Monday, January 31, 2011

Bracket Big Board: Michigan State, a crumbling basketball empire

The Bracket Big Board takes into consideration past returns, current performance and expected future gains in determining who should be included among the field of 68 (31 automatic and 37 at-large bids). Essentially, the Bracket Big Board is a cheat sheet designed for amateur bracketologists if they were filling out a Tourney Pick ‘Em '11 entry today. The Bracket Big Board is updated every Monday until the dance card is officially unveiled March 13.


In 371 B.C., approximately 11,000 Spartan hoplites clashed with outmanned Thebans outside a small Boeotian village. Sparta, the supreme military power of its day, invaded the area, determined to reestablish its authority in a contested area of Central Greece. Instead of walking over opponent forces as it had done numerous times before, the supposedly invincible Spartan phalanx crumbled under the pressure of the Theban charge.

The decisive defeat at the Battle of Leuctra marked a turning point in Greek and early European history. Crippled by the loss, Spartan influence in the region declined dramatically. The once prominent superpower quickly faded into the background, giving rise to the Thebans and eventually the Macedonians under command of Phillip II, the father of Alexander the Great.

Centuries later, another group of allegedly unstoppable Spartans are winding a similar path to ruin.

Entering the 2010-2011 season, Michigan State had high expectations. Coming off its fifth Final Four appearance since 2000 and boasting a No. 2 national ranking, many prognosticators believed the standout program was not only a strong contender for the Big Ten, but also a national title. All the ingredients needed for a run to Houston were evident – experience, perimeter shooting, defense, Izzo’s trademark toughness. Thoughts of missing the NCAA Tournament were laughable.

Midway through the conference season, the opposite is true.

Over the past two weeks, Michigan State has taken on the appearance of General Custer’s 7th calvary. Dropping key confrontations to Illinois, Purdue and, humiliatingly, in-state rival Michigan, this is a team clearly on the ropes. Even against inferior competition at home, it has struggled mightily, indicative in OT victories over Northwestern and Indiana. With assist leader Korie Lucious, who was suspended January 26 for undisclosed reasons, out of the picture, the Spartans are in a seemingly irrecoverable tailspin, a situation Izzo described recently as “not very good.”

Naysayers and loyalists will continue to contend the legendary coach will find a cure. After all, this is a program notorious for flipping a switch in February, peaking at the most optimum time. Inconsistency in January is normal operating procedure. However, the Spartans are suffering from an unfamiliar sickness. No medicine man may be able to find a remedy. Shooting just 47.6 percent inside the arc (187th nationally), MSU has performed poorly around the basket. Instead of pounding the paint, it has relied too much on converting low-percentage jumpshots.

More problematic,mdefensive intensity, normally the Spartans' hallmark, has regressed. Blitzed from distance (296th in 3-PT% D), they’ve allowed an uncharacteristic 1.21 points per possession over their past four games. Failing to convert at the charity stripe (67.7 FT%) and coaxing few turnovers (211th in TO% D), this is a club that is also ill-equipped to win tight games. Simply put, there are too many gushing wounds and not enough tourniquets.

If the ship isn’t righted soon, one of the nation’s most consistent winners could be on the outside looking in come March. KenPom’s forecast over the remainder of the season looks bleak:

With a strong SOS, above .500 conference record and three wins versus the RPI top 50, MSU would likely draw an 8-seed if the dance card was unveiled today. If it can resolve its problems and topple beatable foes, the Battle of Leuctra won’t be reenacted. However, another slip or two against an inferior opponent (e.g. at Iowa, vs. Penn St., at Michigan) and the Spartans, sadly, could miss the tourney for only the second time in the Izzo era and first time since 1997.

Here is the 2011 debut of the Triple-B:





*For games played through Sunday, January 30
*RPI data provided by Rivals
*Efficiency stats from kenpom.com

On the Bubble: Colorado St. (15-6), Richmond (16-6), George Mason (17-5), New Mexico (15-7), Nebraska (15-5), Gonzaga (14-8), UAB (15-5), Kansas St. (14-8), Wichita St. (18-4), Northern Iowa (17-6), UTEP (17-5)

Dropped Out: None.

Conference Breakdown: AmericanEast (1), ACC (5), Atlantic Sun (1), Atlantic 10 (2), Big 12 (5), BigEast (10), Big Sky (1), Big South (1), Big Ten (7), Big West (1),Colonial (2), Conference USA (1), Horizon (2), Ivy (1), Metro (1),Mid-American (1), Mid-Eastern (1), Missouri Valley (1), Mountain West(3), Northeast (1), Ohio Valley (1), Pac-10 (4), Patriot (1), SEC (4),Southern (1), Southland (1), SWAC (1), Summit (1), Sun Belt (1), West Coast (1), WAC(1)

--

Image couresty of US Presswire

Missy Peregrym Sarah Gellman Eliza Dushku Bonnie Jill Laflin Joanna Krupa

Choqok, the Twitter and Identi.ca client for Linux, adds loads of new features in v1.0

Choqok -- a fantastic, full-featured Twitter and StatusNet client for Linux -- has finally reached version 1.0. The new release adds support for a number of new sharing services, including Flickr, Posterous, YFrog, and Twitpic as well as a number of new URL shortening services. Choqok 1.0 also shows inline thumbnail previews of images and videos.

