Author: Serkadis

  • Week in tech: iPad protestors, RIAA vs. Thomas-Rasset redux, and stupid Facebook users




    The iPad made finally debuted last week, but not everyone was happy to see it. A group of protesters from the Free Software Foundation picketed the launch event saying that Apple’s new tablet is nothing more than a golden calf of DRM.

    A federal judge slashed the RIAA’s $1.92 million copyright infringement damage award by 97 percent, reducing it to just $54,000. The labels offered to settle for $25,000, but Jammie Thomas-Rasset wants no part of it, so a third trial looks inevitable.

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  • Quinn, Exelon to make FutureGen announcement toay

    SPRINGFIELD — The nation’s largest electric utility appears poised to join efforts to build the experimental FutureGen power plant in Mattoon.

    A top official with Exelon Corp. will appear with Gov. Pat Quinn at an event in downtown Chicago this morning.

    The governor’s office Friday didn’t offer details about what would be announced, but his official schedule notes that the 10:30 a.m. news conference concerns the FutureGen alliance.

    Doyle Beneby, a senior vice president with the Chicago-based utility giant, is scheduled to speak.

    Others included in the announcement are Warren Ribley, Quinn’s chief economic development aide who has been active in promoting the FutureGen plant.

    The announcement is among three scheduled Saturday by Quinn, who is running for the Democratic nomination for governor in Tuesday’s election.

    He also plans to travel to Rockford and the Quad-Cities to announce plans to bring passenger rail service to those communities.

    Developers of the clean-coal project have been waiting for the U.S. Department of Energy to decide whether to move forward with building the plant. A decision is expected next month.

    After the project was put on hold by the Bush Administration, it was revived pending a review by federal regulators. At the same time, the alliance, which includes a number of large energy companies and foreign investors, has been attempting to add additional private-sector partners.

    Exelon, the parent company of ComEd and a major player in the nuclear power industry would be a significant addition to the alliance.

    The coal-burning plant, which is designed to limit the emission of harmful pollutants into the air, is expected to cost upwards of $2.4 billion to build, with the Energy Department expected to kick in $1 billion.

    Read the original article from Herald & Review.


  • Will China Eat America’s Lunch in Cleantech?

    In the State of the Union Address last Wednesday, President Obama said “the nation that leads the clean energy economy will be the nation that leads the global economy and America must be that nation.”  At the same time, on the other coast, 75 clean energy investors, entrepreneurs, and researchers were debating whether the U.S. can gain this leadership position.  They agreed that even though Silicon Valley leads the world in technology, it is not clear if it will ever lead in Cleantech. The Valley may develop some breakthrough technologies, but without government help these are unlikely to translate into global leadership. The technology world is rightfully allergic to government assistance and intervention. Cleantech is different, however, and we aren’t dealing with a level global playing field.

    The Knowledge Economy Institute Leadership Summit, which I attended, was held at the Joint BioEnergy Institute (JBEI), in Emeryville, California. The question posed: what will take for the U.S. to achieve global leadership in the clean-energy economy? The group concluded that the U.S., by far, has the strongest innovation platform in the world. But other countries may well reap the benefits of its research efforts. China, in particular, is making massive investments and has a huge advantage from focused policy and large markets.  Even though China is not likely to produce its own innovation, it will continue to appropriate U.S. technology and gain a major advantage by combining this with its manufacturing prowess.  American firms which are increasingly choosing to build design and manufacturing operations in China will provide it with additional advantage.

    What will it take for America to lead? Despite decades of dominance in technology innovation, America has a dilemma in the clean-energy economy. Most entrepreneurs aren’t getting the support needed, and we are unable to translate research discoveries in our universities into profitable businesses that attract high levels of investment, make lots of money through manufacturing, and create jobs.

    There are two problems with university research – the system for commercializing discoveries doesn’t work well, and there is no clear path-to-market for new technologies which do make it out the door. I’ve written about these problems and I prescribed some workarounds. JBEI is a bold experiment to fix some of these problems the right way. It brings together researchers from different disciplines with business. And it has a practical focus on solving real-world problems.

    Centers like JBEI may produce major breakthroughs in technology. But that is when the next set of problems kick in both for university research and for entrepreneurs – clean-energy is different than other technologies.  Startups typically need hundreds-of-millions of dollars to develop and scale up technologies.  Investors don’t see steady, strong and growing markets. So, few are taking the risks and making the big investments.

