night's loss with a blown save and a brain cramp, then just ignore it all?

"People don't get it," Zimmerman said. "We just don't care."

The Nats show up, count the warm bodies, check the lineup card and play as though they just don't care that perfectly sensible major league scouts predicted that -- at full health -- they might be the worst team in history this season. All things considered, their 31-37 record since April 10 is one of the most remarkable 11 weeks I've seen from any team.

In a season in flux, a year that could still fall apart, it's hard to know what really matters, what answers have lasting weight. But team president Stan Kasten thinks he already has a "yes" to two large questions.

"I know we've got a general manger who can really find 'pieces,' " Kasten said. In yesterday's game, castoff Dmitri Young, continued his all-star campaign with two hits, raising his average to .339. Utility man Ronnie Belliard had three hits and is hitting .297. Jesus Flores, a Rule 5 pickup, had two RBI. General Manager Jim Bowden found them all when few, if any, wanted them. That's one day's list.

"After all the players we subtracted, to get where we are now, especially with all the injuries, is a testament to Jim and his staff," Kasten said. "And we've found a manager that can manage. Watch how this team is playing. That's the manager.

"So we're okay at those two spots. That's a lot to know."

With a team that was supposed to be awful, in an ancient park before the fifth-worst crowds in baseball, in a season when they have had the worst injuries in baseball, the Nats have played the league to a standstill since the 10th day of the season. Yesterday, Cleveland's Paul Byrd told Austin Kearns, "You guys have a scrappy little team." How nice, in a condescending way.

What happens, someday, if they become a scrappy big team? ...Read more here...

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

Top 10 US Beaches

1. Ocracoke Lifeguarded Beach, Outer Banks, North Carolina - National Winner

2. Caladesi Island State Park, Dunedin/Clearwater, Florida

3. Coopers Beach, Southampton, New York

4. Hanalei Bay, Kauai, Hawaii

5. Coast Guard Beach, Cape Cod, Massachusetts

6. Hamoa Beach, Maui, Hawaii

7. Main Beach, East Hampton, New York

8. Coronado Beach, San Diego, California

9. Lighthouse Point Park, Daytona Beach, Florida

10. Siesta Beach, Sarasota, Florida ...Read more here...

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Jefferson Virginia Soccer Champs

NEWPORT NEWS, Va., June 9-- There was plenty of time for reality to set in, but still no one on the Jefferson boys' soccer team could believe it.

The 10th-ranked Colonials had been awarded the AAA state championship trophy. Hundreds of their red-clad fans had rushed the field to celebrate the victory. They posed for pictures, hugged and high-fived. And still, they could hardly comprehend that their magical late-season run culminated Saturday with a 1-0 victory over No. 1 Osbourn Park in the state championship at Christopher Newport University.

Harry Beddo's goal in the 51st minute lifted Jefferson (17-1-5) to a championship that few thought was possible early this season. The Colonials finished below .500 and missed the Northern Region tournament last season, and they started this year 4-1-5 before winning 13 straight to claim the Liberty District, region and state titles.

"It's like we just robbed a bank and no one knows where the money went," Coach Sean Burke joked. "We're rich!"

The victory capped one of Jefferson's finest athletic seasons since it became a magnet school for science and technology 22 years ago. The Colonials have won state team titles in boys' and girls' swimming and diving, boys' cross-country and girls' indoor track, but this was their first title in a sport with no individual competition. ...Read more here...

Sunday, June 10, 2007

Nude Bikers

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Dozens of women posed naked on their bicycles on a bridge over one of Amsterdam's historic canals last Sunday - a unique sight even in a city famed for its relaxed attitude toward nudity and sex.

They were among 2000 men and women who participated in a series of four nude group photos in the city in the early hours of the morning as part of the latest project of US photographer Spencer Tunick.

The first and largest composition was in a decidedly prosaic location: a parking garage on the outer ring of the city.

But what the location lacked in romance, it made up for in style.

Participants lined the railings of the garage's twin circular towers, creating a pattern of multicoloured stripes against the white building and an overcast sky.

The women on bikes were selected from the larger group and posed with their chins pointed triumphantly upward toward the sky.

Friday, June 01, 2007

Honey, I'm Gone

Abandoned Beehives Are a Scientific Mystery and a Metaphor for Our Tenuous Times

In "The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy," just before Earth is destroyed to make way for a hyperspatial express route, all the dolphins in the world disappear, leaving behind just the message: "So long, and thanks for all the fish."