Want more? Choqok is also fully extensible thanks to its plug-in system, and a handful of very useful ones are included from the get-go. Tops among them: update filtering. So long, check-ins, now playings, and annoying prepubescent male vocalists! While we're on the subject, Choqok itself can tap into several Linux music players in case you want to share your tunes with the world. It'll also push your updates to supported IM clients as well, for automated status changes.

Choqok, the Twitter and Identi.ca client for Linux, adds loads of new features in v1.0 originally appeared on Download Squad on Fri, 28 Jan 2011 13:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Carla Gugino Ana Hickmann Mischa Barton Jamie Lynn Sigler Stacy Keibler

1/17 Quickie: J-E-T-S, Jets! Jets! Jets!

Minki van der Westhuizen Katharine Towne Malia Jones Jennifer ODell Jenny McCarthy

Motorola Connected Music Player for Android is packed with awesomeness

motorola connected music player android Motorola's new Connected Music Player isn't the first leaked audio app we've seen -- but it's certainly got a leg up on the one we saw from Google. CMP goes way beyond shuffling through your music and video library, building in a ton of (predictably enough) connected features.

Let's start with the radio. CMP includes both SHOUTcast integration and the ability to tap into your phone's FM radio hardware. Soundhound support is also built-in, allowing you to identify unknown tracks anywhere you've got an Internet connection. The video tab will play your locally-stored videos and it's also got a YouTube search option -- though it's limited to finding music videos. The app's Community section leads you to TuneWiki charts, and Twitter and Facebook audio hotness courtesy of Blip.fm. It also features a cool Music Maps option, which lets you see who's listening to what -- either near your location or anywhere else in the world (my neck of the woods is unsurprisingly quiet and showed only me).

From the player's now playing screen you can Blip what you're listening to, add the track to a playlist, delete it from your library, or set it to your ringtone. Want to gently drift off to sleep as you listen to your playlist? No problem, just head to the settings screen and set up the sleep timer.

Continue reading Motorola Connected Music Player for Android is packed with awesomeness

Motorola Connected Music Player for Android is packed with awesomeness originally appeared on Download Squad on Wed, 26 Jan 2011 10:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

LeAnn Rimes Adrianne Curry Jennifer Gimenez Katie Cassidy Estella Warren

Ominous signs for the Johnson/Earnhardt crew split?

You recall last year, when Jimmie Johnson's crew chief Chad Knaus effectively fired his crew mid-race in Texas and brought aboard the crew from the No. 24 team? It seemed extreme, even heartless, at the time. But the numbers bore out Knaus' vision, both by season-finishing place (that would be "1") and absolute time during pit stops.

Now, though, the NASCAR Insiders point to a potentially problematic element of the whole revolving-door-crew business over at Hendrick. Knaus and fellow crew chief Steve Letarte are still swapping crew members, although Letarte is now captaining Dale Earnhardt Jr. And in media discussions last week, Knaus revealed that there will be a "bench" team of crew members for every spot in the lineup. The Insiders' "T.C." -- an anonymous tire changer for a major team -- has the following analysis:

What I see here, is two race teams with three pit crews.  And you have Knaus saying he has yet to settle on a lineup (let me remind you that the Budweiser Shootout is [now 10] days away).  With all the changes coming to the Cup Series this season in regards to the new fuel cans and procedures, these guys need all the time they can get to work through the difficulties of the new system.  The fact that Knaus can’t point to six guys and say “yup, that’s my pit crew” should worry 48 fans.

TC further notes that there's a potential morale impact, knowing your job is only as good as your last pit stop. A little competition for your job is healthy; is cutthroat competition too much?

It's a valid point, but then so too is the fact that Knaus is a reigning five-time champion. If he says something, you'd be well advised to listen, and listen closely. Still, the field was closer than ever before to Johnson last year. Now wouldn't be the time for Knaus to be cruising on rep and press clippings.

Kristy Swanson Ali Campoverdi Giuliana DePandi Pamela Anderson Amber Arbucci

Skype 5 for Mac intentionally blocks Flash and other programs from using your webcam

It seems that Skype 5 for Mac, by design, blocks any other application from using your webcam while it's installed. A commenter on the bug report suggests that it also affects Windows machines, but we were unable to replicate the bug with Windows 7.

