Author: Serkadis

  • Psystar Loses Big To Apple

    When Psystar first started selling PCs with Apple OS’s installed on them, we knew there would be a lawsuit — though it took a bit more time than we expected. Originally, Psystar tried to claim that Apple was violating antitrust law, which seemed like a wasted path for exploration — and, indeed, a court rejected that claim. Then Psystar went back to more reasonable defenses… or so we thought.

    The court hearing the case didn’t seem to think any of Psystar’s main lines of defense had any validity at all and granted summary judgment to Apple on all of the major points, saying that a trial wasn’t even necessary. The “fair use” claim was already weak, and the judge noted that Psystar didn’t even try to discuss any of the four factors generally used in determining fair use. The two (I thought) stronger claims were that (a) the right of first sale applied, and once Psystar purchased OSX legally, it could resell it, provided it was only installed on that one computer, and (b) that Apple went too far in its EULA terms, which demanded that OS X could only work on a Mac. Unfortunately, the judge didn’t agree to either one, though I find the judge’s reasoning perplexing and hardly convincing.

    On the issue of first sale, here’s what the ruling said:


    The copies at issue here were not lawfully manufactured
    with the authorization of the copyright owner. As stated, Psystar made an unauthorized copy of
    Mac OS X from a Mac mini that was placed onto an “imaging station” and then used a “master
    copy” to make many more unauthorized copies that were installed on individual Psystar
    computers. The first-sale defense does not apply to those unauthorized copies.

    Perhaps I’m missing something here, because earlier reports had suggested that Psystar legally purchased each copy of OS X and then installed the legally purchased copy on the new machine (which it then included with the sold machine). But from the description above, it sounds like part of the problem is that a single “master copy” was used to make multiple installations. Of course, that raises a whole host of separate issues. If Psystar legally purchased a separate license for each one, but still used a single master copy, is that really infringing? After all, the code is identical, and it seems positively ridiculous to say that even though you bought, say, 20 licenses, you can’t just use one master copy to install 20 times. It seems like this could use additional clarification. Because, the other way one could interpret this is that there is no right of first sale if the company says a copy is unauthorized — which would have troubling implications.

    On the EULA front, the court again basically just takes Apple’s position, and insists it did nothing wrong. I’m not surprised by the outcome at all, but I would have expected at least a more complete response to the First Sale doctrine rights issues. Even ignoring that a “copy” was being made — with the physical copy, it really is a matter of first sale. The company is selling something it legally purchased.

    Psystar will likely appeal, though I still have little faith that will get anywhere.

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  • Networks & Their Fear & Loathing of Hulu

    Hulu, the online video joint venture of NBC, Fox and Disney that’s funded by Providence Equity Partners, seems to be having familial issues. No, it’s not YouTube or TV Everywhere giving the second-most popular online video service in the U.S. headaches. Instead, internal bickering is causing problems, MediaWeek reports. This is not the first time Hulu’s parents have undermined the service. But it comes as a surprise — traditional media companies have a long history of snatching defeat from the jaws of victory. Continue reading on NewTeeVee.

  • What Are The World’s Oddest Creation Myths?

    Explanations on how the world came to be can be found in almost every culture and faith and vary from the traditional to the truly unusual.  From giant eggs to homicide, these tales of the world’s beginning are more than a little strange.

    Norse


    In the beginning there was nothing but the ice of Niflheim in the north and the fire of Muspelheim in the south.  The empty gap between them was known as Ginnungagap and was a void where the few stray bits of ice could sometimes meet with sparks of flame.

    These ice fragments melted and eventually, if inexplicably, formed a hermaphrodite giant named Ymir and a cow. This was convenient, because the giant was able to survive by drinking  milk from the cow’s udders, while the cow in turn was able to survive on nothing but rime ice. The cow eventually uncovered a man as she consumed the ice, and he joined them once she had licked him free.

    Through means that are biologically boggling, both the giant and the ice man fathered several children, who then took to fighting and murdering each other. Eventually Ymir the giant was slain, and his children used his body to create the universe in one of the most macabre funerals you can imagine.

    His flesh they ground into dirt, and the maggots that appeared in his flesh because the dwarves that lived beneath the earth. His bones were transformed into mountains, and Odin strew his father’s brains into the sky to become clouds. Four of the dwarves were chosen to hold aloft Ymir’s skull for eternity, and so was created the heavens.

    Japanese


    The Japanese gods created two divine beings and assigned to them the task of creating the first land. One could wonder why gods capable of creating divine beings needed to delegate the whole land thing, but questioning gods is really never a good idea.  Izanami no Mikoto (“Exalted Female”) and Izanagi no Mikoto (“Exalted Male”) were thus created and sent down to poke about the ocean with a jeweled halberd until they stirred up what turned out to be land.

    Pleased with this freshly churned up bit of sod, they moved in and eventually decided to have a family. From their unions came the eight great islands of Japan, each one birthed by Izanami in what must have been the strangest set of known pregnancies.  They also were responsible for the creation of the Kami, the natural forces or spirits.  Izanami died giving birth to the Kami of fire, whose destructive nature did terrible damage to its mother at the moment of creation. In her death throes,  Izanami continued her fertile ways, creating more Kami from her feces, vomit and urine, and one last one created by her dying tears of pain and suffering.