    U.S. policy is not as aggressive as other countries in creating sustainable markets, investing in commercialization, or promoting manufacturing.  Take, for example, Japan’s Sunshine-Project and related initiatives that have consistently driven that country’s clean-energy policy since 1974.  Japan has succeeded in building infrastructure, markets, and technology companies that help meet national energy security goals for the long-term.  The U.S. has not.

    Contrast this with how U.S. government responded to challenges to its semiconductor industry by rallying behind it and keeping a significant value piece here.  How do we keep our innovative clean-energy companies and their design and manufacturing operations in America?

    We need to learn from other countries.  In industries like Cleantech, success depends upon consistent and reliable government policy that links market supply and demand over the long-term.  U.S. policy has been cyclical, unilaterally focused on petroleum, and unrealistic about the value of short-term subsidies and support.  American startups suffer from inconsistent pricing-signals that make investors wary.  As investment cycles wax and wane, small companies lose top talent and are unable to recruit it back when funding begins to flow with the next cycle upturn.

    Policy makers need to look at things that affect pricing. Energy is a commodity and it is all about cost.  The energy sector is undifferentiated.  Startups compete with large incumbent firms.  Moreover, clean-energy technology often has a deceptive fit with current industry and markets.  Take biofuels, for example. The high ratio of bulk-to-fuel, distributed biomass sources, and inherent chemical variation dictate smaller-scale and more regional patterns of development and deployment than for petroleum.

    Consumers are key.   Consumer perceptions of energy prices have potent effects on the market.   China figured this out.  In addition to subsidizing manufacturing, it is training thirty-thousand sales-people to sell new clean-technologies to consumers. In the U.S. energy is just too cheap, so consumers don’t see the benefits of Cleantech. Rebates and short-term subsidies just aren’t creating long-term demand. As a result, entrepreneurs trying to build companies on energy efficiency are finding it hard to stay afloat.  The demand and growing markets are just not there.

    Will America meet President Obama’s call for global leadership in the clean energy economy?  Not likely if Congress and state governments don’t make it a lot easier for startups to attract investment and a lot more attractive to manufacture here.  Governments need to coordinate comprehensive, long-term energy policy – now.

    Editor’s note: Guest writer Vivek Wadhwa is an entrepreneur turned academic. He is a Visiting Scholar at UC-Berkeley, Senior Research Associate at Harvard Law School and Director of Research at the Center for Entrepreneurship and Research Commercialization at Duke University. Follow him on Twitter at @vwadhwa.


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  • Guest Post: The Yo-Yo Life of a Tech Entrepreneur

    This is a guest post by Mark Suster, a 2x entrepreneur who has gone to the Dark Side of VC. He started his first company in 1999 and was headquartered in London, leaving in 2005 and selling to a publicly traded French services company. He founded his second company in Palo Alto in 2005 and sold this company to Salesforce.com, becoming VP Product Management. He joined GRP Partners in 2007 as a General Partner focusing on early-stage technology companies.

    TechCrunch Europe ran an article in November of last year that European startups need to work as hard as those in Silicon Valley and I echoed the sentiment in my post about the need for entrepreneurs to be maniacal about their businesses if one wants to work in the hyper competitive tech world.


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  • Virgin Mobile Canada lights up HSPA+ network, iPhone 3GS, Bold 9700 in tow

    Well, it’s a bit earlier than the invitation to the big launch event suggested, but it looks like Virgin Mobile Canada is now officially part of the HSPA+ club, and it’s now also selling a couple of new phones you might be interested in. Naturally, the network will give you coverage in line with the Bell network that Virgin is piggybacking on (encompassing 93% of Canadians), and you can expect the same download speeds of up to 21.6 megabits per second and upload speeds up to 5.76 — in “ideal conditions,” of course. As expected, the carrier is now also offering a number of new phones that take advantage of the network, not the least of which include the iPhone 3G and 3GS (in all the usual varieties), and the BlackBerry Bold 9700. Hit up the link below to check out the complete lineup, and Virgin’s new smartphone plan offerings, which start at $50 per month

    Virgin Mobile Canada lights up HSPA+ network, iPhone 3GS, Bold 9700 in tow originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 30 Jan 2010 10:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Geneva Preview: Toyota pulls the sheet on retouched Auris

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    2010 Toyota Auris

    2010 Toyota Auris – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Toyota isn’t saying much about the refreshed 2010 Auris right now, waiting for the Geneva unboxing, but here are a couple of photos to get you excited. It looks like there will be little nips and tucks all around, such as new fog light enclosures and lower front grille profile. Standard runners will get six engine choices, and the Auris HSD Hybrid will arrive for those who insist on going green. It will go on sale this Spring. A short press release is after the jump, and a coupe of high-res images await your eyes below.