The crazy thing is that you have to uninstall Skype 5 before using your webcam with other programs, including Flash applets on websites. It almost makes sense that Skype would reserve your webcam when it's running -- but even when it isn't? As the commenters on Hacker News note, the Skype for Mac support forum isn't the happiest place on the interwebs at the moment.

To top things off, Skype has known about the issue since the Skype 5 for Mac beta in November. Skype developer Beom Soo Park even admits that it's a feature, not a bug. There's no explanation for the very, very odd functionality, and no ETA for a fix.

[Just as this post published, the Skype bug tracker has gone offline. Hopefully it's just temporary.]

Skype 5 for Mac intentionally blocks Flash and other programs from using your webcam originally appeared on Download Squad on Mon, 31 Jan 2011 08:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Eva Green Lauren Conrad Arielle Kebbel Jessica Paré Leelee Sobieski

THE DIGITAL VIKING: THE EDSBS GUIDE TO SPICY LIVING

Kat Von D Ana Paula Lemes Vanessa Simmons Chyler Leigh Julie Berry

Dead Space 2 ? review

Xbox 360/PS3/PC; �39.99; cert 18+ Visceral Games/EA

If you think things are bad at the moment, just be thankful you're not Isaac Clarke. To describe the character you control in the second instalment of EA's acclaimed space-survival-horror franchise as "put-upon" would be the mother of all understatements.

Dead Space 2 resumes Isaac's story three years after the first game, in the frankly unwelcoming surroundings of the Sprawl, a giant city on one of Saturn's moons. Once again, our poor old hero ? who begins the game in a straitjacket ? must negotiate double-dealing and deranged behaviour from fellow humans, hallucinations of his dead girlfriend and, most of all, the unwanted attentions of a set of mutants known as necromorphs which are so disgustingly putrid, blood-crazed and brain-lackingly persistent that the likes of Clive Barker would be proud to have created them.

That Dead Space 2 happens to be a video game which puts you at the heart of the action is a bonus: it would stand up impressively as an example of non-interactive horror. The ranks of the necromorphs have been impressively added to this time around with the likes of Pukers, who spew acid at you from a distance accompanied by blood-curdling screams, and featureless children with scythe-like limbs who swamp you in a pack.

But much of Dead Space 2's impressive scariness derives from more mundane devices, such as vents that unexpectedly blast you with steam, and gloriously chilling music, lighting and sound effects.

Appropriately, given the way in which he is a more seasoned necromorph-dispatcher, Isaac gets some great new weapons ? such as the Javelin Gun, a powerful speargun which can impale his assailants, and old favourites such as the Plasma cutter have been subtly improved (plus, of course, you can upgrade your favourites via workbenches, or re-spec them if you take an upgrade direction that doesn't work out).

Isaac's Kinesis ability to pick up objects and fire them has been made vastly more responsive, so that it now has a part to play in combat. You can, for example, fire severed limbs at necromorphs. Ammo is still in severely short supply during periods of the game, and like its predecessor, Dead Space 2 is challenging and unforgiving to play. Which is just how games like this should be.

Once again, it contains some great puzzles that involve manipulating objects with Kinesis and Stasis, and plenty of floating around in zero gravity. And this time around, it has acquired a four-versus-four multiplayer mode, in which four humans try to achieve an objective while four necromorphs try to maul them to pieces. Slightly unexpectedly, it's somewhat reminiscent of Left4Dead.

In general, pretty much every aspect of Dead Space 2 has been improved: the combat is slicker and more accurate, the story flows in an exemplary manner (with puzzles occurring just when you're screaming for a break from the relentless necromorph onslaughts), the graphics and sound are fantastic and, in general, production values are sky-high. As long as you're not of a remotely nervous disposition, you'll discover there is a vast amount of pleasure to be found in it.

? Game reviewed on PlayStation 3.

Rating: 4/5


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

Dania Ramirez Lucy Liu LeAnn Rimes Adrianne Curry Jennifer Gimenez

Blogs React to Cubs-Nationals trade for Tom Gorzelanny

Tessie Santiago Jessica Simpson Mandy Moore Shannon Elizabeth Maggie Gyllenhaal

Blog Post: Bing Feature Update: New Images Landing Page

Whether it’s introducing completely new ways to browse pictures with things like image collage or helping you filter images by color and composition, delivering a more intuitive and visual image search experience is a critical focus area for us.

To that end, this week we’re excited to introduce a fresh way to enter the image search experience. Introducing the new image search landing page:

The landing page assembles the top images in full fidelity so you can get a quick snap-shot of some of the most popular image searches on Bing.