    Babylonian


    Babylonian tales begin with three gods, Apsu,  god of fresh water,  Tiamat, goddess of salt water, and Mummu,  the god of mists.  All this water was sloshing about, mingling and having a good time while Apsu and Tiamat got together and spawned two gods who grew up and spawned more gods,  all of them swimming about in a massive body of water without so much as a tropical beach to break up the monotony of endless waves.

    Eventually there grew to be so many gods and goddesses bobbing abut that they got loud and unruly. Apsu went to his mate Tiamat and suggested that the only way they were ever going to get a good night’s sleep again was to slay the whole lot of them.  Naturally Tiamat got a little irate at this suggestion, told Apsu to never suggest such a thing again and went swimming to clear her head.  While she was gone, Apsu decided she’d come around eventually and got on with planning to kill off his entire family in the name of peace and quiet.

    The younger gods soon learned of this plot and were terrified, but their leader Ea hatched a scheme to save all their lives. He cast a spell on his grandfather Apsu, ripped his crown from his head and murdered him.  Ea then built a palace on Apsu’s waters, hooked up with the goddess Damkina and fathered Marduk,  a four eared, four eyed giant who controlled rains and storms.

    Now that the threat was over, the other gods spent no time in getting together and selling out Ea to their grandmother Tiamat, complaining that Ea had slain their dear grandfather. Angry, Tiamat mustered an army of dragons and terrible monsters to go after Ea.  Marduk offered to defend his father on the condition that if he won he, Marduk, would rule the gods instead of Ea.  

    The battle raged and Tiamat’s army fell before Marduk, leaving the two gods to face each other. Eventually Marduk was victorious, and he cleaved his great grandmother’s water laden body in half with his club.  Half he put in the sky to make the heavens, and half   he carved into land, which he lay over her husband Apsu’s fresh waters, which bubbled through her corpse as springs and wells.

    Those gods who had supported Tiamat were assigned labours in the newly created world, working the fields and land.  Soon though, they rebelled, and Marduk decided the solution was to slaughter Tiamat’s general Kingu.  Marduk mixed the general’s blood with clay and spittle collected from the other gods, and created humans from this disgusting muck. Humans were then made to do all the tasks the gods did not wish to do anymore, and were expected to pray to their creators in thanks for the lives they had been given.

    Bakuba


    From central Africa, the Bakuba have their own account of the beginning of the world.

    Originally the Earth was nothing but water and darkness, ruled over by the only living thing, a giant named Mbombo.  Time passed in this dark dank kingdom of one, and very little happened until one day Mbombo felt a terrible pain in his stomach.  The cause of this indigestion was revealed when he vomited up the sun, moon and the stars.   

    Having regurgitated this brilliant source of heat and light, the giant watched as the sun evaporated the water of his kingdom away, creating clouds and eventually revealing dry hills and land that emerged from beneath the water.  Indigestion struck again, and this time Mbombo vomited up a colourful collection of life.  The first man and woman emerged from his bile, as did animals, trees, medicine and other wondrous things.  The first woman went to the east, and her son Woto became the first king of the Bakuba.

    Chinese – Pangu


    According to one Chinese myth the world started off as nothing but formless chaos, like a high school student’s locker right around the end of the school year. Somehow this chaos coalesced, forming a cosmic egg containing the opposing principles of Yin and Yang.  It took 18,000 years, but eventually the two principles worked out their differences and became perfectly balanced. At that moment, a primitive giant covered in hair, sporting horns and a stylish fur wardrobe hatched from the egg. His name was Pangu.

    Having just been born, Pangu didn’t spend any time doing the usual childhood things, but instead set about creating the world.   He cleaved Yin from Yang with his giant ax.  Yin became the Earth, and Yang the sky.  To ensure the two principles never got together again, he stood between them and pushed up the sky. For 18,000 years he pushed; each day Pangu grew 10 feet bigger, the sky 10 feet taller, and the Earth 10 feet wider.  This task took a terrible toll on Pangu, and when it was finally done Pangu died.  In and act that made him into the world’s first organ donor,  Pangu’s body was then transformed into the world as we know it. His voice was transformed into thunder, his right eye the moon and his left eye the sun.  His breath became the wind and his body became the mountains.  Rivers were formed of his blood, muscles became farmland, bones became minerals and the bone marrow became sparkling diamonds.  His facial hair became the stars, his fur the flora of the world, and the fleas on his fur became the animals.

  • Activision hints Call of Duty online plans — for a fee

    More news from the BMO Capital Markets Forums. It looks like Activision’s got something up their sleeves for Call of Duty online players. More fees to…

  • Silent Hill movie sequel targets 2010 release date

    A date’s been set for Konami’s Silent Hill 2 videogame movie sequel. A target date at least. Meeting the deadline is obviously going to be dependent o…

  • H1N1 “super flu” plague in Ukraine spark concern, conspiracy theories about origins

    (NaturalNews) Here’s what we know with some degree of certainty about the H1N1 virus in Ukraine right now: nearly 300 people have died from the viral strain, and over 65,000 people have been hospitalized (the actual numbers are increasing by the hour). The virus appears to be either a highly aggressive mutation of the globally-circulating H1N1 strain, or a combination of three different influenza strains now circulating in Ukraine. Some observers suspect this new “super flu” might be labeled viral hemorrhagic pneumonia (meaning it destroys lung tissue until your lungs bleed so much that you drown in your own fluid), but that has not been confirmed by any official sources we’re aware of.

    Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko has issued emergency quarantine orders for nine of the country’s regions and ordered the deployment of mobile military hospitals. He announced that the nation had been simultaneously hit with two different seasonal flu strains plus H1N1 — and then hinted that all three might have recombined into the deadly new Ukrainian super flu.

    In his own words, as reported by Daily Mail, “Unlike similar epidemics in other countries, three causes of serious viral infections came together simultaneously in Ukraine: two seasonal flus and the Californian flu. Virologists conclude that this combination of infections may produce an even more aggressive new virus as a result of mutation.”

    On November 6, Ukraine’s Deputy Health Minister Zinovy Mytnyk announced that over 600,000 citizens had already caught the new flu. British scientists are now conducting tests on the new viral strain to find out why it appears to be so deadly (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1227984/British-scientists-testing-Ukrainian-super-flu-killed-189-people.html).

    The mainstream media is blaming Ukraine’s poor health care system for the relatively high rates of hospitalization and death (http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/14/world/europe/14flu.html?_r=2), but they refuse to mention (yet again) the vitamin D deficiency found across this population living at high latitude in the winter, where sunlight is relatively scarce.

    Here’s a useful blog for staying up to date on the Ukrainian plague:
    http://ukraineplague.blogspot.com/

    What we don’t know
    Now here’s what we don’t know about the Ukraine outbreak:

    What is the actual genetic composition of this mutated strain?

    Scientists have not released any meaningful news about the genetic sequence of the Ukraine strain. For the moment, the WHO is somewhat quiet on the matter. The last WHO update was from November 3 (and the situation has become considerably worse since). (http://www.who.int/csr/don/2009_11_03/en/index.html).

    Was this viral strain released as a bioweapon?

    There are numerous reports circulating widely across the ‘net that cite aerial spraying across Kiev in the days before the new “super flu” outbreak. People are speculating that this was a bioweapon attack intentionally unleashed upon the Ukrainian population. So far, NaturalNews can find no credible information supporting this theory, but it remains a possibility to be researched further.

    Does Baxter Pharmaceuticals have anything to do with the outbreak?

    You may recall that earlier this year, Baxter shipped live avian flu viral material to labs in 18 countries, including one in the Ukraine. (http://www.naturalnews.com/025760.html) There is suspicion that Baxter could be tied to a planned outbreak of a weaponized virus as a population control bioweapon of some sort, but NaturalNews has not been unable to find any credible information sources supporting this theory. Lacking any better leads on this subject, as far as we can tell right now this remains an unproven conspiracy theory. (If anyone has more credible info on this, please send it our way for review.)

    It is plausible that Baxter had something to do with this, but we just don’t have any convincing evidence to back it up at this point.

    H1N1 vaccines likely offer little protect against the Ukraine super flu
    People receiving H1N1 vaccine shots right now need to know that currently-available H1N1 vaccine shots may offer no protection whatsoever against the “Ukraine Strain.” That’s because once the virus mutates, changing it genetic structure, it can instantly render all existing vaccines obsolete.

    Depending on the degree of genetic changes, there is a possibility that some level of immunity may be conferred to people who already have H1N1 antibodies, but here’s the dirty little secret the vaccine industry doesn’t want you to know: People who built their own natural immunity to H1N1 through exposure rather than vaccines have a much greater likelihood of exhibiting natural immunity to genetic variations of H1N1. In other words, people who overcame H1N1 exposure on their own, without being vaccinated, have a far stronger defense against H1N1 variations that might appear.

    This is yet another reason why flu vaccines are so dangerous: The deny your immune system the important opportunity to exercise its own adaptive defenses and build stronger protections against future infections.

    One possible scenario that could unfold with all this is that the Ukraine strain might spread around the world, wiping out those who got vaccinated against H1N1 because their immune systems suffer from a suppressed ability to naturally generate antibodies to a new strain. Meanwhile, drug companies will try to scramble and create a whole new batch of “super flu” vaccines, but they’re always too little, too late. Theoretically, millions of people could die around the world while waiting in line for yet another vaccine shot.

    All they really need is vitamin D3, some herbal anti-virals, a healthy diet and plenty of rest, but no one is telling them that.

    Even the Ukraine super flu is no match for a healthy immune system. Remember: Out of 65,000+ hospitalizations, fewer than 300 people have died so far. That’s still a very low mortality rate, even if the spread of the viral infection seems aggressive.

    WHO cranking up anti-viral drug push
    Meanwhile, the WHO is upping its push for anti-viral drugs, saying that drugs like Tamiflu should now be used earlier on swine flu victims (http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5g6p5Dtqau5AUbPvikpzic2aDIk6w).

    They still won’t recommend anti-viral herbs, foods, supplements or natural remedies, of course. The WHO remains a faithful pusher of Big Pharma’s profit agenda, even while denying the People of the world the truth about how they can save their own lives with anti-viral natural remedies. To both the WHO and CDC, the swine flu pandemic has always been about pushing a pharmaceutical agenda at the expense of public health.

