Saab victorious in inaugural Swedish Touring Car race

The sequel to Frankenstein is being written in Swedish, by Saab. The ostensibly former car company could teach the good doctor about life after death, having earned itself more good news by winning the inaugural race of the Swedish Touring Car series. Team Tidö’s black 9-3 racer was on pole and carried that lead all the way to the checkered flag. Driving it was Linus Ohlsson, whose past triumphs include taking third in the 2011 Porsche Carrera Cup Scandinavia series.
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GM says Facebook ads not effective, pulls campaign ahead of IPO

The Internets are buzzing over the upcoming initial public offering of Facebook, but General Motors doesn’t seem all that impressed. The Huffington Post reports that The General has pulled its Facebook ad campaigns just days before the social media site is scheduled to officially hit the stock market.
The pricey ad buy reportedly wasn’t paying sufficient dividends for GM, which spends billions of dollars on advertising every year. GM Spokesperson Pat Morrissey confirmed that Facebook was being reassessed, but added that the automaker routinely reviews where it is spending its ad dollars. Morrissey then added that GM is looking for effectiveness when it doles out marketing cash, which doesn’t bode well for Facebook’s ability to draw clicks.
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Chery requests Chinese approval of $1.9B joint venture with Jaguar Land Rover

A month ago, Jaguar Land Rover signed a joint-venture agreement with China’s Chery Automobile Company. JLR’s 12.1 billion yuan ($1.9 billion U.S.) investment, if approved, will pay for a plant in Changsu to build Jaguars, Land Rovers, engines and joint-venture models. The facility will also house a research and development center. Chery has submitted the paperwork to clear the deal with the Chinese government. The agreement must pass muster with the Ministry of Enviroment Protection, after which it will go to the National Development and Reform Commission.
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WSJ: Apple moving towards larger iPhone screens
The idea of a smaller iPad has been rattling around the tech rumor mill for many a month now, but the iPhone’s 3.5-inch screen? That’s sacred surely? Well, according to the Wall Street Journal, apparently not. It’s reporting that those ever-famous “people familiar with the situation” have told it that Apple has ordered screens that are larger that the ones used in the flagship phone so far.
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PSA: Google Music allows four device de-authorizations per year, rooters beware
Just when you thought you could go on rooting and switching ROMs with impunity, it turns out you can’t — at least, not if you want to continue enjoying your Google Music account. Watchful eyes at XDA Developers have discovered a snag in Google’s authorization system, which means that not only is there an upper limit of ten devices that can be authorized simultaneously, but there’s also
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Xbox 360 adds Manga, MUZU apps; upgrades Aussie FOXTEL with Kinect
The Xbox 360 has added a couple new entertainment apps for your audio-visual pleasure. Starting things off, in the States, there’s the Manga app, which enables users to view full length episodes, movies and clips from the Manga Entertainment catalog.
For the northern parts of North America, MUZU.TV will we available to Xbox Live customers in the United States and Canada. MUZU is a … (*googles*) apparently, it’s a music video site, with over 40,000 mini musicals on demand.
Finally, Australians have upgraded FOXTEL with Kinect functionality. The virtual controls on that stuff aren’t what one would call efficient, but Kinect compatibility is still worth it for the joys of “Xbox Pause” and “Xbox Play” functionality.
PSA: Mario Kart 7 patch fixes Maka Wuhu exploit
Along with a 3DS firmware update (which doesn’t do anything interesting), a new patch sent to 3DSes yesterday closes up the Maka Wuhu shortcut, in Mario Kart 7. The patch is required for online play, so you will no longer see miraculous leaps forward on that particular course. The glitch still shows up in time trials.
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Netgear adds R6200 router and A6200 USB adapter to its 802.11ac family
In its ongoing battle against internet bottlenecks — or let’s face it — techie bragging rights, Netgear has launched two more devices with that sweet, sweet 802.11ac data flow. Joining its recently announced R6300 router, is the R6200 model, which supports a combined WiFi speed of 1200 Mbps, has a USB port for networking devices, and of course also rides the a, b, g and n waves too — if you don’t have any 802.11ac kit just yet. Well, as it happens, Netgear thought of that, and has also announced the A6200 dual band USB WiFi adapter to, literally, bring your existing kit up to speed. If you want in on the action, you’ll need to spend $179.99 and $69.99 respectively when they launch in Q3 this year. Full specs in the PR after the break.
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Bricolo mechanical music system hand-on (video)
Nick Yulman has been doing the whole mechanical music thing for sometime. In fact, the first time he came to our attention was at Maker Faire a couple of years back, when he had a cadre of small robotic instruments set up on a table in a quiet corner near the food stands. For ITP’s Spring Show, Nick decided to share the love and brought along his Bricolo mechanical music system. Comprised of a number of different modules, Bricolo is meant to simplify the act of incorporating robotics and physical objects into the creation of “electronic” music. The two main pieces are a drum arm, which can be mounted on a mic stand and uses and uses a simple actuator to swing a drum stick, and a platform with a small solenoid that can produce either percussive rhythms or melodic tones. All of the pieces can be easily controlled by any MIDI instrument or sequencer.
The small platform that can produce actual musical
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NVIDIA outs a pair of Tesla GPUs to electrify your supercomputer
NVIDIA’s announced a pair of Tesla GPUs that’ll give some extra pep to your supercomputing tasks. The K10 and K20 units harness the power of Kepler to add more muscle to the company’s scientific and technical computing arm that supplies gear to the Barcelona Supercomputing Center and Tokyo’s Tsubame 2.0. Internal tests reveal that the hardware is around three times faster than the company’s Fermi GPUs — with the latter card expected to arrive at the end of the year. The company didn’t announce pricing, since its aiming them squarely at the big academic institutions, defense contractors and oil explorers — but if your surname is Buffet or Abramovitch, then they might sell you one at trade.
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