Now, around the world, honeybees are vanishingen masse, leaving their humans engaged in a furious attempt to figure out the meaning of their exodus. Entire colonies are following the Shakespearean stage direction, "Exeunt omnes." They're flying off and not returning. Commercial beekeepers open their hives and find them empty except for a queen, a few immature bees and abundant honey and pollen. The rest of the bees are simply gone, leaving behind not even dead bodies.

A third of our food supply -- including much of the boredom-relieving stuff, from cranberries to cucumbers -- is dependent on animal pollinators like the honeybee. As a result, this mystery is rapidly joining the all-star ranks of millennial end-time run-for-your-lives threats, right up there with Y2K, mad cow disease, West Nile virus, SARS and avian flu.

Of equal note is the way the bees are setting a new standard in human emotional resonance. Absolutely no one yet knows why the bees are checking out, though not for lack of abundant effort on the part of the world's scientists. This dearth of data allows us to project our greatest anxieties onto the bees.

If what you're searching for is an entire spectrum of moral lessons regarding the evils of human behavior, this crisis is even better than global warming. If you hate globalization, then you will doubtless see its evils as patent in the disappearance of the bees. Pesticides? Genetically modified foods? Those, too, are convenient hypotheses in the absence of contradictory information. Even cellphones have been offered as an explanation. If you're driven crazy by them, then so must be the bees. Isn't it obvious?

Our fuzzy, hard-working, sweetness-producing icons have become our most powerful Rorschach test.

As go the bees, so go our hopes and fears for the future.

An estimated quarter of the country's 2.4 million colonies of Apis mellifera have been lost since winter. ..Read more here...

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

American Idol VI

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Which one will be crowned "American Idol" tonight? Jordin Sparks or Blake Lewis? I like them both and they have totally different styles of singing.

Since Jordin is the better singer, has been hyped continuously by the judges and "the coronation song" was definitely more in her style than Blake - I predict she will win the sixth "American Idol" crown.

Tuesday, May 22, 2007

New Internet?

A government contractor that played a key role in the Internet's birth will oversee efforts to redesign the network from scratch.

The National Science Foundation announced Monday that BBN Technologies Inc. will get up to $10 million over four years to oversee the planning and design of the Global Environment for Network Innovations, or GENI.

Many researchers want to rethink the Internet's underlying architecture, saying a "clean-slate" approach is the only way to truly address security, mobility and other challenges that have cropped up since the Internet's birth in 1969.

Construction on GENI could start about 2010 and cost $350 million. ..Read more here...

Monday, May 14, 2007

Radio Surfing With Cerphe

Four years after he fell in love with rock-and-roll while watching the Beatles on "The Ed Sullivan Show," Don Cerphe Colwell packed up his guitar and followed a girlfriend from suburban Boston down to American University.

"The girl lasted a semester," says Colwell, but within weeks, the freshman met another AU student who invited him to work part time at a radio station that was experimenting with a new kind of music programming.

By day, WHFS was a middle-of-the-road FM station, the kind that played Sinatra, Mantovani and Tom Jones. But at night, beginning in 1968, the station, then based in Bethesda, sold time to young rockers who desperately craved a place on the dial where they could play the album cuts and underground sounds that AM Top 40 radio would not spin.

Cerphe Colwell, who landed a part-time gig on WHFS and kept at it throughout college, joined the station full time in 1972. This month, he marks his 35th anniversary on the air in Washington, a rare feat of continuity in rock radio -- a career in which he became the first DJ in the region to play the music of Bruce Springsteen, watched as radio pulled away from its role in shaping listeners' tastes, and somehow survived a blizzard of ownership and format changes.

Cerphe, as he's known on the air (pronounced "surf"), looks the part of the aging but committed rocker. In black leather jacket, fashionably unshaven face and shaggy haircut, the 55-year-old DJ runs the afternoon shift at 94.7 the Globe (WTGB-FM), the formerly classic rock station that switched formats in February to try a blend of '60s and '70s rock standards and contemporary artists who fit in with the classic hits: Coldplay, Dave Matthews Band, KT Tunstall, Norah Jones.

The idea is to add younger listeners to the aging classic-rock audience while expanding the playlist to counter the widespread belief that broadcast radio is a place to hear established hits, but not necessarily the best way to discover new sounds.