    Had the public been informed about vitamin D and natural anti-virals like Lomatium, many lives could have already been saved. Instead, the drug pushers at the CDC and WHO have tens of millions of people standing in line waiting for vaccines instead of consuming natural supplements and remedies that could help protect them from influenza.

    The profit agenda forces us to wonder: With the current H1N1 strain fizzling out — and yet billions of dollars worth of vaccines still needing to be sold — could the Ukraine strain have been engineered to scare up more demand and more sales of vaccines and anti-virals?

    That’s a question that all thinking people need to be asking right now. But we also need to be careful in assessing what’s true here. Reading the postings about this on the ‘net, I’ve noticed way too many people leaping to assumptions about what’s happening in the Ukraine without any real evidence to back that up. The reports about Joseph Moshe, in particular, appear to be a complete hoax.

    While it’s possible this was an engineered bioweapon of some sort, it’s not enough to just assume that’s true and then declare it to be so. More evidence is needed before NaturalNews would back a theory like that.

    We’ll keep you posted on what we find. New documents tend to come our way after we post the first story on a subject like this, often leading to a follow-up story that benefits from more information.

    Sources for this story include:
    http://www.who.int/csr/don/2009_11_03/en/index.html
    http://www.recombinomics.com/News/11120902/Ukraine_239.html
    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/worldnews/article-1227984/British-scientists-testing-Ukrainian-super-flu-killed-189-people.html
    http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/14/world/europe/14flu.html?_r=2

  • Farmers, Ranchers Fighting Back Against FDA Tyranny Over Animal Farms

    (NaturalNews) A bill that would grant the FDA expanded authority to inspect farms has come under fire from ranchers and farmers concerned about increased government interference in their operations.

    In response to a recent series of food-borne illness outbreaks, a bill has been approved by the House Energy and Commerce Committee that would allocate more money and authority to the FDA to fulfill its current food safety duties. Although technically the bill would not expand the FDA’s authority to foods currently supervised by the Department of Agriculture (USDA) , meat, poultry and some egg products , many farmers and their advocates are concerned that the language of the bill is too vague to ensure against this.

    “Live animals are not ‘food’ until the point of processing, which is why this bill needs to clarify that the FDA does not have regulatory authority on our farms, ranches and feedlots,” said Sam Ives of the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association.

    Even though the USDA has been involved in several recent recalls of beef products, its inspection procedures are usually considered stricter than the FDA’s, and the agency’s inspection program is also better funded. This has spared the USDA the criticism the FDA has faced after recent recalls of peanut butter, hot peppers and spinach.

    FDA Senior Adviser on Food Safety Mike Taylor said that the agency already inspects some farms as part of its duties to supervise egg, vegetable and animal feed production. He noted that the FDA and the USDA have also cooperated in the past, such as on the issue of mad cow disease, and promised that the law will not change any agency’s jurisdiction. Not everyone was reassured, however.

    “We are a little skeptical of FDA,” said Rep. Collin Peterson, Chair of the House Agricultural Committee. “We are very concerned about them getting involved in grain farms, livestock farms.”

    Sources for this story include: online.wsj.com.

  • November is Diabetes Awareness Month: Become Aware of the Warning Signs of Diabetes

    (NaturalNews) Approximately 24 million people living in the United States have diabetes, but many of them don’t know it. The reason they don’t know it is because the symptoms of diabetes aren’t unusual. For example, if they’re feeling tired, it could easily be due to just not getting enough sleep. Using the facilities frequently? That could easily be due to drinking too much coffee to offset the sleepiness. So, this being Diabetes Awareness Month and all, it’s time to become aware of the warning signs…before it’s too late.

    In reality, these symptoms are the body’s internal warning system, alerting the body that there’s a problem. But because these warnings so often go unheeded, diabetes develops and lives change permanently.

    There’s no known cure for diabetes. Once it develops, there’s no turning back; you will be forever burdened with constantly having to check your blood sugar levels, constantly having to watch your diet, and constantly having to walk that fine line of not allowing blood sugar levels to rise or fall too much.

    Avoiding such a fate is accomplished by recognizing the warning signs early on. The symptoms vary depending on the type of diabetes. For example, with type I diabetes, symptoms include fatigue, unexplained weight loss, extreme thirst, and frequent urination. With type II diabetes, the kind that affects an estimated 90 to 95 percent of people with diabetes, the aforementioned symptoms are accompanied by blurred vision, tingling or numbness in the extremities, not being able to detect sweet tasting foods, and bruising easily.

    Should you experience any combination of these symptoms, consult a doctor. The earlier, the better. If the doctor says you’re at risk for diabetes, take it seriously. Make the lifestyle changes that can prevent diabetes from ever actually developing. This can be accomplished by exercising regularly and eating right. But this prescription is a very generic course of treatment.

    More specific preventative measures include supplementing with alpha-lipoic acid (helps control blood sugar levels), garlic (enhances and improves blood circulation) and vitamin B complex (enhances glucose metabolism). For herbs, look no further than the berry. Huckleberries promote insulin production; juniper berries lower blood glucose levels, and cedar berries are great for the pancreas, the organ that produces and regulates insulin.