    [Source: Toyota]

    Continue reading Geneva Preview: Toyota pulls the sheet on retouched Auris

    Geneva Preview: Toyota pulls the sheet on retouched Auris originally appeared on Autoblog on Sat, 30 Jan 2010 10:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Important 2010 Tax Dates

    As Benjamin Franklin once said – “In this world nothing can be said to be certain, except death and taxes.” While you won’t know when the Grim Reaper will pay you a visit, the IRS is only slightly more considerate as they set tax dates in stone every year.

    Here are the important tax dates for 2010:

    February 1st, 2010 – Normally, employers and most other entities are required to mail 1099s and W-2s by January 31st but since it falls on a Sunday this year, the deadline is the 1st of February. If you don’t get these forms by mid-February, contact your organization to get a replacement sent out. There’s no financial incentive for an organization to withhold your W-2, you have already been paid, but if they play games, call the IRS. If you don’t receive your W-2 by the due date, use your pay stubs and substitute the W-2 with a Form 4852.

    February 16th, 2010 – This year, because of the Energy Improvement and Extension Act of 2008, financial institutions filing a 1099-B, 1099-S, 1099-MISC, 1099-INT (there are a few more less common ones), have until February 16th (the 15th is a holiday) to file those forms. You can learn more about it from this IRS bulletin (Thank you gerlach!).

    April 15th, 2010 – April 15th is the all important tax due date when all tax returns must be postmarked or electronically filed. This year it’s on a Thursday. If you need an extension, you can file a request for a tax filing extension. You may be granted an extension until October 15th, 2010 for the tax return but payment for taxes due is still April 15th. You can also request an extension for payment if it would cause you “undue hardship” using Form 1127, but you will be charged interest.

    October 15th, 2010 – If you request and were approved for an extension, October 15th is your new due date. This date also happens to be the last day you can recharacterize (undo) a Roth IRA conversion. If the IRA has lost money since you converted, you could save money by “undoing” it.

    Quarterly Estimated Tax Payments – For 2010, the payment dates are April 15th (1st), June 15th (2nd), September 15th (3rd), and January 18, 2011 (4th).

    Jim writes about personal finance at Bargaineering.com.

  • Looking for a Driver Driven Hatchback

    First the background :

    I have an Indica DLX Turbo of August ’07 I stay in Gurgaon and my office is on Mathura Road a daily commute of about 80 kms give or take a few depending on family . We ‘ve a family of 4 self , wife ,son and my mother . I met with an accident after which had to go for an surgical implant in my left hand which means I can’t drive over long distances and is dependent on a driver for daily commute . Additionally roads are a mix of smooth to non existent to series of potholes put together . Driver has been with us for about 18 months and is a fairly careful one without being rash .
    Indica has done about 60,000 Km and is headache if we all have to travel and I have to sit in the front . It is definitely time for replacement at the earliest . Wife has an Opel Corsa which we are not planning to change for some time to go
    please:
    Present :

    A car which is comfortable to be driven in and has fuel efficiency and low running cost so a diesel fits in nicely . Since I already have an Indica I am done with Tata Cars for life so no Indica Vista or alpha for that matter .

    I am 6 foot tall so have limited choices cars tried so far

    Fabia : Noisy engine ( sales rep told me car is under maintenance ) and a new car is better .

    Punto : Can;t fit in the rear seat

    Would welcome any advise on which car to go for , budget is not a constraint but it is definitely not Lora’sque .

    Biggest requirement is back seat comfort

  • From CollegeFashion: Bright, Awake Looking Eyes

    I am not a morning person. Never have been, never will be. And it shows on my face in the form of dark circles and tired eyes.

    Even though I always want to crawl back into my comfy bed and get more rest, I know that with a touch of the right makeup I can instantly fix that problem. As a girl, I know that no matter how tired I am, I always want to look my best. Therefore, here is a tutorial on how to achieve that bright-eyed, wide-awake look. Even if you received zero hours of sleep, with these steps, nobody will be able to tell!

    1. Dab concealer underneath your eyes. Make sure to blend well!

    Dark circles under the eyes are probably the most obvious sign of a tired student. By concealing those problem areas, you will be amazed how much more awake you look.

