Author: Serkadis
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DISCUSS: Best Sports Stadium
Discuss in this Thread your most favorite sports stadiums -
Desal and “Carbon”ated Water: Coastal Commission Should Make the Carlsbad … – California Progress Report

California Progress ReportDesal and “Carbon”ated Water: Coastal Commission Should Make the Carlsbad …
California Progress Report
That assumed carbon offset is key to the company's claim of carbon neutrality, though the company also makes dubious claims of high-energy efficiency, …
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“Law & Order: Los Angeles” Spinoff
The latest Law & Order spinoff will be set in the City of Angels.
During the Winter Television Critics Association Tour on Sunday, NBC programming chief Angela Bromstad announced that the network are having “very fluid” conversations with L&O creator Dick Wolf about introducing Law & Order: Los Angeles to the airwaves. NBC producers are currently working on hiring writers for a pilot.

Bromstad emphasized Law & Order: Los Angeles is still in very early stages. “We’re talking about writers,” she said about the franchise.
“Even if, for instance, ‘Law & Order’ the mothership, didn’t go beyond another couple of years, that way of telling stories is so unique that I actually think it could work in Los Angeles with a new look and a new cast,” she said.
Law & Order: LA would be the first series in the L&O franchise set outside New York.
“We officially call that LOLA,” Jeff Gaspin, NBC Television Entertainment Chairman added.
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Schumacher Will Test GP2 Car at Jerez, This Week
Michael Schumacher’s preparations for the return to Formula One racing will begin sooner than everybody else’s, as the German will reportedly take the wheel of a GP2 machinery later this week for a maiden testing session at the Jerez circuit. According to Switzerland’s Blick and Germany’s Bild publications, the International Automobile Federation already agreed to the test, which is likely to get off as early as tomorrow. The testing session will last for 3 days, a period of tim… (read more)
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2011 BMW Alpina B7 Bi-Turbo Comes to the US
The American lineup of BMW 7 Series models will receive this year a very exciting addition, the Alpina B7, which is poised to become the "most dynamic 7 Series model" in the country. The car features BMW’s 4.4l, all-aluminum V8 engine, tweaked by Alpina into developing a huge 500 hp and 700 Nm of torque. Enough to make the large sedan sprint from naught to sixty in 4.5 seconds and keep it accelerating to "virtually any speed."
The engine, boost… (read more)
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Geely to Launch Chinese-Made Volvo
Although Geely assured everyone that Volvo’s operations would remain untouched once the Swedish unit steps under its ownership, the company will actually suffer some slight changes. Mostly because it will become a more Chinese-oriented manufacturer, as Geely intends to build cars in its domestic market and even set up a new plant locally.The most important question is whether people over the world would buy a Chinese-made Volvo, as some of the models produced in local plants fail… (read more)
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Qualcomm Shows its Consumer Side at CES, Venture Investor Joins Economic Development Corp., Dot Hill Buys Cloverleaf, & More San Diego BizTech News
Bruce V. Bigelow wrote:
There was a lot of tech news from Las Vegas last week, and it wants to get out. So we’re setting it free now.
—Dazzling examples of the latest innovations of tablet computers, e-book readers, 3D-TVs, netbooks, and many more electronic devices were introduced at the annual International Consumer Electronics Show (CES), which ended yesterday in Las Vegas. Avondale Partners analyst John F. Bright predicted that connectivity would be a prevailing theme, which proved to be true.
—Another theme at CES was the emergence of San Diego-based Qualcomm (NASDAQ: QCOM) as a force in consumer electronics. Qualcomm has traditionally been a B2B company that supplies wireless chipsets used in devices stamped with other brand names. As an example, Qualcomm’s Snapdragon chip is inside the new Nexus One Android phone, which was revealed just before the show by Google and HTC. But CEO Paul Jacobs outlined Qualcomm’s rising influence in the first CES keynote address by a Qualcomm executive. In an account prepared by CNET’s Erica Ogg, Jacobs said the company believes that all consumer-related technology devices are going to be connected. In his report of Jacobs’ speech, San Diego Union-Tribune reporter Mike Freeman highlighted “Swagg,” a new wireless gift card and transaction application that Qualcomm plans to roll out later this year.