    Because of the complications that result from it, diabetes is among the leading causes of death in the United States. It is the sixth leading cause, and the leading cause of blindness in people between the ages of 20 and 74.

    November is Diabetes Awareness Month. Live up to its title by becoming more aware of how diabetes presents itself, so you can protect you and your family from a lifetime of pin-pricking and cholesterol-checking (among many, many other daily annoyances).

    Sources:
    http://www.recordonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20091111/HEALTH/911110324/-1/SITEMAP
    http://www.diabetes.org/diabetes-basics/symptoms/
    Balch, Phyllis A. Prescription for Nutritional Healing. 4th ed. New York: Avery, 2006



    About the author
    Frank Mangano is an American author, health advocate, researcher and entrepreneur in the field of alternative health. He is perhaps best known for his book “The Blood Pressure Miracle”, which hit best seller status on Amazon within days of its release. Additionally, he has published numerous reports and a considerable amount of articles pertaining to natural health.
    Mangano is the publisher of Natural Health On The Web, which offers readers free and valuable information on alternative remedies. Visit http://www.naturalhealthontheweb.com to learn more.

  • New Gift Items from The Illustrated Cat PLUS BONUS GIVEAWAY!

    Pendant & Tote Bag from The Illustrated Cat

    Just in time for the holidays, The Illustrated Cat (remember those amazing colored pencil drawings?) now has two perfect gift items for the cat lovers in your life: pendants and tote bags, both featuring Johnnie Scoutten’s beautiful cat portraits.

    The glass pendants are individually handcrafted and adorned with beads to match the portrait. Each pendant comes with a black satin cord and sells for $60. The tote bags are made of micro fiber material and measure 18″ x 12″ x 5.5″. The bags are fully lined with two inside pockets and a zippered pouch, and they have a magnetic closure. Tote bags are $80 each.

    All Portraits

    BONUS GIVEAWAY! ENTER TO WIN A PENDANT!

    One lucky winner is going receive a handcrafted pendant of their choice from The Illustrated Cat! The winner will get to choose one of Johnnie’s six cat portraits. To enter, please leave a comment on this post. One entry per person. The winner will be chosen in a random drawing on November 22. This giveaway is open to readers everywhere!


  • Uncharted 2 breaks one million sales mark

    This is no surprise at all. Naughty Dog’s Uncharted 2: Among Thieves continues to impress as as it goes on to sell copies, breaking the one million un…

  • Harper College’s Future Tied to Changing Economy and Skilled Labor, New President Says, TribLocal

    The weight of Harper College’s pewter Presidential Medallion is meant to remind those who wear it of the heavy burden running a school of 40,000 students.

    But for the most current recipient, Harper’s newest president, Kenneth Ender, the weight for him is something more, he said.

    At Ender’s formal installation last week, community college presidents paraded in cap and gowns and politicians and educational leaders congratulated him in a 90-minute ceremony on the Palatine campus.

    Harper’s fifth president in its 44-year history took a more somber tact in his speech compared to the jovial festivities.

    Ender has said the almost 1,200 community college presidents like himself are at crossroads.

    A high school diploma used to mean employment after graduation but now more than ever some sort of post-secondary education is required as the evolving economy demands a skilled labor force, he said

    It’s likely community colleges will be expected to fill a void for its 11.7 million students, especially after a $12 billion federal community college initiative was announced earlier this year.

    That challenge is exactly what Ender will be grappling with during his tenure at Harper, he said.

    “What we have is a great result – the creation a great 20th century community college,” Ender said. “What we are all trying to figure out what is a great 21st Century Community College.”

    Challenge for the future 

    The American Association of Community Colleges offers a snapshot into the current state of community colleges: Almost half of undergraduates in the U.S. attend a community college. Forty percent are full time. The average age is 29. Almost 60 percent are women and nearly 40 percent are the first generation to attend college. Average tuition is about $2,400 compared with about $6,600 for a 4-year public institution, according to the association.

    In June, community colleges came to the educational forefront after President Barack Obama announced a $12-billion initiative to pump money into community colleges, which is designed to boost high school and college graduation rates.

    The new federal push has been on the horizon for quite some time, said James Rosenbaum, Northwestern University’s professor of education and social policy.

    “A generation ago, community colleges started out as minor element,” Rosenbaum said. “But now they are becoming a big deal.”

    The reason for the shift has to do with the demands of the economy, which continues to quickly transition toward a more educated labor force with specialized skills, Rosenbaum said. Health care and information technology are major sectors that are developing rapidly, but to be part of those fields requires serious skills that a high school education can’t offer, he said. A lot of high schoolers don’t like school, preferring to finish and then look for work, but this tactic will likely to fail, leading to one low-paying, dead-end job after another, he said.

    Community colleges provide education past high school, like a certificate or associates degree, which students will need if they want any economic stability, he said.

    “Society does a bad job warning students what they need,” Rosenbaum, said. “Some kids don’t like school, but they are coming to terms that some college is necessary.

    Harper’s role

    Ender said he’s well aware of how the economy continues to change education. At 59, he’s committing at least 10 years to Harper where he’ll attempt to address the challenge, he said.

