This is the house that Jerry built. Jerry Jones, owner of the Dallas Cowboys, created a state-of-the-art football arena like no other. Cowboys Stadium will be the home of Super Bowl XLV, this years version of the NFLs annual celebration of all things professional football, and eWEEK recently got a look inside the stadium, thanks to Hewlett-Packard. This years game pits the Green Bay Packers against the Pittsburgh Steelers& two teams with physical defenses, mobile and accurate quarterbacks, and a corps of wide receivers that can get to the ball. This years game will be played in the most technologically advanced stadium ever to host a Super Bowl, courtesy of the likes of Cisco Systems and HP. HP has a contract to provide the bulk of the IT that drives the stadium operations. Jones and the Cowboys selected HP because they needed an IT provider that could ensure scalability to support not only the biggest events at the 82,000-seat venue, but also the day-to-day work of the Cowboys and the Jones family of more than 35 other business operations. The $1.2 billion-plus, 3.2-million-square-foot facility is the largest domed stadium in the NFL. The centerpieces of the stadium are the Mitsubishi-built video screens facing the sidelines, which are 70 feet tall and 60 yards in length, spanning the field from one 20-yard line to the other. The $40 million JumboTron& or video board configuration& has 30 million light bulbs and 25,000 square feet of video displays. Meanwhile, two 48-foot wide boards face fans sitting at both ends of the stadium, enhancing their game-day experience. There are also more than 3,100 TV monitors throughout the stadium for attendees to see the action on the field or anything else the Cowboys organization wants to pump into various sections and clubs in the building. As part of a recent ProLiant Day event, HP hosted eWEEK and a group of other journalists and bloggers on a tour of Cowboys Stadium. – …
Posts Tagged ‘road’
Serbia gets new road company
Minister of Infrastructure Milutin Mrkonjić said on Wednesday that a motorway company called Koridori Srbije (Corridors of Serbia) had been established. It would be in charge of the construction of Corridor 10 and the highway from Belgrade to Montenegro, he explained.
Delhi road rage: Jet Airways pilot granted bail
Jet Airways pilot Vikas Agarwal was granted bail Wednesday morning, a day after he allegedly ran his car over another driver in a case of road rage in the capital’s upscale Khan Market, police said. “It was a bailable offence,” a senior police official told IANS. The accused was charged under Section 279 (rash driving) [...]
Grateful Dead: Road Trips 2011 Subscription
SUBSCRIPTION OFFER AVAILABLE THROUGH JAN. 31, 2011
![]() Grateful Dead |
From Dead.net:
“For 2011, we’re offering our four regularly-scheduled Road Trips (February, May, September and November), as
part of a subscription package. Subscribe now, and you’ll be sent the next four Road Trips as they’re released.
These will all be 3-CD sets, and as a thank you for subscribing to the series, we’re offering free shipping (U.S.
domestic standard shipping, that is) on all four releases. (If you’re an international customer, please choose the
“International” version which includes standard, International shipping).
Additionally, as an extra thanks for subscribing, we’ll be including a bonus disc to go along with Road Trips Vol. 4
No. 3, the May, 2011 release. We haven’t yet completely finalized the details of that release, but rest assured the
bonus disc will feature all previously unreleased music, mastered in HDCD, and will be limited to only those who
subscribe by January 31, 2011.
We’re just putting the finishing touches on the next couple of Road Trips, and all we can tell you at this point is that
they’ll both be complete shows (with plenty of additional material to round out the 3-CD format!). So don’t delay,
sign up today, and get free shipping and an exclusive bonus disc!
2011 SUBSCRIPTION INCLUDES:
- Road Trips Vol. 4 No. 2 (ships in February)
- Road Trips Vol. 4 No. 3 + Bonus disc (ships in May)
- Road Trips Vol. 4 No. 4 (ships in August)
- Road Trips Vol. 4 No. 5 (ships in November)
Please note: Purchase of subscription is nonrefundable. Bonus Disc is ONLY available with subscription.“
Would shortage of skilled developers block the road to IT innovations? Posted By : amits
Poaching developers is the latest trend wrapping up the whole tech industry. Be it Apple, Microsoft, Google or any other tech vendor; the only challenge surfacing for these is the shortage of the skilled staff;
Citizens evacuated from flooded areas
A state of emergency has been declared in the towns of Ljubovija, Prijepolje and Loznica due to flooding caused by overflowing of the Drina and Lim Rivers.
Road Prijepolje-Podgorica is closed and therefore road traffic between Serbia and Montenegro is disrupted.