—Len J. Lauer, who was previously employed as the chief operating officer at Qualcomm, was named CEO of Memjet, a private company developing innovative color printing technology. Argonaut Private Equity of Tulsa, OK, is a major investor in Memjet.
—The San Diego Regional Economic Development Corp. (EDC) found work for Dave Titus, a co-founder and managing partner of Windward Ventures, a San Diego venture capital firm that was becalmed, so to speak, by the market downturn. Titus was named as the EDC’s new managing director of strategic initiatives.
—San Diego-based Verari Systems, which provides blade server racks and related data storage technology, was the subject last week of an asset sale that took place under a “general assignment for the benefit of creditors.” That’s a legal process that enables Verari to avoid a bankruptcy liquidation, and allows Verari’s secured creditors to avoid the trouble and cost of foreclosure.
—Carlsbad, CA-based Dot Hill Systems (NASDAQ: HILL), which provides data storage equipment, announced plans to acquire Cloverleaf Communications, a privately held software developer based in Woodbury, NY. The deal enables Dot Hill to expand its access to the market for cloud storage and storage virtualization. Dot Hill said it is paying about $12 million for Cloverleaf, which got some $43 million in venture capital support.
—Qualcomm announced plans to start manufacturing 28-nanometer chips, skipping the 32-nanometer technology that most chipmakers are adopting as the new standard size of microcircuitry patterns printed on semiconductors. Qualcomm’s existing technology makes chips with microcircuits that are about 45 nanometers apart. Qualcomm said it is working on the project with its foundry partner, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co.
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New grads face health care worries
For someone looking for work during an unsettled economy, Matthew Janes ’07 seems to be in a reasonably appealing position. Armed with a Stanford degree in symbolic systems and over a year of experience at Palo Alto tech company mSpot, Janes has the right credentials for a permanent programming job. He is even making some money during his job hunt by doing contract Web design work.
But Janes and other work-seeking graduates overwhelmingly absorbed with finding post-college work are also dealing with another issue: the fact that they often lack standard health care coverage during the job search process.
Stanford requires every enrolled student to have health insurance–an “individual mandate” in health care parlance. If a student is not covered under an outside plan (usually his or her parents’), the student must purchase Cardinal Care, the University-run health insurance plan, for a premium of $800 per quarter.
This ensures that Stanford students have health coverage through their education. However, neither Cardinal Care nor nearly every parental health plan is available to Stanford alumni after their graduation.
Many companies offer group health plans to their employees, but when a graduate wants to freelance or work at a start-up or a small company that does not offer insurance–or when work is scarce in a down economy–this makes the months and years after graduation perilous from a health insurance standpoint.
The United States Census Bureau estimates that 15.4 percent of the population was without health insurance in 2008. Of those 46 million people, over half are between age 18 and 34. Young alumni are in the age group most likely to be uninsured.
Most of those interviewed by The Daily try to solve the problem of insurance by purchasing high-deductible emergency health plans. Bryan Schell ’07 gets a basic level of coverage from this type of plan as he works an unpaid internship at the United Nations Refugee Agency in Washington, D.C. He hopes the internship will open doors for future employment (and health coverage), but for the moment he can only afford a basic plan on his own.
Under Schell’s plan, the insurance company pays for expenses after the first $1,000, so it doesn’t help with check-ups and prescriptions. In the event of a major accident, though, Schell would have help with the ensuing costs.
“I’m young and I don’t have any health problems, so it’s ideal for me,” said Schell, who is paying rent out of savings and small earnings from a part-time job.
But underinsurance can be almost as big a problem as being uninsured. The Census does not project the number of underinsured people, but a post-college emergency plan, which may be the only option available to an alum seeking work, is sometimes just not enough coverage.
