Google’s Superbowl Ad Has Google CEO Eric Schmidt All Atwitter [Google]

Curious. Very curious. Eric Schmidt, head Googler, just Tweeted about his excitement for tomorrow's Superbowl. But he's not nearly as pumped for the gridiron as he is for a commercial running during the third quarter:

Can't wait to watch the Superbowl tomorrow. Be sure to watch the ads in the 3rd quarter (someone said "Hell has indeed frozen over.")

Well, color us intrigued. What exactly will Google be advertising, if it's even a Google advertisement to begin with? A minimalist Nexus One spot? A rehashing of Apple's famous 1984 ad? If you have any guesses, let's hear 'em in the comments. [Eric Schmidt]

Update: BusinessInsider spotted a blog post by search guru John Battelle which suggests tomorrow's ad will be this one, entitled "Parisian Love":

Sure, it's sweet and all, but really? That's it? Not to mention that the idea of running off to France to live a life of truffles and Truffaut and true love might not exactly resonate with the segment of our nation that will be tuned in tomorrow.


A Brief Survey of Recent Tape-Based Anamorphic Illusions [Opticalillusions]

With just a roll or two of painters tape, some patience, and a willingness to forfeit the respectability of their apartments (except, maybe, from a single perspective), some clever artists have created a very impressive collection of tape-based illusions.

Earlier today, Boing Boing posted this neat Back to the Future-inspired piece featuring an impressively detailed DeLorean rendered with painters tape. Kudos to YouTube user Wablamo for immortalizing everyone's favorite time traveling automobile in such an appropriately mind-boggling medium.

But the true hero of the anamorphic painters tape illusion is a YouTube user who goes by the name of BrussPup. I've watched BrussPup evolve over these last few weeks from his first experiments in the form—when he was, indeed, just a pup—up through our current moment in which BrussPup stands as a titan of tape-based illusions.

But let's start back with his humble beginnings. BrussPup's first piece, "X Room Illusion!," was a relatively simple undertaking but it betrayed the artist's natural ability for this particular endeavor:

A week later, we were treated to "Crazy Cube Illusion!," a more complex, confident effort that garnered a corresponding increase in YouTube views and blog notoriety:

Emboldened, BrussPup quickly offered up his next piece, "Pac-man Illusion!," which was noteworthy for spanning all the way down his hallway and incorporating a piece reflected by a mirror, which just piled extra mind-boggling on top of the regular mind-blogging to which we had grown accustomed:

BrussPup's most recent piece, "Nintendo Illusion!," is certainly his most ambitious effort to date. In this illusion, which took BrussPup fifteen hours to complete, blacklights and white paper were employed to create a glowing Nintendo controller:

There's no telling what's next in the world of tape-based anamorphic illusions. Has BrussPup retired his tape roll forever? Will Wablamo usurp his title as preeminent anamoprhic illusionist? We'll just have to wait, squint our eyes, scratch our heads, and see. [BrussPup's YouTube Channel and Boing Boing]


Windows Phone 7 Rumors: Zune HD Inspired Interface, No Multitasking [Rumor]

PPCGeeks is offering up a whole bevy of rumors regarding Windows Mobile 7 and what will be revealed at MWC next week. What they're referring to as Windows Phone 7 has a Zune-like interface and Xbox integration but no multitasking.

PPCGeeks and Mobile Tech World claim that Windows Mobile 7 will be unveiled at Mobile World Congress, though it will be announced under the new name Windows Phone 7 and the presentation will focus on the user interface without offering too much detail on specific functionality. Here's a breakdown of what PPCGeeks and Mobile Tech World have heard:

The UI goes by the codename Metro and is heavily influenced by that of the Zune HD. The interface has been described as "clean," "soulful," and "alive," and offers a fully reimagined Start page. Third party UIs like HTC's Sense will no longer be supported. Windows Phone 7 will ditch Windows Mobile Device Center in favor of Zune's syncing software, and will offer integration with social media networks, Zune devices, and Xboxes, including friends, gamer tags, achievements and the like.