Once you click through to the “images” page you will notice that we’ve populated the tabs with the most common search queries associated with a given image.   With one simple click, you can narrow down the images to find just what you’re looking for or be inspired to discover more. 

Let us know what you think.

- Troy Ma and Jamil Valliani, Bing Image Search

Jennifer Scholle Tatiana Zavialova Tila Tequila Tamie Sheffield Kelly Monaco

Nintendo Battle & Get! Pokemon Typing DS keyboard surfaces

I bet most of us used typing programs back in school to help us learn to type. If you have a kid that is to the age, where they are starting to type in school and are surfing the web it may be time for them to start learning to type correctly as well.

Nintendo has unveiled a cool new typing tutor program that uses Pokemon and a cool Bluetooth keyboard that will also work with the iPhone and iPad. The program is called Battle & Get! Pokemon Typing DS. The DS game will ship with the keyboard and the dongle needed for BT on the portable since it lacks that capability.

The keyboard will also apparently work with Android devices as well. It might be the perfect little keyboard for your Galaxy Tab. The catch is that the game and keyboard are only announced in Japan right now and pricing is unknown.

Via OhGizmo


Relevant Entries on SlashGear



Shiri Appleby Kelly Hu Michelle Rodriguez Mena Suvari Georgina Grenville

iPad 101: Reverting to an older version of an application

It happens to us all: an application update for the iPhone or iPad goes awry, and the new app doesn't do things the way we want (or, unfortunately, work at all on one of our devices). We ourselves are in that boat at the moment, since the new version 2.0 of the TUAW iPhone app is not working as expected on the iPad -- our development team is digging into the problem right now and we hope to be fast-tracking a fixed version right away. Our apologies for the issues.

This sort of thing is particularly sticky because there's no Apple-supported way to roll back to a previous version of an iOS application once you've updated. There is a workaround, however, if you haven't yet emptied your Trash in the Finder. Read on for the steps.

Continue reading iPad 101: Reverting to an older version of an application

iPad 101: Reverting to an older version of an application originally appeared on TUAW on Fri, 28 Jan 2011 14:15:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Source | Permalink | Email this | Comments

Veronica Kay Mýa Natalie Imbruglia Patricia Velásquez Jennifer Morrison

Mariners outfielder Milton Bradley arrested on felony charges

Amber Heard Veronica Kay Mýa Natalie Imbruglia Patricia Velásquez

Web of Trust (WOT) brings Web trust, safety, and privacy ratings to Opera

Web of Trust has been a trusted browser privacy and security add-on for Firefox, Chrome, and Internet Explorer for quite a while. Now, Opera users can take advantage of WOT trust ratings as well! Just head over to the Opera Extensions gallery and install Web of Trust, and you'll have access to the same drop-down ratings panel we've shown you before for other browsers (we suspect it was probably re-spun from the Chrome extension).

Remember, Opera 11+ is required to use extensions, so upgrade first if you're on a previous version. Don't forget to check out other great extensions for Opera, like LastPass and our collection of other handy add-ons.

Web of Trust (WOT) brings Web trust, safety, and privacy ratings to Opera originally appeared on Download Squad on Fri, 28 Jan 2011 09:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Ana Ivanovi Jessica Cauffiel Emmanuelle Vaugier Sarah Silverman Larissa Meek

Construction Halts on Tiger's Dubai Course

Tiger WoodsDUBAI, United Arab Emirates -- The developer of a Tiger Woods signature golf course in Dubai says the project has been suspended because of a drop in demand for luxury properties.

The halt to The Tiger Woods Dubai project, which included high-end villas, shows that Dubai's market is still feeling the effects of the severe downturn that hit the former boomtown more than a year ago.

A statement Monday by the golf course developer, part of Dubai Properties Group, to The Associated Press says the decision to put the development on hold was based on economic factors, but it could resume if conditions improve. Only a few holes on the course have been completed.

Woods plans to play at Dubai's Desert Classic, which begins next week.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. Active hyperlinks have been inserted by AOL.

Kat Von D Ana Paula Lemes Vanessa Simmons Chyler Leigh Julie Berry

Android overtakes Symbian in smartphone sales

Analyst Canalys says popularity of Google platform will continue to soar, as sales of Microsoft-powered handsets slide

Google's Android overtook the long-time market leader, Nokia's Symbian, as the world's most popular smartphone platform in the fourth quarter, according to the research firm Canalys.

In total, 32.9m phones running Android were sold to retailers and mobile networks in the fourth quarter of 2010, compared with Symbian's total sales of 31m in the quarter, the researcher said.

In a press release, Canalys noted that Nokia had however retained its lead as the single biggest smartphone vendor, with a 30.6% share of phones shipped.

The rise of Android to the top of the smartphone sales chart indicates the popularity of the free operating system with vendors, which do not have to pay a licence fee to use it on their phones.