MXI Stealth Zone and Stealth Keys Take Secure Computing on the Road Without PC
MXI Stealth Zone uses USB-based computing devices replete with storage and a Bluefly processor& called Stealth Keys& to provide a complete and secure bootable OS (running Windows XP Embedded) on a FIPS-validated USB stick. Using an M500 Stealth Key means a user won’t be subject to compromise from infected kiosks or other unmanaged PCs, while still retaining the flexibility of having a fully customized PC at their disposal. eWEEK’s test unit worked well on two of the three PCs we tried it with, although the third machine’s failure was a bit inexplicable. The 8GB version of the M500 Stealth Key costs $479, and MXI offers devices with storage capacity between 1GB and 64GB as well. Other models (M700 Bio) with biometric fingerprint authentication, used instead of the default password-based authentication, are also available. Read the full review here. Or if you have experience with MXI Stealth Zone or the M500 Stealth Key, share your thoughts at labs.eweek.com. – …
CapitaLand, Hotel Properties and partners unveil d’Leedon condominium along Farrer Road
CapitaLand, Hotel Properties and their partners today unveiled d’Leedon, a residential development along Farrer Road on the site of the former Farrer Court. The landmark project will be the first condominium in Singapore to be designed by internationally-renowned Pritzker Architecture Prize winner Zaha Hadid. d’Leedon is being developed by a CapitaLand-led consortium that includes Hotel Properties, a fund managed by Morgan Stanley Real Estate and Wachovia Development Corporation (a unit of Wells Fargo & Company).
Road safety and vigilantism: Soft pedal
Citizens’ attempts to slow down speeding drivers
STICKY tape and an old van helped slow speeding traffic outside Kerry Donnelly’s house in Cardiff. When police moved a nearby mobile camera Mr Donnelly, a delivery driver, bought a second-hand police van on eBay. The crude silver-tape patch that mimics the camera window does not fool pedestrians but “works a treat” in making motorists brake, he says.
Such dummy devices have long enlivened roads and not only in Britain. Geoff Wilson, a driving instructor in New Zealand, has used a makeshift speed trap to deter dangerous driving outside his home. Courts there accepted his evidence. But others have been less enthusiastic. A couple who caught a speeding policeman in the American state of Georgia (and informed his superiors) got a warning that their home-made camera could fall foul of anti-stalking laws. In several cases in Britain, officials have told people erecting dummy cameras to take them down or face prosecution (arguing that the devices might make motorists brake too hard). …
Apple, Beatles, iTunes: The Long and Winding Road
Apple is offering the Beatles’ 13 studio albums and associated material through iTunes, ending what many considered a glaring omission from the music service. – Apple is offering the Beatles 13 studio albums through its
iTunes service, alongside extras such as the “Live at the Washington Coliseum,
1964” concert film. The famed bands absence from Apples music service was
long considered a glaring omission.
Apple Corps, which publishes the Beatles work, h…
Major road reopens after huge landslide
A huge landslide on the M-22 – known as Ibarska highway – shut down traffic last night piling up 20 meters of earth and rock onto the road. Emergency services have opened the road to traffic again on Tuesday afternoon, warning drivers to pay attention to road signs put up near the landslide location.
OKP Holdings wins $22m PUB contract for road-raising works along Orchard Road
Mainboard-listed OKP Holdings, one of the leading infrastructure and civil engineering firm, has landed a $22 million contract from the PUB, the national water agency, for road-raising works in the Orchard Road area.
Poland road crash leaves 17 dead
A road crash south of the Polish capital, Warsaw, has left 17 people dead, police have said. The accident occurred at dawn in thick fog when a lorry and a minibus collided near the town of Nowe Miasto nad Pilica, 80km from Warsaw.
Symantec Reveals Encryption Road Map for PGP, GuardianEdge
Symantec unveiled some of its plans for the encryption technology it acquired by buying PGP and GuardianEdge, as well as how the VeriSign acquisition could fit in. – Not long ago, Symantec was going the OEM route for encryption. That
all changed in June when the company announced it had closed on
the PGP and GuardianEdge acquisitions.
This past week, Symantec detailed more of its plans for the technologies,
unveiling a strategy that stretches from whole-d…
Nobel Design unit wins tender for freehold land at 11, 13 Lim Tua Tow Road
Nobel Design Holdings says its Urban Lofts has been won the tender to acquire the Glenville freehold land at 11 & 13 Lim Tua Tow Road for $39.51 million.
The site area is 43,335 sq ft and is adjacent to New Gardens, 7-9E Lim Tua Tow Road.