Apps will only be able to be installed via the Marketplace, which supports an API as well as a try before you buy system. Flash will not be supported initially. Windows Phone 7 also won't offer multitasking, though apps will be able to receive push notifications while paused in the background. WP7 will also reportedly lack NETCF backwards compatibility.

MobileTechWorld's report includes the tidbit that the browsing experience is faster than that of the iPhone 3G, and that Microsoft believes that Windows Phone 7 devices will roll out by September though they themselves won't manufacture any of them.

With all the rumors surrounding Windows Mobile 7, there's no telling if this particular batch will hold water. But with MWC just around the corner, it's definitely possible that this could contain some nuggets of truth. Hopefully it's just not the no-multitasking nugget. [PPCGeeks and MobileTechWorld via Engadget]


The legal establishment of Winkler County, Texas conspires to punish whistle blowing nurses

On Science-Based Medicine, several of us have at various times criticized state medical boards for their tolerance of unscientific medical practices and even outright quackery. After all, Dr. Rashid Buttar still practices in North Carolina and the medical board there seems powerless to do anything about it. However, state medical boards have other functions, one of which is to respond to complaints of unethical and dubious behavior about doctors. Key to this function is protection; i.e., if someone reports a doctor, that person needs to be sure that the state will protect her from retaliation from that doctor of the hospital. About five months ago, I reported a true miscarriage of justice, the sort of thing that should never, ever happen. In brief, it was the story of two nurses who, disturbed at how a local doctor was peddling his dubious “herbal” concoctions in the emergency room of the local hospital when he came in to see patients, reported him to the authorities. Moreover, they had gone up the chain of command, first complaining to hospital authorities. After nothing happened for months, they decided to report the physician, Dr. Rolando Arafiles, to the Texas Medical Board because they honestly believed that this physician was abusing his trust with patients and behaving unethically by improperly hawking herbal supplements that he was selling in the rural health clinic and the emergency room of Winkler County Memorial Hospital.

Even though under whistleblower laws the identities of these nurses should have been kept secret, after he learned that a complaint had been filed against him Dr. Arafiles went to his buddy the Winkler County Sheriff Robert L. Roberts, who left no stone unturned in trying to find out who had ratted out Dr. Arafiles:

To find out who made the anonymous complaint, the sheriff left no stone unturned. He interviewed all of the patients whose medical record case numbers were listed in the report and asked the hospital to identify who would have had access to the patient records in question.

At some point, the sheriff obtained a copy of the anonymous complaint and used the description of a “female over 50? to narrow the potential complainants to the two nurses. He then got a search warrant to seize their work computers and found a copy of the letter to the medical board on one of them.

The result was this:

In a stunning display of good ol’ boy idiocy and abuse of prosecutorial discretion, two West Texas nurses have been fired from their jobs and indicted with a third-degree felony carrying potential penalties of two-to-ten years’ imprisonment and a maximum fine of $10,000. Why? Because they exercised a basic tenet of the nurse’s Code of Ethics — the duty to advocate for the health and safety of their patients.

On Saturday, the New York Times reported on the story, as there have been significant developments since August. Specifically, although the charges against one of the nurses has been dismissed, Anne Mitchell, RN, is going to stand trial beginning today:

But in what may be an unprecedented prosecution, Mrs. Mitchell is scheduled to stand trial in state court on Monday for “misuse of official information,” a third-degree felony in Texas.

The prosecutor said he would show that Mrs. Mitchell had a history of making “inflammatory” statements about Dr. Rolando G. Arafiles Jr. and intended to damage his reputation when she reported him last April to the Texas Medical Board, which licenses and disciplines doctors.

Mrs. Mitchell counters that as an administrative nurse, she had a professional obligation to protect patients from what she saw as a pattern of improper prescribing and surgical procedures — including a failed skin graft that Dr. Arafiles performed in the emergency room, without surgical privileges. He also sutured a rubber tip to a patient’s crushed finger for protection, an unconventional remedy that was later flagged as inappropriate by the Texas Department of State Health Services.