    A good concealer will brighten up the undereye area and cover any darkness. I personally love any of Maybelline’s liquid concealers but several of my friends swear by MAC’s Studio Finish SPF 35 Concealer as well.

    What do you do next? Read the rest (and look your best and brightest) at CollegeFashion.net!

  • Belgian Band Gets Creative With Video Annotations On YouTube

    YouTube has long introduced ways for users to annotate their videos and add links to external websites, other videos on the site, and more. But I haven’t seen that many people or companies make use of video annotations in creative ways – I don’t spend that much time on YouTube to be honest, so maybe it’s just me.

    Belgian electro band The Subs got in touch with us to let us know how they use video annotations to spice up their The Famous Videocast project, and the result is pretty neat if you ask me.

    In the videocast, the band members point to other videos which you can easily watch without having to jump to another tab or webpage (that is, if you’re on YouTube and not watching it here or anywhere else where it gets embedded).

    If you don’t click, the videocast just keeps rolling, but if you do you can watch other videos and return to where you left off in the videocast with a single click.

    Simple, but nice.


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  • HTC HD now running with Android 2.1 and Sense UI

    image

    The World of Windows Mobile has been compromised by Android. The HTC HD, which was once the best Windows Mobile devices is slowly becoming the best Android ported device. Earlier this week an Android port was made for the HD and that port came with Sense UI and Android 2.1 software. That means if you own an HD and have the newest dual booting system, you can get this going on your device. The files can be found on XDA and remember this is not perfect yet, they are some missing things like:

    Working:
    -Radio Fully Works.
    -SMS Fully Works.
    -Vibration.
    -USB Charging and Debugging.
    -Touch screen.
    -Keyboard.
    -Microphone.
    -Front Speaker.

    Not Working
    -Wifi
    -GPRS
    -GPS
    -Bluetooth
    -External Speaker
    -HTC Widgets. (Thinking of getting rid of them)
    -Other things (Will be determined during the process of testing)

    Get the files:XDA
    Via:MobileOSNews

    P.S If Anyone gets this going, please let us know and make a video

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  • A Twitterian Analysis Of The State Of The Union 2010

    01.29.10 04:12 PM posted by FMeekins

    Obama certainly looks down his nose in a condescending manner. Why do I hear "KNEEELLLLLLLLL BEFORE ZOD!!!" from Superman II in my ear?

    In opening the State of Union, Obama mentioned the Speaker of the House, the Vice President and the American people. What, no acknowledgement of illegal aliens? Obama apparently is not as tolerant as made to appear.

    Isn’t Chris Matthews forgetting that Obama is Black more offensive then Harry Reid saying "negro dialect"?

    By invoking Bull Run & the Bloody Sunday of the civil rights movement in the State of the Union, Obama implies disagreement with him is racist.

    Obama claimed he took office amidst growing government debt. It’s getting even worse under him.

    Biden certainly seemed gleeful about hosing the banks. Biden looked like a bobblehead the way he couldn’t keep his neck still.

    Guess we’ll see at tax time if Obama is blowing smoke up our rears about not raising taxes.

    If Obama is supposedly one of the greatest orators of world history surpassing Bush’s limited elocutionary abilities, why did he use the word “cops” rather than “police”?

    President plans to toss $30 billion here; $30 billion there. Reminds me of the Simpsons bit about Internet stock.

    And what if the job bill Obama demands “without delay” is delayed?

    I guess all that clean energy technology China is inventing was the cause of all that smog at the Beijing Olympics.

    Will Obama really allow offshore drilling or is this a phantom promise like clean-coal technology?

    Pelosi’s grin is scarier than the Joker’s.

    Homeland Security Secretary Janet Naplotano applauds like a lethargic Walrus. read more »

    http://www.conservativeoutpost.com/t…ate_union_2010

  • America and Israel: You Got A Friend in Me?