    One of solution is for community colleges to work more closely with high schools and colleges. The school will work more closely with local high schools, encouraging students to take college level courses at Harper.

    The school will continue to partner with universities to provide 4-year degrees, Ender said.

    Through Northern Illinois University, Harper provides a bachelor’s degree in nursing. Just last month, Harper announced the addition of another applied management for students, who are pursuing careers in law enforcement and firefighting.

    At Ender’s previous community college, Cumberland County College in New Jersey, the school offered bachelor’s and master’s programs through university partnerships.

    Another solutions for community colleges to fill the void will be to provide a broader range of educational opportunities that students might not immediately consider.

    Ender points to mechatronic skills, which combines engineering, electronics and computers in the manufacturing field. It can be applied to a variety of other fields, including automotive, pharmaceutical and printing.

    Also, community colleges will not be just for younger people, he said. Years ago, a high school diplomas was enough, but now older adults are finding out they need more.

    “They find themselves in a situation that they never dreamed of,” Ender said. “These people had jobs. They did everything right, but it wasn’t enough. The 50-plus crowd will be another huge market.”

    -Story by Sue Ter Maat, Triblocal.com reporter

     

  • Ace Attorney Investigations: Miles Edgeworth demo now available on official site, Facebook

     The demo for Ace Attorney Investigations: Miles Edgeworth is now available to the rest of the market. Previously a GameStop exclusive, the demo …

  • On Shelves This Week: November 15 – 21, 2009

     This is the week, guys! No more filler games! Well, alright, so we still have a couple of titles from the Imagine and Petz series, but never min…

  • AT&T Dials Up a Computing Cloud

    AT&T today unveiled its Synaptic Compute as a Service product that will use hardware from Sun Microsystems and software from VMware to provide businesses with computing on demand backed by a guarantee of 99.9 percent availability. The product, which will compete with Amazon’s Ec2, Rackspace’s CloudServers, GoGrid and several planned offerings from the likes of IBM, Savvis and Terremark, is one of several web-based offerings from AT&T. Other products include storage as a service and a custom-built platform as a service.

    In such a crowded marketplace, AT&T will have to do a lot to stand out, but Steve Caniano, who is a VP in AT&T’s hosting and application services business, said the company’s network assets will help its Synaptic products win out, something we pointed out last year when AT&T embarked on its voyage to the cloud. The ability to link the AT&T cloud to the customer’s data center over the AT&T network will help the customer automatically switch to a public cloud when its own data centers are full, or even create virtual private clouds for the client’s off-premise computing-on-demand needs. AT&T’s eventual goal (a common one in the industry) is to enable customers to move their computing around the world either following demand, lower power prices or whatever makes sense for the customer. AT&T may have another advantage as the company has experience billing folks for small increments of service, thanks to its days of charging people for calls by the minute.

    Now that we’ve got a real compute cloud from a network provider, I can’t wait to see how the battle for cloud domination manages to work itself out. If AT&T can do this well, enterprise customers will be interested.

  • Crusading Professor Challenges Dartmouth Atlas On Claims Of Wasteful Health Care Spending

    As he raced through the U.S. Capitol this fall, Dr. Richard “Buz” Cooper, a 73-year-old University of Pennsylvania medical school professor, didn’t mince words. He denounced as “malarkey” a reigning premise of the health care debate — that one-third of the nation’s $2.5 trillion in annual health spending is unnecessary — and said that the idea came from “a bunch of clowns.”

    The harsh language underscores Cooper’s disdain for highly regarded work — as close to a sacred cow as anything in health care — developed over two decades by the Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care. The work by Dartmouth Medical School researchers shows huge geographic variations in the amount of care that hospitals and doctors provide, with spending in some areas running three times as much as in others. Dartmouth argues much of the high spending is due to extra procedures and tests that often don’t help patients, but bring in more money for doctors and hospitals.

    Interactive Dartmouth Graphic: Regional Differences In Medicare Spending


    The argument has been embraced by President Barack Obama’s administration and several lawmakers, who have repeatedly said that the nation could save as much as $700 billion a year — if only doctors and hospitals in high-spending areas, such as Philadelphia, Los Angeles and Chicago, would end their profligate practices and adopt the thriftier ways of say, the Geisinger Health Systems, based in Danville, Pa. The House has inserted provisions in the health bill that could punish high-spending hospitals in Philadelphia and elsewhere, while rewarding low-spending facilities in places such as Albuquerque, N.M., Madison, Wis., or Portland, Ore.

    The Poverty Factor

    But Cooper and some allies say that would be a disaster and hurt efforts by doctors and hospitals to care for the poor. Cooper says the Dartmouth research doesn’t take into account the high cost of helping the impoverished, who often spend more time in hospitals because they don’t have people to care for them at home and often return to the hospital when they can’t afford needed medications.

    “There is abundant evidence that poverty is strongly associated with poor health status, greater per capita spending, more hospital readmissions and poorer outcomes,” he wrote in an Oct. 24 post on his blog. “It is the single strongest factor in variations in health care and the single greatest contributor to ‘excess’ spending.”