Janes understands this better than most. While searching for an employer–and a health plan to replace Cardinal Care, the insurance he got as a dependent of his parents and mSpot’s group health plan–he enrolled in a high-deductible plan. It is, according to him, for “car crashes and chainsaw accidents.”
The plan barely helps with prescription costs, a pressing matter for Janes because he has Type 1 diabetes. Insulin and testing strips cost him $200 to $300 per month now, compared to $25 to $50 when he was on Cardinal Care. He has started to skimp on testing strips, resulting in occasionally erratic blood sugar levels, and is now searching for employer-based health insurance as much as for a job now.
“I’ve had to cut back on a lot of medical care I’d been getting,” Janes said. “A group health plan to me is worth over $1,000 a month on top of a salary.”
Janes is watching the progression of health care reform in Congress with a particularly critical eye; among the provisions in the House and Senate bills that have both passed is one that allows children to remain on their parents’ health plans through age 26, instead of getting kicked off during or after college. Janes, 25, would appreciate that more comprehensive coverage as he looks for employment.
“That would mean huge savings for me and much better medical care than I’ve been getting,” he said.
Through awareness of the recession and the congressional health care debate, Stanford students are becoming more conscious of the health insurance trouble their demographic group steps into after leaving the University. But the search for a job, even one that does not offer insurance, outweighs other considerations. In the minds of most Stanford students looking for something to do with their lives, it appears that the job comes first, and health care comes second…or not at all.
Lance Choy, director of Stanford’s Career Development Center, says that in all of his career counseling, he cannot remember getting a question about health insurance from a student.
“It just doesn’t come up,” Choy said. “Sometimes they ask about retirement, but I don’t think a lot of students think about health insurance much in their 20s unless they’ve got some sort of preexisting condition.”
Seniors tend to be the most concerned with the prospect of finding health insurance in the outside world. Tommy Tobin ’10 was one of a handful of interviewees who expressed concern about his health insurance situation after graduation. However, it was clear which was more important to him.
“Work is a bigger concern,” Tobin said.
Lindsey Smith ’10 was also anxious about health insurance post-college. She said a lack of health benefits in one job could end up being a deciding factor if she were to choose between offers. But if employer-based health benefits were scarce, her answer was the same as everyone else’s: she would take any job she could get regardless of the insurance situation.
“I would take [a job without benefits] if I didn’t have other options for employment,” she said.
For students who are further from leaving the “Stanford bubble,” the question of health coverage is further from their minds.
“I’ve thought about what I want to do and where I want to go, but I haven’t considered that [health care coverage] very much,” said sophomore Colin Gray.
“I’m still on my family health plan,” said Eric Miller ’12. He has kept abreast of the debate over health care reform, but said that on a personal level, it hasn’t greatly impacted him.
“I’m focusing on my classes for now,” he said.
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2010 Audi Models to Have NVIDIA GPUs
At last week’s CES event, German carmaker Audi took the opportunity and revealed that all 2010 Audi models will be equipped with the third-generation multimedia interface system from NVIDIA. The decision was taken in order to keep up with the innovations of the tech world, significantly greater than the ones made in the automotive industry.Luxury car consumers increasingly expect crisp and intuitive navigation systems, said Johan de Nysschen, President, Audi of America. That requ… (read more)
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Earth Systems hops to Hawaii
BRIAN HOWALD/The Stanford Daily
Say “Aloha” to Stanford’s new Earth Systems in Hawaii program.
Next fall, 20 students will be able to take an environmentally-focused quarter-long program in Hawaii that merges earth sciences, life sciences and Hawaiian culture. The School of Earth Sciences and Woods Institute for the Environment unveiled the Hawaii program for fall quarter 2010 in an e-mail to the Earth Systems mailing list last week.
The Hawaii program is the brainchild of Peter Vitousek, a senior fellow at the Woods Institute for the Environment. Vitousek was born and raised in Hawaii and focused most of his academic research on the Pacific chain of islands. He pushed for a permanent Hawaiian outpost after seeing the high demand for several seminar trips to Hawaii he headed a few years ago.