Introducing listeners to the new was the heart of Cerphe's early years in the business. At WHFS in the '70s, "the idea of thinking about the ratings was foreign to us," he says. "It was extremely hippie radio. We did a ride board and lost cat reports: 'Bill has lost a Burmese in Bethesda.' It was self-indulgent -- if I bought a car, I would bore the hell out of people with four or five hours of car songs. But we turned people on to a tremendous amount of new music."

He would sign on in those years like this: "This is Cerphe -- we're sending out some tunes tonight for the truckers, the mad hatters, the ships at sea and especially, the ladies of the night." The music that followed was whatever the DJ wanted to play. In Cerphe's case, the tunes came from big wooden crates full of records that he hauled in from his enormous vinyl collection at home. (Only about 5,000 albums remain in Cerphe's Reston home from that legendary assemblage; he recently sold 40,000 records to a collector, and has now switched primarily to CDs and downloads.) ...Read more here...

Sunday, May 06, 2007

18,000 Mexicans Get Naked

MEXICO CITY - A record 18,000 people took off their clothes to pose for U.S. photographic artist Spencer Tunick on Sunday in Mexico City's Zocalo square, the heart of the ancient Aztec empire.

Tunick, who has raised eyebrows by staging mass nude photo shoots in cities from Dusseldorf, Germany, to Caracas, smashed his previous record of 7,000 volunteers set in 2003 in Barcelona, Spain.

Directing with a megaphone, Tunick shot a series of pictures with his Mexican models simultaneously raising their arms, then lying on their backs in the square as well as another scene on a side street with volunteers arranged in the shape of an arrow...Read more here...

Thursday, May 03, 2007

Before "American Bandstand"

..."The Milt Grant Show," the teen-oriented dance program aired six evenings a week on WTTG (Channel 5), from the top floor of the Harrington Hotel (no relation) at the time...I was a little too young to appreciate some of the special guests -- Chuck Berry, Jimmy Clanton, Fabian, Chubby Checker, Bobby Darin, the Everly Brothers -- I instinctively knew this was something special. Later I learned just how special: All the stars of the day made it a point to stop by "The Milt Grant Show," which predated Dick Clark's nationally syndicated "American Bandstand" by a year.

In Washington, Milt Grant was king. He created and hosted Washington's most popular program, which was especially a favorite among the youngsters who either rushed home after school to tune in, or who aspired to become regulars on a show that began like class:

"Hi, kids!"

"Hi, Milt!" (in loud unison).

And like many popular DJs in that era, Grant also hosted record hops, including regular summertime Miss Teen Queen contests at Glen Echo Park.

Another of Grant's dances produced a rock-and-roll classic. In 1958, the show's occasional house band, the Wraymen, played at a "Milt Grant Record Hop" in Fredericksburg. The Wraymen were backing the Diamonds when Grant asked them to play a stroll ("The Stroll" being one of the Diamonds' biggest hits at the time). Guitarist Link Wray insisted he didn't know how, then improvised after his brother Doug started playing a stroll beat on the drums...When Wray finally recorded it, he called it "Rumble."

"American Bandstand" began its long run in 1957; by 1961, "The Milt Grant Show" was off the air, replaced by "Robin Hood" reruns. The station's new owner, Metromedia, did not approve of rock-and-roll...Milt Grant passed away this past week at 85. ...Read article here...

Friday, April 27, 2007

Why Does This Bother Me?

Exxon Mobil, the world's biggest oil company, said profit climbed 10 percent to a first-quarter record after higher gasoline and diesel prices increased refining profit.

Profit rose to $9.28 billion from $8.4 billion in the comparable period a year earlier, the Irving, Tex, company said in a statement yesterday. Revenue fell 2 percent, to $87.2 billion.

Meanwhile, gas prices at the pump are close to or over $3.00 a gallon in sevaral places throughout the U.S and are expected to go higher as the summer approaches.

Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Charlottesville Top 10 Emerging Wine Area

Here are the Top 10 emerging wine regions in the world according to MSN Travel article.