    “Don’t say our failure is that medicine is bad in Mississippi and the South Bronx,” Cooper adds in an interview. “That’s a social problem. We’re bad because we don’t spend enough in areas of poverty.”

    Cooper is emerging as the most provocative voice among a small group of health care experts raising doubts about Dartmouth’s methods, which focus on comparing how hospitals treat Medicare patients in their final two years of life. It is from those studies that Dartmouth came to its most far-reaching conclusion: that too much medical care can actually hurt patients rather than help them. But the skeptics say the way hospitals treat Medicare patients can’t be translated into firm conclusions about the country’s overall health spending and trends.

    Dartmouth researchers say that Cooper is flat-out wrong. They say that even when you take the socio-economic levels of patients and sicker populations into account, some hospitals spend far more than others without good reason. And they say their studies show Medicare spending is a good indication of how hospitals generally operate.

    “It’s impossible to carry on a debate with somebody who does not understand statistics, and seems uninterested in learning,” Jonathan Skinner, a senior author of the Atlas, says of Cooper.

    Other critics of Cooper — and there are many — say he has not offered a better way to analyze spending variations among hospitals, but instead takes potshots. They say he tends to embrace data that back up his long-held view that the country needs more doctors, and is too eager to flout professional customs. In December, he was banned from writing for the journal Health Affairs for five years for breaking a rule against sharing articles before publication.

    Hospitals Defend Spending

    The counterattacks haven’t slowed Cooper down. These days, he’s working with several Democratic members of Congress, including Rep. Allyson Schwartz, D-Pa, whose district includes parts of Philadelphia, and Rep. Shelley Berkley, D-Nev. Cooper’s criticisms are also being cited by the lobbyists for the nation’s teaching hospitals and some state hospital associations, including New York’s. All are trying to ensure the health overhaul bills don’t lead the government to unfairly penalize high-spending parts of the country.

    “Our institutions are barely getting by,” says Atul Grover, chief advocacy officer at the Association of American Medical Colleges. “They’re struggling to take care of people who can’t get care anywhere else, and now they’re talking about cutting them, saying they’re inefficient.”

    Hospitals in the greater Philadelphia area certainly have reason to worry. Overall, the region’s hospitals billed Medicare $66,974 on average for patients in the last two years of life, according to the most recent Dartmouth data, covering the years 2001 through 2005. That was 25 percent above the state average of $53,373, and 27 percent above the national average of $52,838.

    The highest-spending hospitals – such as Temple University Hospital, which Dartmouth says spent $85,538 on the average Medicare patient for the period – say they provide more treatment because their patients are poor and enter Medicare with greater health problems. A Temple spokeswoman says they treat more Medicaid patients than any other hospital in the state. Teaching hospitals in the city note that under Medicare rules they get paid extra.

    “Our costs are higher because we have more technology, we have a wider range of programs,” says Ralph Muller, chief executive officer of the University of Pennsylvania Health System, which spent $80,727 on Medicare patients in their final two years of life. “When you adjust for a teaching hospital, a lot of the variation goes away.”

    Dartmouth researchers counter that they have compared hospitals with similar patients’ populations and still found wide differences in spending.

    “There are a lot of people and a lot of hospitals, particularly in big cities, that feel threatened by the message of the Dartmouth Atlas,” says Skinner. “For them to find a spokesperson who is absolving them of all sin is very appealing to them.”

    So who’s right? To help find an answer, the House health overhaul legislation would direct the prestigious Institute of Medicine to research the causes of geographic variations. The institute then would recommend how Medicare can best identify and clamp down on regions where the spending is unjustifiably high. In a partial victory for Cooper and his allies, the bill requires that the institute take into account “socio-economic factors” as well as the health status of patients.

    Other researchers’ work is raising questions about Dartmouth’s conclusions. A recent study published in Circulation, the journal of the American Heart Association, followed patients at six California teaching hospitals who had been hospitalized for heart failure. The study found that those who received more treatment from the hospital — through procedures, tests or days as a patient — were more likely to survive than those who got less medical care.

    Measuring Waste

    Dan Mendelson, president of Avalere Health, a consulting firm in Washington, says some low-spending hospitals may be providing insufficient care, while higher spenders may be giving the needed amount. “What the Cooper analysis does is show why it’s so difficult to change the system,” says Mendelson, a top health budget expert in the Clinton administration.

    But many of the nation’s most prominent health economists, including Princeton University’s Uwe Reinhardt and Harvard University’s David Cutler, argue there is substantial variation among hospital spending even when the special needs of high poverty areas are fully analyzed.

    “I have yet to meet anyone who really plays around in the health care system who really thinks there’s less than 20 percent waste,” says Cutler, who advised Obama during his presidential run.

    More answers are coming. The Medicare Payment Advisory Commission, an independent congressional agency, is performing its own analysis. Early on, it has found that regional spending differences persist even after patients’ health is taken into account. But the disparities are not as wide as Dartmouth’s.

    “Before Dartmouth came along, nobody measured anything,” says Skinner. “We did use the methods we thought would work the best, given our very scarce resources. Are they the best measures? No. Are there better measures? Yes. But there is certainly information in these measures that cannot be denied by the people who want to deny them.”

