Finding Holes in Tesla's Data, <em>New York Times</em> Assertions



Tesla’s late-night data dump might have refuted some of the claims surrounding John Broder’s ill-fated drive in the Tesla Model S. But there are still questions for both the automaker and The New York Times.


To begin with, there’s one massive chunk of the data missing from the puzzle: GPS. According to a Tesla spokeswoman, the automaker didn’t have GPS data turned on in the car, which makes Tesla’s claims that Broder drove around in circle in a Supercharger parking lot dubious, at best.


But Broder doesn’t help the matter, admitting to the Daily Intelligencer (via New York Magazine) that, “I was circling the parking lot in the service plaza looking for the unmarked and unlighted Supercharger port in the dark. I was not trying to drain the battery.” He repeated this claim to the San Jose Mercury News, saying “I was looking for the charger, which is not well labeled or lighted.” However, this was the second time Broder had been to the Newark Supercharger station, so why was it hard to find?


Tesla also claims that the State of Charge indicator never reached zero. But Elon Musk didn’t need to delve deep into the car’s logs to determine that. The Model S is incapable of reaching a zero charge. The controllers connected to the lithium-ion battery packs won’t let the charge be completely depleted as that would “brick” the battery, rendering it useless. There always has to be some kind of energy stored in the packs to avoid damaging the battery.


That makes the small residual charge in the battery a meaningless technicality, not a smoking gun. Broder, seeing an ominous “car is shutting down” indicator on the instrument panel, assumed he was completely out of juice and did what any thinking individual would do: He pulled off the road, stopped and shut the vehicle down. Unfortunately, there wasn’t enough charge in the high-voltage pack to continue powering the 12-volt accessories, which includes the parking brake, meaning the Model S was immobile and unable to be driven onto the flatbed.



Tesla also claims that Broder never completely charged the battery pack, including the first Supercharger stop where the vehicle told him the charge was complete, despite only being at 90 percent capacity.


This mistake is fully on Tesla, as the automaker didn’t instruct Broder to enable Max Range mode, freeing up an additional 20-plus miles of range and allowing the battery to be fully charged. Tesla doesn’t suggest using Max Range mode on a normal basis as it contributes to more wear and tear on the battery, but this would be the perfect use case for the feature.


Tesla also suggests that Broder didn’t turn down the interior temperature during the trip, but the chart it released last night shows a dip in the climate control temp from 225 to 300 miles. It might not have been exactly when Broder claimed, but he did it nonetheless.




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Lady Gaga needs hip surgery, cancels remainder of tour






LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Lady Gaga canceled the remainder of her “Born This Way Ball” concert tour to undergo hip surgery, promoters Live Nation said on Wednesday.


The 26-year-old singer announced she was suffering from an inflammation of the joints on Tuesday, but the tour operator said Gaga’s injuries were more serious than she realized.






“After additional tests this morning to review the severity of the issue, it has been determined that Lady Gaga has a labral tear of the right hip,” Live Nation said in a statement.


“She will need surgery to repair the problem, followed by strict downtime to recover. This, unfortunately, will force her to cancel the tour so she can heal,” it added.


Gaga has been on the road for two years, traveling across six continents.


On Tuesday, she postponed four U.S. shows saying she was suffering from synovitis that left her temporarily unable to walk. Synovitis is an inflammation of the joints that sometimes follows a sprain, strain or injury.


According to her website, the singer was due to play another 20 dates in the United States.


Live Nation said ticket holders would have their money refunded, starting on Thursday.


(Reporting By Jill Serjeant; Editing by Stacey Joyce)


Music News Headlines – Yahoo! News





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Doctor and Patient: Afraid to Speak Up to Medical Power

The slender, weather-beaten, elderly Polish immigrant had been diagnosed with lung cancer nearly a year earlier and was receiving chemotherapy as part of a clinical trial. I was a surgical consultant, called in to help control the fluid that kept accumulating in his lungs.

During one visit, he motioned for me to come closer. His voice was hoarse from a tumor that spread, and the constant hissing from his humidified oxygen mask meant I had to press my face nearly against his to understand his words.

“This is getting harder, doctor,” he rasped. “I’m not sure I’m up to anymore chemo.”

I was not the only doctor that he confided to. But what I quickly learned was that none of us was eager to broach the topic of stopping treatment with his primary cancer doctor.