Charges against a second nurse, Vickilyn Galle, who helped Mrs. Mitchell write the letter, were dismissed at the prosecutor’s discretion last week.

So let me get this straight (yet again). A dedicated nurse does what her professional code of ethics demands that she do, even knowing at the time that she did it that it might cost her her job, and the end result is that the good ol’ boy network in Texas tries to throw her in jail for three years on trumped up charges that even the Texas Medical Board states are bogus. Even Ms. Galle won’t be unscathed. As the Texas Nurses Association points out, she will have a felony indictment on her record, which will haunt her the rest of her professional career. In fact, in all my years in medicine, I cannot recall a more blatant example of punishing a whistleblower or of the good ol’ boys network getting together to punish an uppity nurse who dared to call a doctor out on his unethical behavior, which was described in a bit more detail in the NYT story:

It was not long after the public hospital hired Dr. Arafiles in 2008 that the nurses said they began to worry. They sounded internal alarms but felt they were not being heeded by administrators.

Frustrated and fearing for patients, they directed the medical board to six cases “of concern” that were identified by file numbers but not by patient names. The letter also mentioned that Dr. Arafiles was sending e-mail messages to patients about an herbal supplement he sold on the side.

Mrs. Mitchell typed the letter and mailed it with a separate complaint signed by a third nurse, who wrote that she had resigned because of similar concerns about Dr. Arafiles. That nurse was not charged.

To convict Mrs. Mitchell, the prosecution must prove that she used her position to disseminate confidential information for a “nongovernmental purpose” with intent to harm Dr. Arafiles.

One thing that I hadn’t known before is that Sheriff Robert L. Roberts had been a patient of Dr. Arafiles and credited him with saving his life, and he went on a vendetta, abusing his power in an outrageous manner to track them down. One wonders if he spends as much effort trying to hunt down real criminals, such as thieves and murderer, as he did in trying to hunt down two nurses doing their duty. Moreover, from the NYT story, the justifications of Stan Wiley, hospital administrator for Winkler County Hospital, made it clear (to me, at least) that the reason the hospital is standing by Dr. Arafiles is not because he’s a good doctor, but rather because they have a hard time recruiting doctors to west Texas, having recruited Dr. Arafiles even though he had a restriction on his license and had been in trouble with the state medical board before. Particularly galling and disingenuous was his claim:

Mr. Wiley said he believed that the nurses had acted in bad faith because they went to the state despite his internal efforts to discipline Dr. Arafiles. But, he said, “I don’t believe they did it on a personal vendetta.”

Unfortunately for Mr. Wiley, that does not appear to be the definition of “bad faith” under Texas law. It does not require that the whistleblower wait for the hospital to act on reports against a doctor, contrary to what Wiley said. He may think that’s bad faith, but it’s not. Mitchell and Galle could have gone straight to the Texas Medical Board without even trying to go through the hospital administration if they had wanted and it would not have been bad faith. As the story explains, under Texas law, good faith requires only a reasonable belief that the conduct being reported is illegal, and the Texas State Medical Board has stated that it believes the nurses reported Dr. Arafiles’ activities in good faith. Wiley is just plain wrong about this; it isn’t even close. The most likely explanation for his supporting this outrageous abuse of prosecutorial power is that hospital administration was roundly embarrassed (as it should be) when this story came out. It didn’t act; so Mitchell and Galle did. That these two nurses felt obligated to risk their careers (and, even though they couldn’t have known it at the time, their freedom) by reporting Dr. Arafiles derived not from bad faith, but from the ineffectiveness of the hospital’s response.

Indeed, the very fact that Sheriff Roberts and County Attorney Scott D. Tidwell continue to pursue this case to trial strongly suggests that it is not Ms. Mitchell who’s engaging in a vendetta. Rather, it’s Dr. Arafiles through his buddy Sheriff Roberts and the clueless County Attorney Scott Tidwell who are all teaming up to engage in a bit of payback against two brave but hapless nurses. It’s so blatantly obvious from even a cursory examination of the case, and a deeper examination only reinforces this point. It is utterly outrageous and unforgivable, and there’s definitely something rotten in west Texas, specifically Winkler County. Regardless of whether Dr. Arafiles is guilty of abusing his medical license and practicing medicine that endangers patients, what’s rotten in west Texas goes under the names of Dr. Rolando Arafiles, Jr., Sheriff Robert L. Roberts, Jr., and County Attorney Scott M. Tidwell.