1. British Columbia: Okanagan Valley

2. Hungary: Villány and Szekszárd

3. India: Nashik

4. Israel: Upper Galilee and Golan Heights

5. Mexico: Guadalupe Valley

6. New York: East End, Long Island

7. Portugal: Douro Valley

8. Tasmania: The Tamar, Derwent, Huon, and Coal River Valleys

9. Uruguay: Colonia

10. Virginia: Charlottesville

The land: The state is home to over 100 wineries, but some of the best cluster around Charlottesville, a region of 18th-century plantations and thoroughbred farms in the Blue Ridge foothills. Why it's hot: The Jamestown colonists cultivated America's first vines in 1608, while oenophile Thomas Jefferson planted over 20 varietals himself, hoping a fledgling wine industry would reduce the nation's dependence on imported spirits. Earthy Cabernet Francs, plummy Merlots, lively Chardonnays, and vivacious Viogniers thrive in Virginia's warm climate.

Wineries to watch: Barboursville (www.barboursvillewine.com) ...Read article here...

Sunday, April 15, 2007

Think I'll Move to Florida

When is Spring going to come here in Washington, D.C.? It's April 15th, tax day and the Cherry Blossom Parade in Washington.

So we get two inches of rain(well it is April) but temperatures in the low 40's. It almost went down to freezing last night and our Cherry Blossoms are no where near open, and I don't think they are ever going to make it. I think they will just fall off without ever opening.

All baseball games have been postponed because of the weather, just when the Nationls get hot and have won 2 of their past 3 games. And the Wizards are in the playoffs but half their team is out for the rest of the season.

The D.C. United MLS soccer team was picked to win the tiltle this year. So, they go out and loose their first two games.

Think I'll move to Florida.

Friday, April 06, 2007

Brangelina - Bald Eagle Style

Martha is scarcely cold in the grave, and George has already shacked up with another bald eagle. Worse: It's the nestwrecker who tried to peck to death Martha, George's longtime mate and the mother of his 16 eaglets.

Even the brawny bunch of construction workers on the Woodrow Wilson Bridge project near the eagles' nest are aghast. They call the younger bird in George's life "Camilla," "Angelina" and "Charlotte the Harlot." "George has taken a second wife," said John Undeland, spokesman for the bridge project. "He's moving on with his life."

Last April, George and Martha, as nicknamed by the bridge workers, made national headlines when Martha was attacked by -- oh, let's just call her Angelina -- a rival for George's attentions.

Martha, who had lived with George on Rosalie Island on the Maryland side of the bridge since the 1990s, was seriously injured in Angelina's bloody midair attack and was taken to a bird rescue center in Delaware, where she recovered in a few weeks. Bridge workers cheered when she made her way back to her George soon after she was released into the wild in Delaware.

But tragedy struck again in September, when Martha flew into a tree or a power line and dislocated an elbow in her right wing. She was euthanized, and veterinarians said then she was at least 13 years old. A bald eagle's normal life span is about 20 years.

Throughout the ordeal, Angelina -- a far younger eagle than Martha who is described as "in her prime" (aren't they always?) -- never really went away. And now, she has just plain moved into Martha's old home.

"Since January, they've gotten closer and closer, first hanging out on the same branch, one in the nest, the other right beside it, then in the same nest," said Michael S. Baker, environmental manager for the bridge project.

The only thing the two new lovebirds don't seem to have done yet, Baker said, is produce some eaglets.

Baker also said that although George and Martha were acclimated to the heavily traveled bridge, which carries about 200,000 vehicles a day, Angelina might not be "comfortable with all that urban activity." He said workers have also seen the eagles on nearby farm property, one of them carrying a stick, prompting scientists to speculate they might be building another nest elsewhere. Namibia, perhaps? ...Read full article here...

Wednesday, April 04, 2007

College Basketball Congrats

Well, the Florida Gators are repeat champs in Men's College basketball and the Tennessee Vols are back on top as the Womens champs. Congrats to both teams. Now that College Basketball is over, I need to at least say "congrats" to very good seasons by the Maryland University basketball teams.

The Womens team which had won its last seven NCAA games, including the National Championship game last year, lost in the second round his year and finished with a 28-6 record. The defending champs had beaten 31 consecutive nonconference opponents, including Harvard, 89-65 in the first round, before losing to Mississippi.

Senior Shay Doron is the only senior starter to graduate, so the women's team should still be great next year, with All-American Crystal Langhorne and a very good cast of players.

The Maryland Terps men's team lost to Butler and finished the year 25-9 having advanced to the NCAA Midwest Region's second round. It was the 14th consecutive season the Terrapins qualified for postseason play, but was the first time back in the NCAA tournament in three years. The Maryland men's team was National Champs in 2002.