    01.29.10 10:48 PM posted by ibbetsonusa

    What is the meaning of friendship? What makes the bonds that we call a true friendship mean something? We have all heard of the fair-weather friend and most likely we have all had one ortwo of them. The fair-weather friend stays by your side as long as all the conditions of life are optimum. Unfortunately, we often need our friends most when times are bad, and that is when the fair-weather friend often disappears, and in some cases, sides with the forces we are struggling against. “Thanks a lot!” Those may very well be the parting words that passour lips when we come to the painful realization that not all that play “buddy-buddy” are actually in our corner.
    Conversely, a true friend is a powerful force in that it allows for the extension of values and beliefs into places that one might not be able to tread alone. America has had a long history of creating lasting friendships with countries, and those bonds have created economic prosperity and security in many places. For the most part, this country has shown the proper discernment in selecting who will be our business associates in the globaleconomy and who will be allies when the world gets tumultuous. Despite those wholike to denigrate this great country, one of America’s strongest selling points is that within the global community, this country has been known to come through with what it says it is going to do. With that said, we would be wise to remember that while American exceptionalism exists, it does so in conjunction with our ability to make and maintain true friends across the planet. read more »

    http://www.conservativeoutpost.com/a…_got_friend_me

  • Woman Wins Lottery, Gets Run Over, Dies

    There’s an old saying in some countries which states a pile of bad luck will fall upon those who win a lottery. Unfortunately for 47-year old Deborah McDonald, the saying turned into a cruel reality this week in Ohio.

    After years of financial struggles, Deborah and her husband Robert managed to get a seat in the Ohio Lottery’s Cash Explosion Double Play television show and the chance to escape poverty. Deborah managed to win $8,000 in the lottery and things seemed brighter for the family.
    … (read more)

  • Find of the Day: Bugatti Veyron with matching transporter

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    Bugatti Veyron w/ Transporter
    2007 Bugatti Veyron with matching Mercedes Atego transporter – Click above for image gallery

    We never thought we’d see the day when someone would have to sweeten the deal to sell a car as eminently desirable as a Bugatti Veyron. But with the economy still putt-putting its way down the road to recovery, there are plenty of wealthy collectors looking to free up some liquid assets. That means a buyer’s market, so we wouldn’t be surprised to see everything this side of the proverbial kitchen sink thrown in to seal the deal.

    This, however, looks far more enticing than a porcelain fixture. The owner of this Veyron – monochromatically decked out in French Racing Blue – apparently had this Mercedes-Benz Atego transporter painted to match. As you can see from the photo, the truck’s precious-cargo box tilts back and a ramp slides out to get the supercar in with a minimum of fuss.

    Oh, and the Bugatti itself? It’s a 2007 model with 7,728 kilometers (4,800 miles) on the odometer, a matching dark blue interior and, together with the matching truck, is up for grabs on JamesList from the Netherlands with a €895,000 ($1,264,815) price tag.

    [Source: JamesList via World Car Fans]

    Find of the Day: Bugatti Veyron with matching transporter originally appeared on Autoblog on Sat, 30 Jan 2010 08:55:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Patent Troll Sues Apple Over Wireless Messaging Technology

    Intellect Wireless, a tiny company based in Reston, VA has filed suit against Apple over mobile picture/video messaging technology it claims to have successfully patented years ago.

    The patent infringement suit was filed on 28 January in Illinois Northern District Court.

    The complaint states that Apple infringed on the company’s patents when it provided wireless portable communication devices (you know, like the iPhone) that “receive and display caller ID information, non-facsimile pictures, video messages and/or Multimedia Messaging Services.”

    It was easy to retrieve court documents showing Intellect Wireless is seeking about $10 million in damages from Apple for allegedly infringing on its patent, but it sure was a whole lot harder to track down what this company has effectively produced with the technology it claims to have enriched the planet with. In other words: it’s a non-practicing entity, aka patent troll, hard at work in this case.

    And judging from this article on the General Patent Corporation blog, Intellect Wireless is a feisty one at that.

    To learn more about the technology Wireless Intellect has invented, try making sense of this magnificent slide deck from self-proclaimed inventor Daniel A. Henderson, the man behind the company.

    This isn’t exactly the first time Intellect Wireless has turned to courts over alleged patent infringement: the company sued T-Mobile USA, Virgin Mobile USA, Helio and U.S. Cellular Corp back in February 2008, Motorola, LG Electronics and Sanyo Electric in March 2008, Samsung Electronics in October 2008 and HTC in May 2009.

    Ugh.


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  • Lenovo’s G560 and G460 laptops now available to order

    Good news, laptop hunters! No, not those laptop hunters…. Anywho, two of Lenovo’s CES-announced machines are now ready for you to customize and order, with the 14-inch G460 packing a 2.13GHz Core i3-330M processor, integrated Intel graphics, Windows 7 Home Premium (64-bit), 4GB of DDR3 RAM, a 1,366 x 768 resolution panel, 320GB hard drive, Bluetooth 2.1+EDR, dual-layer DVD writer and a 6-cell battery. The 15.6-inch G560 adds a marginally larger LCD and, well, that’s it. Thankfully, both units get going at the same $799 price point, so choosing between the two really boils down to how awful your vision is. Got that, gramps?