That doctor was a rising superstar in the world of oncology, a brilliant physician-researcher who had helped discover treatments for other cancers and who had been recruited to lead our hospital’s then lackluster cancer center. Within a few months of the doctor’s arrival, the once sleepy department began offering a dazzling array of experimental drugs. Calls came in from outside doctors eager to send their patients in for treatment, and every patient who was seen was promptly enrolled in one of more than a dozen well-documented treatment protocols.

But now, no doctors felt comfortable suggesting anything but the most cutting-edge, aggressive treatments.

Even the No. 2 doctor in the cancer center, Robin to the chief’s cancer-battling Batman, was momentarily taken aback when I suggested we reconsider the patient’s chemotherapy plan. “I don’t want to tell him,” he said, eyes widening. He reeled off his chief’s vast accomplishments. “I mean, who am I to tell him what to do?”

We stood for a moment in silence before he pointed his index finger at me. “You tell him,” he said with a smile. “You tell him to consider stopping treatment.”

Memories of this conversation came flooding back last week when I read an essay on the problems posed by hierarchies within the medical profession.

For several decades, medical educators and sociologists have documented the existence of hierarchies and an intense awareness of rank among doctors. The bulk of studies have focused on medical education, a process often likened to military and religious training, with elder patriarchs imposing the hair shirt of shame on acolytes unable to incorporate a profession’s accepted values and behaviors. Aspiring doctors quickly learn whose opinions, experiences and voices count, and it is rarely their own. Ask a group of interns who’ve been on the wards for but a week, and they will quickly raise their hands up to the level of their heads to indicate their teachers’ status and importance, then lower them toward their feet to demonstrate their own.

It turns out that this keen awareness of ranking is not limited to students and interns. Other research has shown that fully trained physicians are acutely aware of a tacit professional hierarchy based on specialties, like primary care versus neurosurgery, or even on diseases different specialists might treat, like hemorrhoids and constipation versus heart attacks and certain cancers.

But while such professional preoccupation with privilege can make for interesting sociological fodder, the real issue, warns the author of a courageous essay published recently in The New England Journal of Medicine, is that such an overly developed sense of hierarchy comes at an unacceptable price: good patient care.

Dr. Ranjana Srivastava, a medical oncologist at the Monash Medical Centre in Melbourne, Australia, recalls a patient she helped to care for who died after an operation. Before the surgery, Dr. Srivastava had been hesitant to voice her concerns, assuming that the patient’s surgeon must be “unequivocally right, unassailable, or simply not worth antagonizing.” When she confesses her earlier uncertainty to the surgeon after the patient’s death, Dr. Srivastava learns that the surgeon had been just as loath to question her expertise and had assumed that her silence before the surgery meant she agreed with his plan to operate.

“Each of us was trying our best to help a patient, but we were also respecting the boundaries and hierarchy imposed by our professional culture,” Dr. Srivastava said. “The tragedy was that the patient died, when speaking up would have made all the difference.”

Compounding the problem is an increasing sense of self-doubt among many doctors. With rapid advances in treatment, there is often no single correct “answer” for a patient’s problem, and doctors, struggling to stay up-to-date in their own particular specialty niches, are more tentative about making suggestions that cross over to other doctors’ “turf.” Even as some clinicians attempt to compensate by organizing multidisciplinary meetings, inviting doctors from all specialties to discuss a patient’s therapeutic options, “there will inevitably be a hierarchy at those meetings of who is speaking,” Dr. Srivastava noted. “And it won’t always be the ones who know the most about the patient who will be taking the lead.”

It is the potentially disastrous repercussions for patients that make this overly developed awareness of rank and boundaries a critical issue in medicine. Recent efforts to raise safety standards and improve patient care have shown that teams are a critical ingredient for success. But simply organizing multidisciplinary lineups of clinicians isn’t enough. What is required are teams that recognize the importance of all voices and encourage active and open debate.

Since their patient’s death, Dr. Srivastava and the surgeon have worked together to discuss patient cases, articulate questions and describe their own uncertainties to each other and in patients’ notes. “We have tried to remain cognizant of the fact that we are susceptible to thinking about hierarchy,” Dr. Srivastava said. “We have tried to remember that sometimes, despite our best intentions, we do not speak up for our patients because we are fearful of the consequences.”

That was certainly true for my lung cancer patient. Like all the other doctors involved in his care, I hesitated to talk to the chief medical oncologist. I questioned my own credentials, my lack of expertise in this particular area of oncology and even my own clinical judgment. When the patient appeared to fare better, requiring less oxygen and joking and laughing more than I had ever seen in the past, I took his improvement to be yet another sign that my attempt to talk about holding back chemotherapy was surely some surgical folly.