Urban Lofts is a Joint Venture company set up by Nobel Design, Aspen Development, A.C.T Holdings and individual Soh Chooi Lai for the development of the property at New Gardens.
Zac Brown Band: Play The Road
By: Dennis Cook
Zac Brown Band |
Success often makes new listeners wary of a band. Too many hits too fast and one may wonder if an artist is a flash in the pan and unworthy of a serious music fan’s attention. However, sometimes a truly talented, hard working group breaks through and the world is simply wise enough – for a rare change – to recognize a good thing when it lands in their lap.
In 2008 it seemed the Zac Brown Band came out of nowhere to pulverize the country charts, racking up four number one singles and double platinum album sales for what many thought was their debut, The Foundation. But, two self-released albums preceded this first major label release, along with a tour schedule that had kept the band away from home for as many as 200 gigs a year since 2002. All that wood shedding and club humping rings out in the confidence and craftsmanship of The Foundation, and the past two years where they’ve become a major headlining draw and a fixture on CMT and country radio shows in the utterly confident, absolutely winning follow-up You Get What You Give (released September 21 on Southern Ground/Atlantic), which opens with a scene full of hippie-esque wisdom played out over chord-skipping acoustic guitar and playful fiddle that ride a shuffling beat.
Spent the night with a friend of mine and a handle of good whiskey
Picked guitars and talked about how the glory days went missing
It didn’t take too long to find the truth inside that bottle
Cast a-sea so long ago was a message from my father
You keep your heart above your head and your eyes wide open
So this world can’t find a way to leave you cold
No, you’re not the only ship out on the ocean
Save your strength for things that you can change
Forget the ones you can’t
You got to let it go
You Get What You Give is a record with a huge potential audience, not just the country establishment that’s already embraced them. Within this talented bunch lays many points of connection for jam band aficionados (high level musicianship, broad cover tune sensibilities, a 420-friendly attitude, shifting setlists), Americana purists (dead solid songwriting, twang that’s stretched into interesting new forms) and straight-up mainstream rock fans.
ZBB @ Bonnaroo ’09 by Dave Vann |
“We realize that country radio and TV is the way they’re selling this music and the way we’re connecting with our fans but only during 4 or 5 songs in our live set do we even think we’re a country band,” says multi-instrumentalist Clay Cook. “I think we’re more concerned with songs than genre. Sure, we’re telling stories in our songs but it’s more of a southern approach than a strict country one.”
Like the best southern bands in the modern era, ZBB scoops up a wide array of influences and gives them a below-the-Mason-Dixon accent. Ronnie Van Zant-era Skynyrd did this well, as do contemporaries like JJ Grey & Mofro and Hill Country Revue, both of whom have more in common with the Zac Brown Band’s general vibe than most of what’s coming out of Nashville today. At the core of this group is one of the strongest emerging songwriting teams out there, namely Zac Brown and lyricist Wyatt Durrette, who possess a Tom Petty-like populist feel that’s VERY hard to resist.
“The way Zac approaches performing songs is so much different than anything I’ve been involved with before. You just really believe every word he says with the way he sings it,” says Cook. “I feel very lucky to be where I am in this band, especially because of the way we connect with audiences, and that stems from Zac.”
The band doesn’t hesitate to place their originals next some of the finest songwriting of the past 50 years, regularly covering tunes from The Band, Bob Marley, Van Morrison, Ray LaMontagne and other heavy hitters, with the company they keep reflecting the larger ambitions of the band. One also sees this in the high powered patronage of certifiable icons like Jimmy Buffett, Dave Matthews and Kid Rock, who’ve taken the band under their wing and welcomed them as openers and kindred spirits.
“When we’re picking covers we pick things we want to play, the songs we’re listening to on our iPods. This is the music we love. It’s stuff we’re intimately familiar with and huge fans of. We feel like it’s our duty to do a good job,” says Cook. “We’ve been playing Bob Dylan’s ‘I Shall Be Released,’ and I can’t tell you how many other versions are out there. But when we get onstage to play that song, I feel like we’re only the second or third band to ever attempt it, just by how we love it SO much. It’s a weird feeling, but we think we do that with certain songs, really live inside them and make them somewhat our own. Otherwise, we’ll play a song once and never again.”
Zac Brown Band |
On the Deluxe Edition of You Get What You Give, they do a fantastic cover of Ryan Adams’ “Oh My Sweet Carolina” (off Ryan’s solo debut Heartbreaker).