The men Terps loose three starters to graduation; Ekene Ibekwe, Mike Jones and D.J. Strawberry. The men's team needs some underclassman to step up next year if the Terps are going to be back in the NCAA tournament next season. Their task is much harder than the women.

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Oh, Maria

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Oh Maria!!! Maria Sharapova lost to Serena Williams 6-1 and 6-1 in Florida at the 2007 Sony Erickson Tennis Open yesterday.

Maria has just not looked good so far this year. Well she "looks" good, but she has just not played very good tennis.

Thursday, March 22, 2007

32 Things To Do With Beer

Beer is so good that you should be able to do more with it than just drink it then flush it away. I'm bathing in it now, submerged in the sweet smell of Original Badebier Neuzeller Kloster-Brau, a German brew of 16th-century origin that costs $77 per 3-liter bottle. It's blacker than motor oil (and only slightly less viscous), but it's uncommonly delicious. In fact, after I had uncorked the bottle and sampled it, it seemed criminal to pour it into a tub of hot bathwater. This stuff is for my insides, not my outsides.

But when I punch on the Jacuzzi jets, my beer bath foams into an impressive head. Had I known about this possibility before, I would be the cleanest man in North America. After 20 minutes of soaking, I step out, heeding the brewer's advice to towel off without rinsing. I expect my skin to be tacky and tart-smelling, like a fraternity floor the morning after homecoming. But my wife buries her face in my chest and says I smell like fresh bread. The yeast — left in to soothe the skin — had made mine smooth and luxurious.

If Badebier weren't so expensive and difficult to obtain (international money orders or cash only to Neuzelle, Germany), I could become a bubble-bath addict.

The experience started me thinking about other possible uses for my favorite beverage. What if beer were like WD-40 — an indispensable product with hundreds of household uses? The next time your bride complains about all the room it's taking up in the fridge, you could argue that it's not just beer, it's lawn fertilizer, a necessary kitchen-safety tool, and an integral part of a chess set.

And, of course, research shows that, in moderation, drinking beer has significant health benefits. It's time, gentlemen, to make beer an even bigger part of our world. Here are 32 new reasons to love it.

1. BATHE IN IT Instead of sipping a beer, try soaking in it. Pour a bottle of German Badebier in the tub and lie back for a real bubble bath.

2. PUT OUT A FIRE Although certainly not as effective as a real fire extinguisher, a can or bottle of beer can mimic one if none is available. Simply shake and spritz. After all, beer is mostly water. This works on small grill flare-ups, and some people have been known to carry an emergency can in their car in case of engine fire. Or at least that's what they tell the state troopers.

3. MARINATE MEAT Beer is slightly acidic — and that makes it an excellent meat tenderizer, says Linda Omichinski, R.D., a nutritionist. This allows you to enjoy leaner cuts that otherwise might be too tough. Beer also won't alter the meat's flavor as much as wine- and vinegar-based marinades do. Poke a few holes in the meat, put it in a Tupperware container (we know you have them) or a large resealable bag, and add beer. (English ale is great for beef.) Marinate in the refrigerator for a few hours or, better yet, overnight. Do not drink the marinade. ...Read more here...

Wednesday, March 14, 2007

Changing Malls

Across the country, many regional malls are languishing as shoppers are drawn by the gravitational force of super-regional mega-malls outfitted with restaurants, spas, movie theaters, gyms, supermarkets and, oh yes, stores. Or else they're ambling down the brick-lined streets of an outdoor "lifestyle center" that mimics the feel of a town square, with condominiums and office buildings nearby. The regional mall -- enclosed shopping centers between 400,000 to 800,000 square feet that proliferated through the 1970s and 1980s -- is becoming a relic of the past. Malls, which emerged in the 1950s with two stories of shopping anchored by department stores..

Most of the 20 shopping centers in the Washington D.C. area built in the 1970s and '80s with more than 400,000 square feet of leasable space were enclosed malls, including White Flint and Springfield Mall. Mazza Gallerie in the District was built in 1975 but is just under 300,000 square feet. Tysons Corner Center is the region's largest mall, with more than 2 million square feet, and was built in 1968.

But tastes changed. Enclosed malls gave way to open-air shopping centers that mix retailers, restaurants, residences and offices in one place. Only three shopping centers built in the Washington region since 1990 are enclosed.