But a couple of days later, the humidified oxygen mask came back on. And not long after that, the patient again asked for me to come close.

This time he said: “I’m tired. I want to stop the chemo.”

Just before he died, a little over a week later, he was off all treatment except for what might make him comfortable. He thanked me and the other doctors for our care, but really, we should have thanked him and apologized. Because he had pushed us out of our comfortable, well-delineated professional zones. He had prodded us to talk to one another. And he showed us how to work as a team in order to do, at last, what we should have done weeks earlier.

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Cardinal Health Buys AssuraMed for $2 Billion





Cardinal Health, the second-largest distributor of prescription drugs, announced on Thursday that it was buying a large medical supplier in a $2 billion deal aimed at expanding the business into the growing area of home health care.




The medical supplier, the privately held AssuraMed, supplies products for home use to aid treatment of diabetes, wounds, incontinence and other conditions. It had revenue of $1 billion in 2012, Cardinal Health said.


AssuraMed, which has been owned by the private equity firms Clayton, Dubilier & Rice and Goldman Sachs’s GS Capital Partners, serves more than one million patients nationwide and sells more than 30,000 products.


In an interview, George S. Barrett, Cardinal’s chairman and chief executive, said the acquisition was aimed at taking advantage of a confluence of national trends: the aging population, which has led to an increase in patients with chronic conditions, and more treatment of those conditions at home or in nonhospital settings like doctors’ offices and outpatient clinics.


“One of the things that has become clear is we’re going to have to manage patients differently,” Mr. Barrett said. “It very strategically aligns with where we think health care is moving, and it’s a natural extension of our skill set.”


In a conference call with investors, Mr. Barrett said the home health care area was growing at nearly 7 percent and represented a market opportunity of about $16 billion.


The deal is expected to close in April and will be financed with a combination of $1.3 billion in senior unsecured notes and cash. Cardinal estimated the acquisition would add 2 to 3 cents to its earnings a share in 2013, and 18 cents a share by 2014.


Cardinal, based in Dublin, Ohio, had revenue of $108 billion in 2012, and ranks second in the drug-distribution market behind the McKesson Corporation, based in San Francisco. AssuraMed is based in Twinsburg, Ohio.


Shares in Cardinal closed up 56 cents, or 1.2 percent, at $46 on Thursday.


Cardinal was advised by Bank of America Merrill Lynch and the law firm Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen & Katz. Clayton Dubilier and GS Capital were advised by JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs and the law firm Debevoise & Plimpton.


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Defense Nerds Strike Back: A Symposium on the Battle of Hoth



So. You guys have really, really strong opinions about the Battle of Hoth.


Many took issue with my argument that Hoth represented a military debacle for the Galactic Empire. Some questioned the (meta)factual premises of my case (are TIE Fighters even capable of in-atmospheric flight?). Others argued that Vader was deliberately trying to lose, rendering my essay myopic. Still others desired to travel back in time and physically accost my childhood self, so as to spare me the error of even thinking about Hoth. Anger, fear, aggression: the dark side are they.


My responses are less interesting than those that others can provide. So we at Danger Room widened the aperture and brought in six military nerds — soldiers, academics, bloggers — with a similarly abiding love for Star Wars. Some agree with me, most disagree with me, and all add keen insights, except for when they disagree with me. In any event, check out their thoughts on Hoth, for the Force is strong with them.



If Hoth was a defeat for Darth Vader, as Spencer Ackerman contends, it was a short-lived one at best. Thanks to well-conceived contingency plans, and a judicious use of nefarious private military contractors, Darth Vader was still well along the path to achieving his ultimate strategic objective: turning Luke Skywalker to the Dark Side of the Force, and finally overthrowing the Emperor. Of course, Vader’s agenda only tangentially marries up with that of the Imperial Forces at large, and is cross-purposes with that of the Emperor. Thus, Vader’s true objective in the attack on Hoth is not the destruction of the Rebel Alliance, but rather, capturing Luke. In many ways, Darth Vader is a one-man shadow government, who seeks to find and shelter the religious extremist responsible for the greatest terrorist act ever perpetrated against the Empire — all to further his own personal political agenda.


Luke Skywalker may have escaped to Dagobah, sure, but Yoda saves Vader the expense and hassle of having to train young Luke. In fact, Luke’s escape actually gives Vader plausible deniability when Emperor Palpatine confronts Vader via hologram on Luke’s paternity.