Not to mention Winkler County Hospital.

ADDENDUM: You and I can help fight this abuse of power by contributing to Mitchell and Galle’s legal defense fund through the a link on the Texas Nurses Association website’s front page. Mitchell and Galle’s careers have been ruined through this malicious prosecution; they can’t find work and may never be able to find work as nurses again, at least not in west Texas, and they’ve racked up huge legal bills trying to defend themselves.


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Second Try for STS-130

NASA: "Just before midnight the six STS-130 crew members will be climbing into their flight suits, helmets and gloves at Kennedy's Operations and Checkout Building. The flight suits contain an oxygen supply, communications equipment and a temperature control system that offer protection in the event of an emergency and pressure changes during liftoff. The crew also will be attending a briefing with flight controllers to discuss details on weather conditions at Kennedy's Shuttle Landing Facility and the transoceanic abort landing, or TAL, sites."
 
Keith's note: Stay up to date with STS-130 on spaceflightnow.com for the best web coverage with Miles O'Brien, David Waters, and Leroy Chiao. Alas, they never link back to us ...

Super Bowl Ads 2010: Lots of Chips and Beer, Light On Gadgets [Super Bowl]

Did you blink during the Super Bowl commercial breaks? Too bad if you did, because it means you may have missed the anemic number of gadget or tech-related commercials worth talking about tomorrow at the water cooler. But! Megan Fox!

Megan Fox is an obvious choice, for obvious reasons (if she's your thing): She had a Motoblur, and we're a gadget blog! See? Obvious. Anyway, tweeting from a tub on her new phone, she pondered what would happen if she sent a picture of her bathing out to the world. Hijinks ensued, people were hurt, and even a gay couple somehow got distracted by the fox that is Megan Fox:

And such is the power of Fox that there were scenes that didn't make the final cut.

Then there was Beyonce, fresh off her Grammy performance, performing again for Vizio. Surrounded by Internet memes and celebrities, Twitter and what appeared to be an army of automobile assembly line robots (hopefully not ones from Toyota), she sang and sold that company's Via/Internet Apps technology. Think Internet on your HDTV, not because I say so or because that's exactly what it is, but because that's the message Vizio assaulted viewers with during the 60-second clip:

Tough love was the story for Intel's Jeffrey the Robot. The commercial was supposedly for Intel's Core processor line, but I know the truth: Robot uprising. It 20 years' time we can all look back at this commercial, when poor Jeffrey was snubbed For The Last Time by his human overlords:

Lastly, there's one we actually covered yesterday. Google. Its poignant ad about a search-happy boy in love with a French girl aired yesterday, on the Internet, which is probably fitting. We'll revisit it again here if you missed it tonight:

Sigh.

Personally, for me the ads were a bit stale this year. Even the Bud Light beer ads, which have made me laugh out loud on occasion in years past, felt a little tired. Betty White was a standout though, and there were back-to-back ads depicting grown men in their underwear. Possibly a first there. Also a first: Seeing a two-timing baby talk about eTrade while his "milk-a-holic" girl on the side blew up his shit over a webcam.

The one Bud Light ad I will give props to, however, was their Autotune bit. It's a stretch including here on Gizmodo, but we have a history with that app (iPhone, anyone?), and we'll take an opportunity here to thank Budweiser for hopefully killing the tech off for good with this Super Bowl ad:

OK, I admit it, I smiled a bit watching that a second time. Guilty.

The entire crop is over at YouTube in one convenient package (Fox's is notably absent at the moment, although they appear to be updating throughout the night).


Super Bowl

I gotta say, I got a kick out of that Budlight commercial with the astronomers – and I don’t drink beer.  :mrgreen:

You can find it HERE.

and….The Who were EXCELLENT!