Pete Cunningham, a senior analyst with Canalys, said that the company's most recent forecast expects Android use to continue to grow at least twice as fast as the smartphone market itself, which grew by 88.6% between the fourth quarters of 2009 and 2010, from 53.7m phones sold to 101.2m.

But he warned that low-end vendors such as China's Huawei and ZTE would create problems for some of the other players such as LG, Sony Ericsson and Motorola, which are trying to reinvent their product lines to capture high-end sales. HTC and Samsung are in the strongest position, accounting for nearly 45% of Google OS-based handset shipments.

"Motorola and Sony Ericsson were trying to supply to all segments of the market, and they haven't got the ability to do that," said Cunningham. "Samsung and Nokia are the only two that can do that. So for Motorola and Sony Ericsson, the only option is to reinvent themselves. On the higher tier of the platform there are high margins to be made."

The biggest loser in sales terms was Microsoft, which was the only company to power fewer smartphones ? 3.1m compared with 3.9m in Q4 09. Given that it said last week that 2m phones running its new Windows Phone 7 OS have shipped to retailers and networks since its launch at the end of October, that suggests that 1.1m phones running the now-orphaned Windows Mobile OS were also shipped.

However, Nokia was the biggest loser in terms of market share, dropping by 13.8%, while Android's rose by 24.2%. Apple lost 0.3% in share, shipping 16.2m phones, and RIM, maker of the BlackBerry range, lost 5.6%, even while both grew the numbers of phones shipped.

"2010 has been a fantastic year for the smartphone market. After a difficult 2009, the speed with which the market has recovered has required real commitment and innovation from vendors and they have risen to the challenge," said Canalys VP and principal analyst Chris Jones. "But vendors cannot afford to be complacent. 2011 is set to be a highly competitive year with vendors looking to use new technology, such as dual-core processors, NFC and 3D displays, to differentiate their products and maintain value."

Europe, the Middle East and Africa (EMEA) remained the largest market, with shipments totalling 38.8m and a year-on-year growth rate of 90%. Nokia continued to lead in EMEA and Asia Pacific, but in 2010 it was overtaken by RIM in Latin America, which shipped over a million more units than Nokia in Q4 2010, helped by the popularity of its mid-range smartphones, such as its Curve family of devices.

Separately, RIM claimed today that it won the smartphone wars in the UK for December, saying that data from GfK estimated it had sold half a million BlackBerry devices in the UK in that month, capturing a record high of 36% of the UK smartphone market including 51.1% of the smartphone pre-pay market, and 23.3% of the contract and SIM-free market. In all, RIM claims it made up 14.9% of the total mobile handset market for the UK in December 2010.

Cunningham said that Android handset makers will increasingly move into the pre-pay market in the coming year and drive down prices.

The US is still the largest country market in terms of shipments, at more than double the size of the Chinese smartphone market. RIM recaptured first place from Apple, as the latter experienced its usual US seasonal dip, and RIM benefited from the first full quarter of shipments for the BlackBerry Torch.

But that too could change. "The US landscape will shift dramatically this coming year, as a result of the Verizon-Apple agreement," said Canalys analyst Tim Shepherd. "Verizon will move its focus away from the [Android-based] Droid range, but the overall market impact will mean less carrier-exclusive deals, while increasing the AT&T opportunity for Android vendors, such as HTC, Motorola and Samsung."

Android was by far the largest smartphone platform in the US market in Q4 2010, with shipments of 12.1m units ? nearly three times those of RIM's BlackBerry devices. Windows Phone 7 devices appeared too late in the quarter to take full advantage of holiday season purchasing. As a result, Microsoft lost share in the US, from 8% in Q4 2009 to 5% in Q4 2010.

In China, Nokia's share slipped from 76% a year ago to 56%, under pressure from Huawei and Samsung in particular, despite growing its volume in the country by over 70% in the same period. The Chinese market grew 134% year on year, though from a small base, but notably faster than the US market, which grew at 64%.


guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

Kate Beckinsale Shiri Appleby Kelly Hu Michelle Rodriguez Mena Suvari

Albert Pujols Will Reject Any Trade Proposals if No Extension Is Reached

Filed under: ,

Albert Pujols has already said he wants to end his career as a member of the St. Louis Cardinals, stipulating, however, that any long-term contract must be completed by Feb. 19, the first day he will report to spring training because he doesn't want the negotiations to be a distraction during the season.

Regardless of what transpires over the next three weeks of negotiations, the All-Star first baseman will not be traded anywhere -- because he would veto any proposal -- according to a report from Buster Olney of ESPN.

Since Pujols has spent 10 years in the majors and five with the same team, he has the right to veto any trade and will exercise that right if a trade possibility for the Cardinals surfaces moving forward.