Vader’s true strategic failure comes not at Hoth, but at Bespin, when he fails to turn Luke to the Dark Side. By the next film, Vader’s been removed from field command, relegated to overseeing defense contractors working on yet another flawed and bloated acquisitions program. And of course, in Return of the Jedi, it’s Emperor Palpatine’s turn to take the offensive, using Luke to dispatch his weakened apprentice, and carry on the Sith legacy. In Star Wars, intergalactic civil war is little more than a vehicle to advance the grand plan of the Sith.


Major Crispin J. Burke is a U.S. Army Aviator who blogs at Wings Over Iraq. Follow him on Twitter at @CrispinBurke.


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Nicole Kidman, Halle Berry, Reese Witherspoon, Sandra Bullock presenting at Oscars






LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) – Four former Best Actress winners will converge on stage at this year’s Oscar telecast, the show’s producers said Wednesday.


Halle Berry, Sandra Bullock, Nicole Kidman and Reese Witherspoon will present an award, although the show’s producers were mum about whether or not they will take the stage together. If they do, it may mean a return to a format that was deployed and favorably received during the 2009 broadcast.






During that show, former winners of acting awards appeared on stage together to give short speeches praising each of the nominees. That was revived in a slightly modified form in the 2010 telecast, in which co-stars or celebrity friends of the various nominees were called on to pay tribute before the winner was announced.


Traditionally, the previous winner of an acting award reads out the nominees and hands out the statue without assistance.


Berry won the Oscar for her performance as a grieving widow in “Monster’s Ball” (2001), Bullock for her work as a feisty housewife and football fan in “The Blind Side” (2009), Kidman for playing a depressive Virginia Woolf in “The Hours” (2002) and Witherspoon for channeling June Carter Cash in “Walk the Line” (2005).


Other previously announced Oscar presenters including Mark Wahlberg, Channing Tatum, Daniel Radcliffe and “Marvel’s The Avengers” cast members Robert Downey Jr., Samuel L. Jackson, Chris Evans, Jeremy Renner and Mark Ruffalo.


The Oscars will be hosted by Seth MacFarlane and will air on February 24.


Movies News Headlines – Yahoo! News




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Phys Ed: Getting the Right Dose of Exercise

Phys Ed

Gretchen Reynolds on the science of fitness.

Fitness Tracker

Marathon, half-marathon, 10k and 5K training plans to get you race ready.

A common concern about exercise is that if you don’t do it almost every day, you won’t achieve much health benefit. But a commendable new study suggests otherwise, showing that a fairly leisurely approach to scheduling workouts may actually be more beneficial than working out almost daily.

For the new study, published this month in Exercise & Science in Sports & Medicine, researchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham gathered 72 older, sedentary women and randomly assigned them to one of three exercise groups.

One group began lifting weights once a week and performing an endurance-style workout, like jogging or bike riding, on another day.

Another group lifted weights twice a week and jogged or rode an exercise bike twice a week.

The final group, as you may have guessed, completed three weight-lifting and three endurance sessions, or six weekly workouts.

The exercise, which was supervised by researchers, was easy at first and meant to elicit changes in both muscles and endurance. Over the course of four months, the intensity and duration gradually increased, until the women were jogging moderately for 40 minutes and lifting weights for about the same amount of time.

The researchers were hoping to find out which number of weekly workouts would be, Goldilocks-like, just right for increasing the women’s fitness and overall weekly energy expenditure.

Some previous studies had suggested that working out only once or twice a week produced few gains in fitness, while exercising vigorously almost every day sometimes led people to become less physically active, over all, than those formally exercising less. Researchers theorized that the more grueling workout schedule caused the central nervous system to respond as if people were overdoing things, sending out physiological signals that, in an unconscious internal reaction, prompted them to feel tired or lethargic and stop moving so much.

To determine if either of these possibilities held true among their volunteers, the researchers in the current study tracked the women’s blood levels of cytokines, a substance related to stress that is thought to be one of the signals the nervous system uses to determine if someone is overdoing things physically. They also measured the women’s changing aerobic capacities, muscle strength, body fat, moods and, using sophisticated calorimetry techniques, energy expenditure over the course of each week.

By the end of the four-month experiment, all of the women had gained endurance and strength and shed body fat, although weight loss was not the point of the study. The scientists had not asked the women to change their eating habits.