“My trips were popular and the Australia program is always way oversubscribed, so I think that the Hawaii program will be a great opportunity for people interested in the earth sciences,” Vitousek said.
There has been a boom in earth systems enrollment in the past years and Vitousek says that while earth sciences students can choose from Bing’s Australia program, Stanford at Sea and field opportunities at the Hopkins Marine station, “there are never enough options.”
Stanford’s Hawaii program was partially funded by a generous donation from Julie Wrigley, a sustainability and environmental philanthropist, to provide students with field experience in sustainability research. The earth sciences and Woods Institute for the Environment carried the remainder of the cost, which field program coordinator Max Borella described as a “significant investment” on Stanford’s end.
The 20 students who will be accepted into the 10-week class will leapfrog around the Big Island of Hawaii for eight weeks and end with a two-week stay on Kauai. The program will offer three classes: Hawaiian Earth Sciences, Life Sciences and Human Systems and a three-unit independent research project.
Students will begin the program at Volcanoes National Park–the home of two of the world’s most active volcanoes–where they will stay at a military R&R (rest and relaxation) camp to study the volcanic processes and erosion. The group will then move to the northern end of the Big Island for about four weeks to a house owned by a boarding school to do terrestrial and marine work, looking especially at rainforests and coral reefs. Their work will conclude at the island of Kauai where they will stay in a field station–a place Borella calls the “Grand Canyon of Hawaii”–with a week-long final stop at a YMCA camp on the north shore of Kauai.
“One thing I’ve found working in Hawaii is that it’s a great model. You have most tropics and climate zones present in one area,” Vitousek said. “There are lava flows that are millions of years old,–spectacular gradients in climate and age of soils. From a biophysical standpoint, you just can’t beat it.”
According to Vitousek, the Hawaiian islands are a microcosm of sustainability adaptation: native Hawaiians managed to create an agricultural infrastructure on completely cut-off land without the help of things like container ships.
“Hawaii’s the perfect place to tackle the question of how you build a sustainable society in complete isolation,” Vitousek said. “Hundreds of yeas ago, Hawaiians had to think about issues of global sustainability. They faced and met those challenges. We’re facing some of the same issues today so it’s interesting to see how they approached it.”
Borella says that logistically, the program is “essentially ready to go” and his team is working to iron out administrative details like synchronizing the course curriculum so that classes are properly cross-listed under the biology, anthropology and earth sciences departments.
Borella stressed that the Hawaii program will be more integrated than many other seminars, interweaving the program’s anthropological, cultural and biological components.
“We don’t want the courses to be discreet modules that operate independently,” Borella said. “Each course component–from the ecologists to the soil scientists to the anthropologists–will be connected in a comprehensive way.”
“What I most love about the program is the student interaction,” said Borella, who came from the non-profit sector before settling at Stanford. “This is going to be an experiential, hands-on program that really resonates with students who want to learn about Hawaii.”
Jess McNally, a co-terminal student in earth systems and head TA for the program, did both Stanford at Sea and Stanford in Australia to study biology and global change. She said that the Hawaii program is ideal for students interested in evolutionary ecology and biology.
“The earth systems program is growing so rapidly so it’s exciting that there’s another option. The demand is definitely there,” McNally said. “Plus, Hawaii’s a fascinating place to investigate both cultural history and environmental history.”
Johnny Bartz ’10, a student advisor in the earth systems program, agrees that the program appears promising.
“It’s great to be able to get that hands-on experience and go out into the field and do research,” Bartz said. “The Hawaii program sounds like it’s being designed by a lot of faculty interested in ecology and biology and could be an opportunity for students to epitomize their passion for field work.”
For more information on the Hawaii Earth Systems program, check out the public information session on Feb. 8 at 12:30 p.m. in Y2E2.