For the most part, the negotiations between the first baseman and the Cardinals have been kept under wraps, as both parties have sought to keep it away from the media. If no deal is agreed to by spring training, it is very likely -- based on Pujols' demands -- that he ends up exploring free agency next fall.

Pujols is in his last year of a seven-year, $100 million contract and his next pact will undoubtedly rival the 10-year, $275 million deal Alex Rodriguez received with the New York Yankees in 2007.

If the Cardinals cannot reach an agreement with Pujols and he leaves as a free agent, they will receive two draft picks as compensation.

The slugging first baseman finished last season with a .312 batting average, 42 home runs and 118 RBI. For his career, he's been selected to nine All-Star games, earned three NL MVP awards and six Silver Slugger awards. He's also a two-time Gold Glove Award winner.

Vogue Charlize Theron Eva Mendes Sarah Polley Aisha Tyler

Recall: Ducati Multistrada 1100/1000/620 for Fuel Leak

Ducati North America has issued a recall for various Multistrada models ranging from 2003 to 2009, including the 1100cc, 1000cc, and 620cc variants, because of an issue with the fuel tank pump flange seal leaking fuel. Affecting 3,911 models, owners of the following motorcycles could be affected by the recall, and should check to see if their VIN is affected: 2003-2004 & 2006 Ducati MTS 1000, 2005 Ducati MTS 1000S, 2006 Ducati MTS 620, and ...

Victoria Pratt Shakara Ledard Vanessa Marcil Rachel McAdams Kristin Cavallari

'Jacare' Souza keeps belt with win over Lawler at Strikeforce

Ronaldo "Jacare" Souza defended his Strikeforce middleweight championship belt using the world-class jiu-jitsu he is known for, submitting Robbie Lawler with a rear naked choke at Strikeforce in San Jose on Saturday night.

Jacare took Lawler down early in the first round, but when he switched to a guillotine, Lawler was able to get back to his feet. From there, violent stand-up erupted with Lawler throwing big strikes. He used a knee and a combination of punches to knock him to the ground. For some reason, Lawler followed Jacare to the ground, and was controlled on the ground until they were stood up with just 0:25 left in the round. Lawler finished the round strong, throwing strikes until Jacare tried for another takedown. 

In the second round, Jacare controlled Lawler on the ground. He punished Lawler with strikes and tried for several submission attempts, but Lawler showed evolution in his fight game, working out of each and every submission attempt with one of MMA's best grapplers.

That submission defense magic disappeared in the third round, as Jacare took Lawler down early. He took his back, slapped on a body triangle and then slipped in a rear naked choke. Lawler tapped at 2:00 in the third.

The difference in this fight was takedown defense. Though Lawler is now training in Arizona with former All-American wrestlers Ryan Bader and C.B. Dollaway, he couldn't stop four of Jacare's six takedown attempts. 

Souza is undefeated with Strikeforce after fighting for Dream and Brazilian-based promotions, earning a record of 14-2. Lawler, who just signed a new contract with Strikeforce, is 18-7.

Liz Phair Aaliyah Katherine Heigl Lorri Bagley Leslie Bega

Opera Web browser coming to Sony TVs and Blu-ray players

While it might not have a huge share of the desktop Web browser market, Opera certainly knows how to score deals with OEMs. Today, Opera announced that it has entered into a partnership with Sony to deliver an embedded browser on TVs and Blu-ray players. As Opera states in its official post, the integration will bring "web applications, widgets, full web browsing and emerging standards such as HTML5, HbbTV and OIPF" to your computer-free home theater.

From in-dash systems in your new vehicle, to your Wii, to your 60" Sony LCD, Opera has steadily grown into a force to be reckoned with in the world of non-computer browsing. Where will the Norwegian browser wind up next?

Opera Web browser coming to Sony TVs and Blu-ray players originally appeared on Download Squad on Thu, 20 Jan 2011 16:10:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Emma Watson Amy Smart Sarah Wynter Jaime Pressly Ashanti

2011 Provisional World Supersport Rider Line Up

The provisional entry list for the 2011 World Supersport class, as issued by the FIM: 

read more


Michelle Obama Kerry Suseck FSU Cowgirls Abbie Cornish Krista Allen

Reds sign Johnny Cueto to four-year extension

Brody Dalle

Gmail Labs features get easier to find with Instant-like search

Gmail Labs features are great, but with more than four dozen to choose from, it's gotten a bit tedious scrolling through and trying to figure out which to enable. You could use your Web browser's built-in find feature to locate a specific term on the page, but that's just not very Google.