There were, remarkably, almost no differences in fitness gains among the groups. The women working out twice a week had become as powerful and aerobically fit as those who had worked out six times a week. There were no discernible differences in cytokine levels among the groups, either.

However, the women exercising four times per week were now expending far more energy, over all, than the women in either of the other two groups. They were burning about 225 additional calories each day, beyond what they expended while exercising, compared to their calorie burning at the start of the experiment.

The twice-a-week exercisers also were using more energy each day than they had been at first, burning almost 100 calories more daily, in addition to the calories used during workouts.

But the women who had been assigned to exercise six times per week were now expending considerably less daily energy than they had been at the experiment’s start, the equivalent of almost 200 fewer calories each day, even though they were exercising so assiduously.

“We think that the women in the twice-a-week and four-times-a-week groups felt more energized and physically capable” after several months of training than they had at the start of the study, says Gary Hunter, a U.A.B. professor who led the experiment. Based on conversations with the women, he says he thinks they began opting for stairs over escalators and walking for pleasure.

The women working out six times a week, though, reacted very differently. “They complained to us that working out six times a week took too much time,” Dr. Hunter says. They did not report feeling fatigued or physically droopy. Their bodies were not producing excessive levels of cytokines, sending invisible messages to the body to slow down.

Rather, they felt pressed for time and reacted, it seems, by making choices like driving instead of walking and impatiently avoiding the stairs.

Despite the cautionary note, those who insist on working out six times per week need not feel discouraged. As long as you consciously monitor your activity level, the findings suggest, you won’t necessarily and unconsciously wind up moving less over all.

But the more fundamental finding of this study, Dr. Hunter says, is that “less may be more,” a message that most likely resonates with far more of us. The women exercising four times a week “had the greatest overall increase in energy expenditure,” he says. But those working out only twice a week “weren’t far behind.”

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Cisco Tops Expectations With Rise in Profit of 44%





SAN FRANCISCO — Cisco Systems reported surprisingly strong results for its second quarter despite concerns about weak demand in some areas.




Cisco, the San Jose, Calif., networking giant, said that net income in the second quarter rose 44 percent to $3.1 billion, or 59 cents a share, from the year-ago quarter.


The company said revenue climbed 5 percent, to $12.1 billion.


Excluding certain items, such as tax gains and stock-compensation expenses, Cisco had earnings of 51 cents per share.


The results exceeded the expectations of Wall Street analysts, who had projected earnings of 48 cents a share and revenue of $12.06 billion, according to a survey of analysts by Thomson Reuters.


“Cisco delivered record earnings,” John Chambers, Cisco’s chief executive officer, said in a release accompanying the results. “We are making solid progress towards our goal of becoming the number-one information technology company in the world.”


Cisco has traditionally met, or slightly exceeded, Wall Street’s earnings expectations.


Over the past two years, Cisco has reorganized, paring down much of its consumer business and refocusing on new technology initiatives, such as cloud computing.


In December, Mr. Chambers announced plans to move Cisco from just selling gear that routes Internet data into the development of highly networked systems of sensors and data analysis machines. That plan, which involves working closely with large companies and governments, remains in its early stages.


Sales of regular networking equipment to government remains a key part of Cisco’s business. Analysts had been concerned that poor demand from governments, along with economic jitters in Europe, could hurt Cisco’s performance.


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Guantanamo witness testifies on courtroom eavesdropping allegations









FT. MEADE, Md. -- Top officials at the terror detainee prison at the U.S. Naval Base on Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, began testifying in a pretrial hearing Tuesday about courtroom security and allegations that the CIA or other U.S. intelligence officials are secretly listening to private conversations between defense lawyers and five accused Sept. 11 plotters.

First to the witness stand -- in fact the first substantial witness to testify in the military tribunal case that is the only prosecution in the 2001 terror attacks -- was Maurice Elkins, an Army veteran who is the director of technology for the new courtroom built next to the prison compound that houses 166 detainees.


In a crisp gray suit, Elkins testified that it would be almost impossible for any outside intelligence officials, known by the ambiguous acronym OCA for Original Classification Authority, to tap into the private defense conversations, and less likely they could record them.





But, he conceded, “I do not know what the OCA’s capability is.”


Yet while acknowledging that outside intelligence officials are indeed monitoring the proceedings should any classified information be inadvertently disclosed, Elkins added, “No entity in the U.S. government has ever asked me for recordings.”