Particularly vulnerable are regional malls, which generally have two or more anchors and draw shoppers from a radius of five to 15 miles. They have struggled with the popularity of new formats such as super-regional centers, with more than 800,000 square feet and at least three anchors; smaller, outdoor centers that include upscale national chains and restaurants; and power centers lined with big-box category killers such as Home Depot.. The problem of the regional mall has become so pervasive that it spawned a new buzzword, "de-malling."

The newest concept in "malls" is "mixed use", where the area is made-up of shopping, restaurants, parks and housing, ususally condos or town -houses. With walk-ways and open spaces the concept is to have "everything" the consumer needs or wants in one area.

Thursday, March 08, 2007

Skywalk, No Thanks!!!

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Grand Canyon West, a destination owned and operated by the Hualapai Tribe at the Grand Canyon’s western rim, announces March 28, 2007 as the official public opening date of The Skywalk.

The Skywalk will be the first-ever cantilever shaped glass walkway to suspend more than 4,000 feet above the canyon’s floor and extend 70 feet from the canyon’s rim.

Thursday, March 01, 2007

Maryland Terps Beat Duke and Heels

Maryland is suddenly looking like a team that nobody wants to play in March.

Mike Jones scored 25 points and D.J. Strawberry had a pair of baskets during a decisive second-half spurt Wednesday night to lead the 24th-ranked Terrapins past No. 14 Duke 85-77, giving the Terrapins their sixth straight victory.

Strawberry finished with 17 points for the Terps (23-7, 9-6 Atlantic Coast Conference), whose win streak (all in conference games) has firmed up what looked to be a shaky NCAA tournament resume only a few weeks ago. And the two most recent wins - including an 89-87 weekend victory against North Carolina - have the Terrapins dreaming big.

Three weeks ago, it was uncertain whether No. 24 Maryland would be in contention for the NCAA tournament this late in the season. But after collecting its sixth straight victory, Maryland (23-7, 9-6 ACC) enters the sport's defining month as one of the nation's hottest teams.

Over a 17-day span, the Terrapins have beaten Duke twice and North Carolina once. They have gone from a team with no margin for error to a program eyeing a strong seed in the NCAA tournament. And they will become the first team in ACC history to start 2-5 in conference play and finish with a winning record.

Friday, February 23, 2007

Microsoft to Pay $1.52B for MP3 Use

A U.S. federal jury found that Microsoft Corp. infringed audio patents held by Alcatel-Lucent and should pay $1.52 billion in damages, the No. 1 software maker said on Thursday.

Alcatel-Lucent had accused the world's biggest software maker of infringing patents related to standards used for playing MP3 digital music files.

One analyst said the decision means Alcatel-Lucent may seek payments from providers of software and hardware that support MP3 files, including Apple Inc.'s iPod and iTunes. "Potentially it's a significant windfall for Alcatel-Lucent," Bernstein analyst Paul Sagawa said.

He said Alcatel-Lucent could go after include MP3 player makers Sony Corp. , Creative Technology Ltd. and music service provuder Napster.

For Microsoft, $1.52 billion represents about six weeks of cash flow or about 15 cents per share -- a charge that most analysts would likely take in stride, according to Goldman Sachs analyst Rick Sherlund.

"While $1.52 billion is a large sum, it is less than the $4.5 billion Alcatel-Lucent originally sought according to other press reports and is not particularly material in our opinion when considered with the amount of cash on Microsoft's balance sheet and substantial free cash flow generation of about $1 billion per month," he wrote in a research note.

The $1.52 billion awarded was based on 0.5 percent of the price of personal computers sold since around mid-2003, Tom Burt, Microsoft's deputy general counsel, said.

"We are concerned that this decision opens the door for Alcatel-Lucent to pursue action against hundreds of other companies who purchased the rights to use MP3 technology from Fraunhofer," Burt said. Computer, cell phone and MP3 player makers may be affected as well as software suppliers, he said. ...Read more here...

Friday, February 16, 2007

American Idol

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting Katharine McPhee's CD is out and has done well. It opened at #2 on the Billboard charts last week, and her first single "Over It" has debuted at #38 on the singles chart. Not bad for the runner-up in last year's "American Idol".

The TV show "American Idol" has finally weeded out the "weird" and the "unusual" and the "not talented", and is now into the serious part of the show. Next week the Top 24(12 girls and 12 boys)start competing and sometime this May we will have a new "American Idol".

Thursday, February 08, 2007

Drew Barrymore for Valentine's Day

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting Drew Barrymore in the movie "Music and Lyrics" to open February 14th.