    Lenovo’s G560 and G460 laptops now available to order originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 30 Jan 2010 08:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • AT&T-friendly Nexus One passes through the FCC

    nexus-one-fcc-label-ATT-compare

    We told you earlier this month that the Nexus One would be coming to AT&T and we now have the first sharable shred of evidence that our source was spot on. Spotted emerging from the testing halls of the FCC is an unknown mobile phone with the FCC ID NM899110. For the geeky folk, the NM8 is the FCC Grantee code for HTC while 99110 is the model. People who rock a Nexus One and have a penchant for studying FCC labels would notice that the FCC ID for this mystery handset is only a single digit away from the FCC ID of the current Nexus One (NM899100) and would be quick to recognize that this mystery handset is most likely a kissing cousin to their T-Mobile-friendly handset. Without looking at the FCC documents, one might casually pass this mystery handset off as the upcoming Verizon Wireless CDMA version, but a quick perusal of the testing report reveals that the handset in question is rocking WCDMA bands I, II and V which are decidedly AT&T. Any Nexus One owners crawling on AT&T’s EDGE a bit peeved by this discovery?

    [via Engadget]

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  • Household Solar Power – Don’t Believe The Hype

    I want you to consider this hypothetical situation.

    This is a 30 Panel Rooftop Solar Installation. Image courtesy of Braemac Corp.

    The Utility Company that supplies the electrical power to your house calls you and tells you that they are going to raise the cost of the electricity they supply to your house, and not by the incremental small percentages that it does creep up by, but this time they are going to triple the cost. Take out your recent electrical utilities account, and multiply that by three. That’s how much your new account will be.

    How happy would that make you?

    This is a hypothetical only, but I want you to keep that in mind because I will directly come back to this exact situation later on in this post.

    Household Solar power consists of those panels on your roof. The Sunlight generates a tiny amount of electricity in the small cells in the panel. Hundreds of those small cells are connected together in the one panel, so that the small amount of power is increased, and having more than the one panel means that an even larger amount of electricity can be generated. This then has to be converted into the power you use in your house, in other words the same as power supplied from the grid. This is done with the use of an Inverter which changes the DC induced in the cells by the sunlight into the AC supply you use in your house.

    You may think that Australia is an ideal place for households to utilise this form of power production for your household needs, and even though this form of power has been in use now for decades to provide power for hot water systems in a household application, they are now coming into vogue for supplying other electrical needs for that household application.

    Those who are from the environmentalist side of the fence are the ones you see touting for these systems to be used on a more widespread basis, and you hear wonderful stories of just how effective they really are, that they supply free electricity, enough to power your whole house, and that they pay for themselves in a relatively short period of time, and the excess is fed back into the grid itself, and the Authority even pays you for the power you produce.

    Having worked in the electrical field for more than 25 years, and having spent 6 of those years teaching the trade, it intrigued me as to why these claims gain widespread belief that they actually can do this.

    As you may understand these systems are not cheap. Here in Australia, there are many distributors for these systems and this link shows just one of those, and the prices shown here are fairly representative for nearly all of them. Scroll down to around half page and you will see the prices indicated. What you are looking for is in the middle column the Installed price.

    The one I will direct you to is the one second from the bottom. It has 42 panels, each panel generating 175 Watts for a total power of 7350 Watts, and the Installed cost is $39,900. The second column shows the amount of power it can feasibly supply on a daily basis, that being 30KiloWattHours. (KWH) Why I selected this one is because that is the amount of power that is used on average each day in a U.S. household application, and that is shown at this link, from the U.S. Government’s own site, The Energy Information Administration. That number is shown at the bottom of that chart there, second column in from the left, and indicated as 936, that being the U.S. monthly average power consumption, translated down to around 32KWH per day, so a Solar System of this size could realistically supply that total. (That image at the top of the page shows an installed system that has 30 panels. For a larger image, click on that image to open it in a new and larger window.)

    However, that’s not the full story.

    Because they are in fact so expensive, then not very many people can actually afford that type of outlay, so to make them somewhat attractive, they need to have a large subsidy attached to them. In other words, because you show your environmental concern by doing something like this, then the Government rewards you for doing it. In the case of this system, that rebate from the Government amounts to $8280, which is around 20% of the overall cost. This now brings that end cost down to $31,600. Rebates vary depending upon the size of the system you have.