Though Elkins was a defense witness, his testimony largely mirrored the government’s position that confidential defense conversations are not being picked up by the CIA or other intelligence agencies.


However, under questioning from David Nevin, an attorney for alleged Sept. 11 mastermind Khalid Shaikh Mohammed,  Judge James L. Pohl, an Army colonel, acknowledged that intelligence authorities could be listening in and recording.


When Nevin asked if it was possible the OCA was recording everything they were picking up, the judge stepped in and answered the questions. “Anything is possible,” he said. “Most witnesses would agree that anything in life is possible.”


Elkins put it this way:  "I wouldn't know OCA if I walked next to OCA on the street or played basketball with OCA.” He added,  “You’re asking me to assume they are recording, and I can’t answer that.”


The defense, however, filed an emergency motion to address the matter, claiming that covert intelligence officials are listening in on their private courtroom discussion, as well as to visits the lawyers have with their clients in the prison.


Also scheduled to testify Tuesday are Navy Capt. Thomas Welsh, the staff judge advocate at the prison, and Army Col. John Bogdan, the compound commander.


ALSO:

Former Californian gets Medal of Honor for valor in Afghanistan

In Northeast, Monday was a day of struggling to dig out from blizzard


SEAL sniper Chris Kyle gets public farewell at Cowboys Stadium





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Intel Teases Set-Top Box to Compete With Cable



Intel is developing a set-top box that delivers video on demand and live TV over the internet, a move that would place it in competition with the likes of Roku and your local cable company.


There’s no word on who’ll provide the all-important content we’d see on such a box or what we’d pay for it when it appears later this year, but Erik Huggers, Intel’s corporate vice president of media, promises a “superior experience” to what is already hooked up to your TV.


Huggers, speaking at the Dive Into Media event Tuesday, said the new device will launch under its own brand under Intel’s new media division. The service and set-top box are a huge departure for a company that has made its name supplying chipsets to just about everyone and has a less-than-stellar track record bringing products to the consumer market.


The device and web-TV service will compete directly with cable and satellite providers by delivering live TV via the internet. The box also will offer video on demand and a feature called Catch Up TV, which also is available in the BBC iPlayer. That means everything that is broadcast on network or cable TV would be available to play whenever you like, making it something like a cloud-based DVR that records everything on your TV. In that way, Intel isn’t just gunning for content providers, but also for the Apple TV and Roku box.


That’s because Intel thinks you have too many devices plugged into your TV, and it’s positioning its as yet unnamed box as “an all in one solution” to handle all your content. Huggers mentioned Netflix, suggesting we might see the streaming service as a partner.


The chipmaker had long been rumored to be working on its own streaming service and device. Tuesday’s announcement puts those rumors to rest but raises many new questions. The most pressing is how is this different than what’s already on the market. For example, how will this be different than subscribing to cable and will it save viewers money?


Current cable and satellite services package channels and sell them as bundles. These bundles have been a huge financial pain for viewers, because you’re often paying for channels you don’t watch. And while Huggers was quick to point out that bundles aren’t going away, he did say, “if bundles are done right, I think there is real value in that. An opportunity to create a more flexible environment.”  A la carte programming is still a long way off, but Huggers hinted at a bundling scenario somewhere between a la carte and the current cable and satellite offerings.


Even with a smarter bundle, don’t expect to save money on your bill. The unnamed Intel box that isn’t an Intel-branded-box is “not a value play but a quality play to create a superior experience,” Huggers said. That experience includes a redesigned electronic program guide and camera that determines who is watching TV and adjusts the environment and suggestions based on who is watching. If you’re concerned about privacy and you watch TV in your underwear, you can turn it off. Other superior features and pricing were not discussed, but Intel has its work cut out for it. Winning this game is all about providing solid content.


This is a huge leap for a company known more for the silicon powering computers than selling devices directly to consumers. Intel has produced reference designs for ultrabooks, smartphones and Windows 8 device hybrids for third parties, but its own consumer products and services have been largely ignored. Most would be surprised, for example, to learn that Intel has an app store called AppUp and a small Mac mini competitor called the NUC. Intel’s problem isn’t necessarily making good products, it’s marketing them.


And while the company has been recruiting employees from Apple, Jawbone, BBC and Microsoft to create this new device and new division, it’s going to have to make sure people actually know about it. Plus it really will have to deliver a substantially superior experience to cable and other set-top boxes to end up connected to the HDMI ports of viewer’s HDTVs.


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