Sinatra "My Way" Karaoke Killings Plague Philippines Bar Scene [Karaoke]

Apparently, when people sing Sinatra's My Way in a Philippines karaoke bar, and they sing it poorly, they die.

The epidemic's gotten so bad, in fact, that local law enforcement started calling it the "My Way Killings."

No one really know why dozens have died over the past decade while warbling to one of Sinatra's greatest hits, just that they have, and after this specific song. Is it bad singing? Traditionally violent streets being traditionally violent streets? Die hard Sinatra fans exacting their revenge on newbs who butcher the greats? Possibly. Karaoke is huge in the region, with machines popping up everywhere, from bars to alleyways (as you can see from the image). Combine that with high crime and a fanatical love of Frank Sinatra and you could have just the right mix for a kill (the audience with your talent) or be killed (by the audience for sucking) atmosphere.

One thing's for sure: This guy should stay the hell away form the Philippines. [NYT]


stem cells, and DNA

Does the stem cells DNA also replicate the host cells DNA? When human nose cells are put on the back of a mouse and then stem cells are added the nose grows back to a fully formed nose. Does this also work cross spiecies? for instance if a hole was cut into the back of the mouse and human stem cells

Ma’am, Your IKEA Graphene Glow Wall Is Ready for Pick-Up [Graphene]

It appears to be graphene day. First, IBM was using the material to shame silicon into submission, and now Swedish scientists say graphene could one day make lamps and other traditional lighting elements unnecessary.

If the Swedes are right, then future homes and buildings could be adorned with graphene panels, called light emitting electromechanical cells (LECs, for short).

The LEC panels can be fashioned so they cover an entire ceiling, wall, or whatever, and they're completely adjustable. Dim your walls and ceiling for a romantic evening with the female characters of Mass Effect 2, for example.

The article notes that OLED panels have seen similar implementations, but the graphene scientists say their material is both cheaper to produce and better for the environment (OLED panels contain indium tin oxide, which is difficult to recycle). [Science Daily via Treehugger via DVICE]


Map: Happiness

A survey of some of spiritual resources on happiness, including the 12 best books on happiness, the 12 best films on happiness, and a collection of 30 quotes that can be seen as a minicourse on happiness.

Here’s Something Steampunk-Inspired That Actually Works [Guns]

Normally we ignore "steampunk" news because it has nothing to do with real, actual steampunk and more to do with some bloke attaching nonfunctional brass tubing to his PC, but in this case these guns actually shoot something.

The blunderbuss, above, shoots rubber balls. Cool, I suppose...But! It also shoots them at such a velocity that they can penetrate cardboard at a respectable distance:

The other rifle, Black Betty shoots ping pong balls and confetti paper, the latter of which can be lit up to make a flame thrower of sorts:

And that's probably the last steampunk anything you'll see here for a while. Well, unless it shoots something. Or, you know, actually uses steam power. [YouTube via Boing Boing]


wiring pressure switch

i have a 3 phase 7.5hp air compressor and i want to use a VFD to run it, i have a 25hp VFD. i know the VFD takes the place of the magnetic starter . where or how do i hook up the pessure switch to the VFD. larry

HTC Incredible Photos Leaked, Reveal Incredibly Brown Back Plate [Htc]

The HTC Incredible, a leaked cellphone code name that first made the rounds back in December, is the real deal, as seen in these sneak peak pics from Pocket Now. Can you say brown? You'll see: Updated.

Very original Zune coloring, no? Lots of contours and wacky shapes going on in the rear too (and probably a prototype placeholder, we hope).

There are some specs to go along with the leak, those being an Android 2.1 OS with HTC Sense, running on a Snapdragon CPU. A rumored 256MB of RAM accompanies a roughly 3.5-3.7" WVGA screen (possibly AMOLED? That's unconfirmed).

Dual LED flashes adorn the brownish backplate, and an optical mouse pointer resides down near the bottom. Thoughts?

Update: Now with video:

Now it looks red... [Pocket Now]