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Quarterback Drew Brees Explains Why Supreme Court Should Block NFL From Having Exclusive Licensing Deals
We were recently discussing how the idea of “officially licensed” gear for professional sports teams is a relatively new phenomenon. In the past, anyone could produce gear for fans. However, there’s a Supreme Court case looking at this issue, involving the NFL’s exclusive license deal with Reebok, and reader Fitz points us to a quite well argued op-ed by New Orleans Saints quarterback Drew Brees explaining the harm that such exclusive deals do, noting that it seems like a clear violation of antitrust rules, in that all of the different NFL teams are effectively teaming up to exclude competition:
The NFL originally won the case because the lower courts decided that, when it comes to marketing hats and gear, the 32 teams in the league act like one big company, a “single entity,” and such an entity can’t illegally conspire with itself to restrain trade. The NFL-Reebok deal is worth a lot of money, and fans pay for it: If you want to show support for your team by buying an official hat, it now costs $10 more than before the exclusive arrangement.Amazingly, after the NFL won the case, it asked the Supreme Court to dramatically expand the ruling and determine that the teams act as a single entity not only for marketing hats and gear, but for pretty much everything the league does. It was an odd request — as if I asked an official to review an 80-yard pass of mine that had already been ruled a touchdown. The notion that the teams function as a single entity is absurd; the 32 organizations composing the NFL and the business people who run them compete with unrelenting intensity for players, coaches and, most of all, the loyalty of fans.
Brees rips apart that argument by noting the competition he, himself, faced as a free agent — a right that players only got after a series of court battles. This isn’t a huge surprise. Like plenty of other businesses, sports leagues have a keen understanding of what monopoly rents are, and do everything possible to profit from them.
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Conservation: A walk in the cemeteries
Al Ahram Weekly (Ahmed Abu Ghazala)
With a story behind every tomb, there is more to Cairo’s cemeteries than meets the eye, says Ahmed Abu GhazalaEgypt’s history is packed with figures who have affected the country’s history in different ways, and perhaps the best way to remember them and their accomplishments is to visit their tombs. A visit to Cairo’s cemeteries makes a fascinating day out, these being constructed in a style different from that of any other cemetery in the world today.
The Al-Ghafeer (guard) cemetery in Cairo is famous for hosting the tombs of many of Egypt’s former royal family, though these are sometimes not well kept. On the cemetery walls, a banner proclaims the names of Mohamed Ibrahim Suleiman and Heidar El-Boghdadi, the MPs who represent the area in parliament, and inside there is the richly decorated tomb of Princess Shwikar, first wife of King Fouad.
However, negligence has blackened the stone, the tomb lies in the middle of a square that is often full of traffic, and a stray dog lives inside the tomb with those who take care of it.
Elsewhere in the cemetery there is the tomb of Queen Nariman, the last queen of Egypt, wife of King Farouk, and mother of the last king, Ahmed Fouad.
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Firefox 3.6 RC1 Comes with a Solid List of New Features
Mozilla finally got around to launching the release candidate version of the latest Firefox 3.6. The first big update after 3.5 was scheduled to be released in Q4 2009 but, as usually the case at Mozilla, it got pushed back and looks set to be coming sometime this month. In theory, the RC1 version could be identical to the final build, th… (read more) -
Water Supply
Please use this thread for posting the Sri Lanka Water Supply Discussions and Pictures. -
Avalanche of Criticism Following GM’s Saab Winding Down Decision
General Motors announced a few days ago its decision to start winding down Saab, despite the bids it has received in the last few weeks. Furthermore, it announced the appointment of AlixPartners to manage the whole process, a move the led to criticism from Sweden officials involved in the Saab business.The first to react was IF Metall chairman Stefan Lofven who said in a statement that GM’s intentions are "irresponsible", pointing to the way the US-based auto giant trie… (read more)
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Lindsay Lohan Hit & Run Lawsuit
Trouble-prone starlet Lindsay Lohan is at the center of a brewing hit and run case in Los Angeles. A member of the paparazzi member is threatening legal action against the actress after claiming her driver “almost killed” him in a pedestrian acccident over the weekend.