Which is precisely why a pair of Google engineers decided it was time to add a fancy search option on the Labs page. Not only can you search, but as with Google Instant your results will appear as you type. You can also link directly to a particular query, which could be useful if you frequently toggle a particular Labs feature or two.

Gmail Labs features get easier to find with Instant-like search originally appeared on Download Squad on Thu, 20 Jan 2011 08:13:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Ana Paula Lemes Vanessa Simmons Chyler Leigh Julie Berry Lori Heuring

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Instagram adds hashtags, brands already love them

Instagram hashtagInstagram -- the app all the cool kids with iPhones use to snap, filter, and share pictures -- has received an update yesterday that adds support for hashtags. These work in a similar fashion to the way they do on Twitter. You can tag a photo you share by adding a hashtag either in the caption or comment field. Each hashtag gets its own page , which you can get to by clicking on a hashtag underneath a photo you're viewing or searching for hashtags using the new search functionality that you can find after you tap on your account name in the app.

Each tag even has its own RSS feed that you can subscribe to, if you wish -- these are available by replacing "yourhashtag" from the following URL with the name of the tag you want to follow: http://instagr.am/tags/yourhashtag/feed/recent.rss

Basically, an Instagram hashtag is much like a photo album, only anyone can easily add pictures to it. And brands seem to love the new functionality. Instagram has partnered with Charity: Water, Brisk Iced Tea, NPR, and many others, who have already launched their own hashtag campaigns. For example, Charity:Water is asking Instagram users to tag pictures of water in their life by using #charitywater. In the future, expect many more brands to hop on this bandwagon, since it provides them with a very cheap way to promote themselves and their offerings.

Download Instagram with hashtag support from the iTunes App Store

Instagram adds hashtags, brands already love them originally appeared on Download Squad on Fri, 28 Jan 2011 10:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Larissa Meek Gina Carano Sanaa Lathan Ana Beatriz Barros Maria Menounos

Blue Jays sign Jon Rauch

Teri Hatcher Lauren Bush Natalie Zea Brody Dalle Taryn Manning

USC has one final plea to the NCAA. In the meantime, full speed ahead to signing day.

If you're one of the many fans whose first reaction to the heavy-handed NCAA sanctions handed down against USC last summer as punishment for the assorted crimes and misdemeanors of ex-Trojan star Reggie Bush in 2004-05 was "That's not fair," this is the weekend you've been waiting for: USC officials will be in Indianapolis over the weekend for a last-gasp appearance in front of the Infractions Appeals Committee, which will hear the university's argument to lift the second year of a two-year bowl ban (the Trojans have already served the first year) and scale back scholarship restrictions by half, from 10 fewer schollies per year over the next three years to five fewer per year.

Athletic director Pat Haden isn't getting his hopes up, given the roughly 10 percent success rate of appeals, but some smart outsiders are more optimistic about the Trojans' chances. Based on the committee's usual timeline, there won't be a verdict either way for 4-6 weeks.

In the meantime, coach Lane Kiffin has a recruiting class to finalize, and sanctions haven't had any discernible effect on the quality: As usual, every major outlet ranks the Trojans' 2011 class among the top five incoming classes in the country based on these standing list of verbal commitments and early enrollees, which this year includes seven players ranked among Rivals' top 100 overall prospects in the country. Among that group, the Trojans have commitments from two of the top five overall players, local headliners George Farmer and De'Anthony Thomas, and two of the top three "pro-style" quarterbacks, early enrollees Max Wittek and Cody Kessler. Typical.

Even with sanctions pending, though, the quantity is also typical. At the moment, the incoming class is 25 members strong, eight of whom have already signed and enrolled, counting against the (unrestricted) 2010 scholarship cap. That leaves 17 likely signees already in the fold, with three more expected by signing day on Feb. 2. If he wanted, Kiffin could theoretically ink a full, 25-man class on signing day to round out the roster to a full 85 scholarship players – the maximum allowable under NCAA rules.

Those numbers are possible despite the mandated scholarship reductions, according to NCAA spokesman Stacy Osburn's statement to the Orange County Register, because "generally speaking, when a school is appealing a penalty, that penalty is staid until a decision by the Infractions Appeals Committee is rendered." In other words, because USC won't know the result of its appeal on Feb. 2, it can essentially proceed as if it's going to win. In this case, that probably means a 20-man class, in anticipation of the penalty being slashed from 10 lost scholarships per year (limiting the Trojans to 15 signees) to five per year (limiting them to twenty).

Of course, if the Trojans lose the appeal when the verdict comes down in March or April, they face either a significant roster purge or an even stricter cap in 2012, when they could theoretically be reduced to signing a mere ten players to make up for this year's (apparent) overage. But it looks like the plan is to forge ahead and jump that ditch when they come to it.

- - -
Matt Hinton is on Twitter: Follow him @DrSaturday.