“It’s a live version and we did it in Louisville. And it was one of those situations where everyone felt so good about it, even though it was only the second or third time we’d attempted it in two or three years,” says Cook. “The only reason we played it in Louisville is it’s got a line that goes, ‘I miss Kentucky and I miss my family.’ Zac said, ‘Let’s just play this one!’ and we did and it was just beautiful. We had somebody mix it and throw it on the Deluxe Edition.”
The band mixes up their song selections nightly very much in the spirit of the never-repeat-yourself ethos of the jam scene.
“We kinda have to but the lighting and video guys really wish we’d stick to the same setlist [laughs]. But if we did the same setlist three nights in a row, by the third night we’d be fit to be tied. We’d be ready to do something different or even change [the arrangements of] songs up if we couldn’t change the setlist, changing up sections of songs as we’re playing them,” says Cook. “It forces you to be creative in different ways. We’ve had to feed from our record that’s been out there for a while. It’s been two years since The Foundation came out, and we have to play stuff from it because that’s why people bought tickets to see us. At least half the people in the audience have never seen us before and don’t know they’re going to see a real live show. And then hopefully the other half of the show is new stuff and covers. Unless we have three hours to play, we really have a hard time boiling down what we want to play every night.”
“At this point, we have six songs that are singles and that’s half an hour already. You have to play those songs. Then you have a few covers you’ve been playing that are working, so you have to play those because if we feel good about them at the moment we want to capitalize on that feeling. And the next time we come around [to a city] we’ll have a whole new set of covers. Then you want to play the stuff off the new record, and we also have special guests on this tour. Like Robert Randolph is opening for us, so we want to play a song with him. So, pretty soon the two-and-a-half-hours for our setlist is pretty full. It’s actually easier to write a three-hour setlist than a two-hour setlist.”
Zac Brown @ Bonnaroo ’09 by Dave Vann |
“A pop artist just wants to play their hits and get off the stage. They want to play a 90-minute set and anything more than that is unbearable to them. I remember talking to this country group Lady Antebellum, who came up to us at one of the awards shows. They just released their second album earlier this year, and they heard we were playing three and four hour shows and said, ‘Why are you doing this to us?’ They’ve only got about 90-minutes of material without covers, and that’s only if they play everything off both records. I said, ‘Well, we’re not a country band.’ We’re a live experience mainly.”
One area they excel at, live and in the studio, is in their rich harmonies. The overlap of voices, not just Brown’s own powerful, flexible pipes, is a lovely alternative to the Clean Room pristine quality of most of today’s auto-tuned, Pro-Tools enhanced “singing.”
“When they did the harmonies on the previous record [before Clay Cook joined ZBB], they had to work really hard on the vocals. And that record was cut almost four years ago with two of the vocalists that are here now and one that’s gone. Now, we sing SO much that I don’t think it took two days to get the background harmonies on [You Get What You Give]. We were just knocking them out. It was almost comical at one point when we realized that a great deal of these harmonies were done in one take,” says Cook. “We didn’t spend a lot of time in the studio tracking [anything on the new record]. A lot of the time spent was between gigs, where we’d go a month without doing anything because we’d be on the road. When we were off the road everybody wanted to go home for two or three days, so we couldn’t jump right back into the studio. And then we were on the road again!”
“We’ve taken measures to fix that on the next record. We’re building a studio in Zac’s backyard,” reveals Cook. “I think we’re gonna try to do this next record live, the solos and everything except maybe the vocals. We care a lot about the vocals and it’d suck to get all the way through an awesome take as a band and discover that two of the vocalists were a little bit off. At worst, we’ll record the entire band live and go back and capture the vocals, OR we’ll be just as gutsy as I hope we’ll be and just capture EVERYTHING live in the studio.”
Perhaps the best way to think of the Zac Brown Band is as the next generation of Great American Music bands in the spirit of the Grateful Dead, Little Feat and Goose Creek Symphony, where the inflection of their music can lean one way or another but the language they’re ultimately speaking is their own. What separates Zac Brown and his collaborators from these ancestors is an almost unerring knack for sinking deep into the pop vernacular. Spin You Get What You Give for almost anyone, regardless of their primary listening habits, and by the last track there’s bound to be one or more cuts that float their boat. It’s a broad, readily appealing reach that hints at a future cult following the likes of which Buffett, Rock and the Dave Matthews Band enjoy.
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Zac Brown Band
ZBB @ Bonnaroo ’09 by Dave Vann
Zac Brown Band
Zac Brown @ Bonnaroo ’09 by Dave Vann
Weekend Comments Oct 1: The road ahead for OKP
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