    That price is still a long way out of reach for most people in general suburbia, in fact the cost of a large car, or even an SUV. At that price, not many people would be that environmentally conscious to go down that route.

    Also, to make it further attractive to those who do purchase something like this, the Government will then pay you for the electrical power that is generated by the panels and not consumed by you during the day. This is called a ‘feed in tariff’. To make it attractive, they then need to make that feed in tariff so that it actually amounts to something, so that tariff amount is set at around three times what you actually pay for the electricity you consume from the grid. This usually amounts to an amount 2.5 to 3 times the price you pay for your power, and even though this is from Australia, this link shows those current feed in tariffs in each of those Australian States, all between that figure, more in the Northern States than in the Southern ones, because the Sun shines brighter and longer in the North here in Australia.

    This is where the analogy I alluded to at the top of the post comes in. If the Utility Company told you they were increasing the cost of your electricity by a factor of three, you would be suitably outraged, but the only way they can actually make these systems attractive is to pay you that amount. See the double standard here. You would be absolutely outraged if they did it to you, but then you think it’s okay to accept that when it’s going the other way. It’s a fact of life. It’s the only way they can actually make these things attractive. To give you great wads of money, and then say it is the environmentally conscious thing to do.

    So let’s look at it if there were no subsidies and use the same standard for you selling the extra electricity at the base price that you pay for it.

    To do that we need to understand electricity consumption using this household solar application. It only produces electricity while the Sun is actually shining. It will provide the household requirement during that time, but as soon as the Sun sets, it stops producing electricity completely. For all your household needs now, you need to be supplied from the grid itself. So, as you can immediately see, you are not ever supplying all your household needs at any stage. The bulk of electrical power usage is in those hours immediately after Sunset. You and your family arrive home from work and school. You shower, using hot water which then has to be reheated. You do the clothes washing, you cook your meals. If it’s cold you turn on the heat. If hot, then the air goes on. You watch TV, turn on the lights, and on it goes. During the day, the only power being consumed is for the Fridge and to top off the hot water system as it cycles, and other small amounts of power being consumed. The vast bulk of power being consumed is from the grid, so, even though you may think of it as being environmentally conscious, you are in fact consuming power from the grid itself.

    You also need to understand exactly how power is being generated, supplied to the grid, and then consumed. That power always has to be there, You draw it down from the existing supply on the overall grid. To supply the vast bulk of that immense amount of power, large coal fired power plants hum away all day every day at the same rate, because they cannot be run up and down at a moments notice, and to keep them running at that huge rate, this is when they are at their most efficient. They supply power to the grid. The vast amount of consumers on that grid then draw it down. At ‘Peaking Power’ times, from 4Pm until 9PM, then smaller, mostly Natural Gas fired plants can be run up to speed, because that’s the best design for these, and also their best application, as they can be run up and down at short notice, and only run for a short period of time. These plants then top up the power supplied to the grid, and then you, as consumers draw down on that. It’s always there, so the amount of power available on the grid is always a percentage higher than is actually being used. If you have a large household system that supplies power TO the grid during the day, the amount you supply is so minute as to be almost non existent, and is not even taken into account in the planning for power consumption.

    That average U.S. power consumption amounts to an annual outlay of $1200, also shown on that same page at the same link as shown above, that amount at right coming in at $100 per month, and keep in mind that data lags the current data which prices electricity higher again. You power consumption is around 33%/67% on a Day/Night basis. So, assuming you have this large system and you feed some power back to the grid, say a large proportion of that near 40%, you are still using power during non daylight hours. So, the cost of your Utilities bill for electrical power decreases commensurately, say by one third. So here you have a saving of around $400 a year.

    The original outlay was $40K, so to recoup that amount, it will take nigh on 100 years.

    Now perhaps you can see why they give hugely generous rebates at the front end, and also as a feed in tariff. With the three times feed in tariff, that yearly cost is now virtually equalised, because the amount you pay for the power you consume after Sunset is covered by the amount you receive for that you feed back to the grid. That means effectively that you do not pay for electricity at all. So, that saving is now all your electricity bill, all $1200 per year. With the subsidy reducing the initial cost now to $31,600, it means the system will now pay for itself in 26 years.

    The systems have a guarantee period in the main of between 20 and 25 years, so as you can see, they will almost be time expired at around the time you finish recouping your initial outlay, because that is effectively how long these panels will last.