Eva Longoria Susan Ward Emmy Rossum Kim Yoon jin Melania Trump

Instagram adds hashtags, brands already love them

Instagram hashtagInstagram -- the app all the cool kids with iPhones use to snap, filter, and share pictures -- has received an update yesterday that adds support for hashtags. These work in a similar fashion to the way they do on Twitter. You can tag a photo you share by adding a hashtag either in the caption or comment field. Each hashtag gets its own page , which you can get to by clicking on a hashtag underneath a photo you're viewing or searching for hashtags using the new search functionality that you can find after you tap on your account name in the app.

Each tag even has its own RSS feed that you can subscribe to, if you wish -- these are available by replacing "yourhashtag" from the following URL with the name of the tag you want to follow: http://instagr.am/tags/yourhashtag/feed/recent.rss

Basically, an Instagram hashtag is much like a photo album, only anyone can easily add pictures to it. And brands seem to love the new functionality. Instagram has partnered with Charity: Water, Brisk Iced Tea, NPR, and many others, who have already launched their own hashtag campaigns. For example, Charity:Water is asking Instagram users to tag pictures of water in their life by using #charitywater. In the future, expect many more brands to hop on this bandwagon, since it provides them with a very cheap way to promote themselves and their offerings.

Download Instagram with hashtag support from the iTunes App Store

Instagram adds hashtags, brands already love them originally appeared on Download Squad on Fri, 28 Jan 2011 10:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Mariah OBrien Uma Thurman Alice Dodd Kate Walsh Autumn Reeser

Star Power: Recruiting gurus' All-American track record, by the numbers

With signing day looming, it's time for the Doc's annual, week-long defense of the recruiting-industrial complex. Part One: Recruiting rankings and All-Americans.

The holy hour of the vast, seedy recruiting underworld, national signing day, is a little over a week away, which is also the signal for legions of recruiting skeptics to sound their annual, anecdotal chants of "Ryan Perrilloux!" and "Notre Dame!" and snake oil!" And occasionally, they make a persuasive case. On All-Americans, for example: If you were to go back and review the projections for American Football Coaches' Association, the Associated Press, the Football Writers of America, the Sporting News and the Walter Camp Foundation – in 2010, only five came into college as can't-miss, five-star blue chips, the cream of the crop.

By contrast, more than five times as many of those All-Americans – 28, to be exact, more than half of the total –were rated three stars or lower by the recruiting services. According to the gurus, the top three or four recruiting powers in the country should field more talented rosters than that by themselves.

If you didn't know any better, you might be convinced all those recruiting stars everyone gets worked up about every winter didn't correspond to future success at all, a theme you might become familiar with over the next week or so as the annual plague of mockery begins.

Fortunately, because we've been bestowed by the American education system with the magic of basic arithmetic, we do know better. If you look more closely at the relationship between initial expectations and eventual production, there's a very good reason for the heavy distribution of lower-ranked players among the nation's best, beginning with the distribution of stars at the beginning of the process, according to Rivals' extensive database of signees to I-A schools over the last five years:

I would hope that two and three-star players could acquit themselves well enough to produce a large number of big names, since they account for more than 85 percent of signees nationally. Again, using the rosters of the five NCAA-recognized All-America teams, the situation changes dramatically when you look at the All-America numbers in light of those ratios:

Maybe a raw ratio of 1 in 13 – or even 1 in 10, or whatever the "adjusted" number is after accounting for the early departures, injuries and academics that these numbers make no attempt to reflect – isn't all that impressive by itself. After all, that means far more elite recruits are falling short of their star-studded birthright than are reaching it. Across the board, failure and mediocrity are the norm, but if you think of a four or five-star player as a guy who is supposed to become an All-American – and a two or three-star guy as someone who is definitely not supposed to become an All-American – then yes, the rankings frequently miss.

On the other hand, if you consider the initial grade as a kind of investment – a projection of the how likely a player is of becoming an elite contributor compared to rest of the field – well, you'd put your money with the "experts" over the chances of finding the proverbial diamond in the rough every time:

Of course, a large number of players in that sample size haven't finished their careers, but you can divide up the numbers over any time period you'd like – one year, five years, 10 years: The ratio always looks identical on a per-capita basis, and it is not a crapshoot. Four and five-star players are roughly seven times as likely as two and three-star players to land on an All-America team, and the numbers in the NFL Draft tend to be even even more lopsided toward the hyped recruits. All the more reason to want as many of them as you can get your hands on.

That's the story on an individual level. We'll continue later in the week with a look at the rankings as they relate to team-wide success.

- - -
Matt Hinton is on Twitter: Follow him @DrSaturday.

Mýa Natalie Imbruglia Patricia Velásquez Jennifer Morrison Adrianne Palicki