The Georgia Rule star’s car allegedly struck the photographer at approximately 12:30 AM Sunday morning in front of The Hotel Cafe in Hollywood, according to L.A.’s NBC affiliate KTLA. After plowing through a throng of determined snappers, the BMW sped away from the scene, witnesses say. Lohan, 23, wasn’t driving, but was inside the car at the time.
The driver is now the target of a criminal assault with a deadly weapon investigation.
The photographer suffered injuries to his arm and wrist, but was not taken to hospital. “Of course I’m going to sue them … but I don’t care about the money,” the photographer told TMZ.com Sunday. He claims he is “lucky to be alive,” especially since the driver was wearing sunglasses while driving in a dark alley.
“I want to press charges so badly … she’s going to jail,” the shutterbug shouted.
Lindsay is no stranger to bad manners behind the wheel. She got her first DUI in 2006, two weeks before her 21st birthday, when she slammed her Mercedes into a tree in Beverly Hills. Her second collar for drunk driving came in July 2007, just days after she left a Malibu rehab facility.
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BMW Split Engine Hybrid in the Works
The next generation hybrid system is reportedly in the works within BMW and rumor goes it will come in the form of a split engine hybrid. According to a report by Autocar, the German manufacturer has already filed a patent application for the technology. According to the source, the application filed by BMW describes the technology as "comprising a first internal combustion engine unit… and a second internal combustion engine unit.
The operating princip… (read more)
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Takuma Sato Linked with Renault Seat
Kamui Kobayashi might not be the only Japanese driver in the Formula One roster next season. According to some recent reports in the French media, Renault F1 Team are currently considering veteran driver Takuma Sato for the vacant seat in their 2010 lineup. With Robert Kubica already confirming his stay at Enstone, new team manager Eric Boullier is on a deadline to secure a functional drivers’ lineup by the Valencia testing session in February.According to French publication Auto… (read more)
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History: Memories of the Aswan High Dam
Al-Masry Al-Youm (Zeinab Abul-Magd)
The story of the High Dam was a tale of a nation, hikayit sha‘b, as Abdel Halim Hafiz chanted in an iconic song from the Nasserist period.This nation lived under the yoke of British colonialism for over 70 years. After gaining independence, Egypt’s revolutionary president, Colonel Gamal Abdel Nasser, approached the World Bank to finance the construction of a dam on the Nile, a vital step towards economic development. The World Bank refused. In an audacious challenge to old and new imperialism, Nasser nationalized the Suez Canal in 1956 to acquire funding for the project. The struggling nation heroically endured subsequent military assaults and a trade embargo. The dam was eventually built.
“We said we would build and here we have built the high dam. Oh colonialism, we have built it with our hands, the high dam. With our money, with the hands of our workers,” Abdel Halim’s chorus enthusiastically repeated. Like this, the socialist dream began, only to fall apart, leaving behind memories of a vanished era.
The story of the High Dam at Aswan is indeed the tale of this nation. The stages of its history chronicle critical transformations in Egyptian history at large. During the last half century, the dam moved from being a celebrated monument to Egyptian independence to a forgotten barrage deep in the country’s south. It was a state-engineered tool of anti-imperialist propaganda, whose splendor faded away with the downfall and fundamental reversion of the anti-imperial project.
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CES: Ed Hardy Tries Cellphone Accessories [Voices]
By Marisa Taylor, Reporter, The Wall Street Journal
There’s not much that’s subtle about Ed Hardy, the clothing line splashed with rhinestones and vintage tattoo designs that’s favored by the likes of Jon Gosselin.
But at CES, Ed Hardy entered the world of mobile accessories with handset designs called Icing, intended for “the distinguishing mobile user who wants to show off the Ed Hardy brand with subtlety,” according to the company.
They’re made by Crystal Icing, which makes handsets adorned with Swarovski crystals. Users can choose between 10 new designs with names like “Beautiful Ghost,” “Love Kills Slowly” and “Koi Fish” for mobile faceplates ($30), iPod faceplates ($20 to $30) or special rhinestone faceplates ($50).
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