    If you read all the information at all the sites on offer, you will find they also mention that you introduce measures to reduce your overall consumption, and here in Australia, that would mean things like not having Airconditioning in the extremely hot Summer months, or heating in the Winter months. It would also include other measures like showering only in daylight hours to minimise the use of electrical power from the grid to heat the water in your hot water system. Other measures might include a smaller refrigerator, a smaller hot water system, changes to your lighting and lighting habits, (minimal effect from this, as household lighting only consumes 8% of all household power) smaller ovens and hot plates, used less often, and other measures like completely insulating your house.

    As is also now obvious, that 26 year period to recover the costs binds you completely to living in that same house for that period of time, because to move house, you can’t really take it with you, well maybe, but then there’s the cost of de installing it completely, and then re installing it at the new house. They also advise you to keep the panels clean, and by clean, the actual intent is completely pristine, because any dust or smearing from rain will decrease the efficiency of power generation. So that means getting up on the roof once a week or so to polish the panels perfectly clean. Don’ even bother to think about them in the cold North East of the U.S. where for three to four months a year they will not be producing one volt let alone the full 7 KW.

    So as you can see from this the only thing that they actually are is revenue neutral.

    You are still consuming power from the grid.

    Again, I purposely selected this large system to show some equality. If the Suns shines all day every day at it’s brightest with no clouds, (when you will lose 30% of your generating capacity immediately, not recovering until long after that cloud has gone) then this system will produce  around 30KWH per day. The average power consumption for a U.S. household is 30KWH per day, so there are some who might argue that you are producing what you use on an everyday basis. Again, the excess you produce during the day is fed back for consumption by the grid. That grid is not storing that power on your behalf, and then graciously giving it back to you after Sunset. You are using electrical power from the grid. That grid is not your private battery where you can store that power for later use.

    You are still consuming power during that Peak Power period as you always have. The excess power you produce is not even being taken into consideration by the grid planners.

    So, when these people who trumpet how good all of this really is, be fully, and absolutely aware that it is all just spin.

    If there were no huge Government subsidies and no large feed in tariffs, then they would be all but completely useless. You could cover every roof in the Country with as many panels as would fit, and it would not make the slightest difference.

    These are an immensely costly item that produces minimal electrical power on a limited basis, and no amount of hype will make them anything more than that. When someone tells you that they produce all the electrical power you might use in a household application, keep right in the front of your mind that the only thing that they are is REVENUE neutral, and that is only if you take something, (the tariff) that you are not willing to pay for if it was the other way round.

    You are still using power from the grid, and more than you can ever produce from a system like this.

    Filed under: Climate Alarmists, Climate Change, Environment, Environmental activists, Fear-mongering, Fraud/Waste, Global Warming, Liberals, Lily-Livered Liberals, Limp-Wrist Liberals, Propaganda Tagged: Climate Change Hypocrisy, Climate Change Religion, Electrical Feed In Tariffs, Global Warming Hype, Household Solar Power Generation, Photovoltaic Panel Solar Power, Solar Power

  • Patent Troll Sues Apple Over Mobile Messaging Technology

    Intellect Wireless, a tiny company based in Reston, VA has filed suit against Apple over mobile picture/video messaging technology it claims to have successfully patented years ago.

    The patent infringement suit was filed on 28 January in Illinois Northern District Court.

    The complaint states that Apple infringed on the company’s patents when it provided wireless portable communication devices (you know, like the iPhone) that “receive and display caller ID information, non-facsimile pictures, video messages and/or Multimedia Messaging Services.”

    It was easy to retrieve court documents showing Intellect Wireless is seeking about $10 million in damages from Apple for allegedly infringing on its patent, but it sure was a whole lot harder to track down what this company has effectively produced with the technology it claims to have enriched the planet with. In other words: it’s a non-practicing entity, aka patent troll, hard at work in this case.

    And judging from this article on the General Patent Corporation blog, Intellect Wireless is a feisty one at that.

    To learn more about the technology Wireless Intellect has invented, try making sense of this magnificent slide deck from self-proclaimed inventor Daniel A. Henderson, the man behind the company.

    This isn’t exactly the first time Intellect Wireless has turned to courts over alleged patent infringement: the company sued T-Mobile USA, Virgin Mobile USA, Helio and U.S. Cellular Corp back in February 2008, Motorola, LG Electronics and Sanyo Electric in March 2008, Samsung Electronics in October 2008 and HTC in May 2009.

    Ugh.


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