A professional collaboration between a popular lyricist and a well-known musician takes a decidedly personal turn as the pair gradually sees their relationship developing into something much deeper.

A romantic comedy directed by Marc Lawrence and starring Drew Barrymore and Hugh Grant. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

Thursday, February 01, 2007

Goodbye Floppy Disks

From The Washington Post

This week PC World, one of the largest computer retailers in Europe, announced it will stop selling floppy disks once its existing stock is sold. Dell Computer Corp. stopped including floppy drives in its desktop computers four years ago.

Floppy's gone, an artifact of that time back in the day when we called the new, exciting, mysterious creation of the Internet the World Wide Web.

As Bryan Magrath, commercial director of PC World, told Britain's Daily Telegraph: "The sound of a computer's floppy disk drive will be as closely associated with 20th-century computing as the sound of a computer dialing into the Internet."

And these days you can store your MP3s, video files, Web pages, anything on the Web, in a CD or a USB thumb drive. Goodbye, Floppy.

Friday, January 26, 2007

Sharapova vs. Serena

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Maria Sharapova into the final of the Austrailian Open. She will face Serena Williams for the title early tomorrow. Win or lose she will be ranked #1 in the World.

Saturday, January 20, 2007

Maria Sharapova at Australia Open

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Maria Sharapova into the fourth round of the 2007 Australia Open. I am so glad tennis got away from the "all white" look in outfits. A little fashion doesn't hurt the sport at all.

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Top Books 2006

1. The Thirteenth Tale: A Novel - Diane Setterfield

2. Suite Francaise - Irene Nemirovsky

3. The Road - Cormac McCarthy

4. At Canaan's Edge - Taylor Branch

5. Special Topics in Calamity Physics - Marisha Pessl

6. An Inconvenient Truth - Al Gore

7. Thunderstruck - Erik Larson

8. William Bennett - America The Last Best Hope

9. The Book of Fate - Brad Meltzer

10. Dispatches From the Edge - Anderson Cooper

11. Andrew Carnegie - David Nassaw

Thursday, January 11, 2007

I Want an iPhone

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OK, I admit it. I want one!!! Can't wait until June when the iPhone becomes available. Steve Jobs is a genius - it's not that he is so "technologically creative", but he knows how to "market existing technology".

Sunday, January 07, 2007

Sunny and 73 in January?

So what happened to winter? Here it is January and it feels like June. I took advantage of the beautiful sunny and warm day to take down our outside Christmas decorations and to play some tennis.

The 73 degrees at Reagan National Airport broke a record dating to 1950. (The highest January temperature ever recorded in Washington is 79, on Jan. 26, 1950.)

Friday, January 05, 2007

Massanutten Resort

A year ago at Massanutten Resort, a small ski and golf center near Harrisonburg, Va., they opened a water park to keep the guests coming during those warm, snowless months. Who knew that would quickly come to include December and January?

Now, during the endless summer that is the current winter, business is booming at the indoor water park as only a handful of downhillers make do on the sad ribbons of man-made skiing on the mountain above.

"This is a textbook example of what to do when Mother Nature throws us a curveball with the weather," said Joe Grandstaff, Massanutten's director of marketing. "We've had families this week who have gone to the water park, played golf and skied all in one day."

The water park -- a 42,000-square-foot, $30 million collection of fanciful slides, artificial rivers and mighty waves -- has also pushed Massanutten into the upper tiers of mid-Atlantic resorts, at least in terms of size.

From a small ski and golf resort in the early 1970s, Massanutten has become a sprawling 7,000-acre town of condominiums and fairways in a neat tuck of the Blue Ridge Mountains about two hours from the Capital Beltway.

The place boasts twin 18-hole golf courses, 14 ski runs, two recreation centers (each with indoor pool), a six-building hotel, a half-dozen eating places and a whopping 1,700 timeshare condominiums (it's the largest timeshare site in Virginia). ...Read more here...

Monday, January 01, 2007

Happy New Year!!!

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Turtles Wax Purdue in Champs Bowl

Maryland's eight regular-season wins weren't always pretty. The Terps were outgained by all 11 of their I-A opponents. Maryland's Champs Sports Bowl win was different. The Terps dominated the action, stats and scoreboard in a 24-7 victory over Purdue. Maryland finishes 2006 with 9-4 record. ...Read more here...