    Ultimately, Cooper may be vindicated not for his denunciations of Dartmouth, but for being an early, vocal doubter that the government can pinpoint excessive health care spending with enough precision to justify paying doctors and hospitals less.

    “The thing with Buz Cooper is he does raise significant and important issues that challenge the status quo’s thinking and conventional wisdom and he should always be taken seriously,” says Reinhardt, the Princeton economist. “If he goes around the Hill and says, ‘Don’t cut Florida and don’t cut Louisiana and Texas until you know more,’ I would be on his side with that one. If he totally belittles the (Dartmouth) work, I think that would be totally wrong.”

  • Reaction To Cooper’s Challenge Against Dartmouth Atlas

    By studying how hospitals treat Medicare patients in their last two years of life, the Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care has found wide geographic differences in how medicine is practiced. The research shows patients in some areas are more likely to get operations and tests than other areas.

    The Dartmouth scholarship argues that more care does not always lead to better health, and sometimes can actually harm patients. As a result, Dartmouth believes much of the nation’s current medical spending—as much as $700 billion, or 30 percent of the country’s $2.5 trillion annual tab—may be not necessary. If the government is able to trim those costs, advocates of health care overhaul legislation believe the savings can help finance an expansion of health insurance to most of the population.

    But some dissenters, including University of Pennsylvania medical school professor Dr. Richard “Buz” Cooper, argue Dartmouth overstates the amount of potential waste because its methods don’t fully factor in the heavy medical needs of very poor people. In addition, the skeptics say you can’t draw conclusions about overall health spending just by studying Medicare patients.

    Here are some views on the debate:


    Paul Ginsburg

    President, Center for Studying Health System Change
    “I think the Dartmouth analysis does show that a lot of the difference in utilization in hospitals or delivery systems in high use areas probably is waste. What Cooper has done is not convincing to me.”

     


    Robert Muller
    Chief Executive Officer, University of Pennsylvania Health System


    “The Dartmouth people use Medicare data because that’s what’s available. It’s like a drunk looking for his keys under the lamp post. All of us who run hospitals know it’s your total income that determines the breadth and depth of your spending. There are variations among hospitals. There are variations inside hospitals. That’s worth looking at. But they’re not 30 percent differences.”


    Joseph Newhouse


    Professor of Health Policy and Management, Harvard Medical School Department of Health Care Policy

    “My general take is that accounting for factor price variation and health status reduces the variation but that it remains substantial.  How much of the remaining variation is excessive and unnecessary, however, is more of an open question.”

     


    Jack Hadley


    Professor and Senior Health Services Researcher, George Mason University’s Department of Health Administration and Policy

    “The desire to have a simple solution to a complex issue is very strong. The idea that all spending above the minimum is waste is a very appealing concept. If you’re looking for the silver bullet, this looks like a good candidate. The reality is the process of medical care is much more complicated, and I don’t think any study does a totally adequate job of controlling for differences in patients’ health.”


    Stuart Guterman


    Assistant Vice President on Payment System Reform, The Commonwealth Fund
    “The potentially harmful thing is by quibbling about what Dartmouth is implying, he [Cooper] gives what might be perceived as ammunition to people arguing against health reform, and I don’t think that’s a viable case.”

     


    Robert Berenson
    Institute Fellow, Urban Institute

    “There is increasing reason to believe Dartmouth didn’t do as good a job in risk adjusting for health status. My own experience practicing medicine would suggest there’s a lot of wasted spending going on.”

  • DS homebrew – Woopsi v0.40

    A new update of Woopsi is now available courtesy of homebrew coder ant512. In case you’re not familiar with the Woopsi, this AmigaOS system-based app …

  • An American political tradition in the People’s Republic of China

    Ed. Note: The town hall begins in three and a half hours at 11:45pm EST.  Be sure to tune in at www.whitehouse.gov/live.

    The town hall meeting is at the core of grassroots American democracy.  It is a tradition that brings together members of a community — both leaders and ordinary citizens — to discuss and shape the direction of their futures.   On Monday, November 16, President Obama will bring that tradition to China — a country with thousands of years of history, but a land where political and social values are different from ours.  In Shanghai, he will hold an historic town hall meeting with China’s youth to talk directly with some of the young people who represent China’s future.

    The planning stages leading up to the town hall have been filled with months of negotiation and cooperation.  Our Chinese hosts are committed to working with us to ensure a successful visit and are genuinely curious as to how an American town hall works.  Together we are creating a unique event mixing American and Chinese elements – a first by an American president visiting China.   Even the language showed the differences in political concept as the word “town hall” doesn’t exist in Mandarin.  In English, this is President Obama’s town hall with China’s youth, but in Chinese, it is mian dui mian or a face-to-face dialogue.

    The cultural differences are vast.  The challenges of creating an event hosted by the President of the United States for China’s youth are numerous.  But the popularity of this American President is high in China and shows that even young people look to U.S.-Chinese cooperation to solve  global issues.  This town hall meeting in Shanghai will show the youth of China that President Obama has come not just to talk, but to listen.

    Richard Buangan is the Deputy Press Spokesman at the U.S. Embassy in Beijing

    Learn more about the President’s trip to Asia.

  • Happy Holidays from CrunchGear

    It is officially on: we’re running our super duper, extra sassy Holiday Gift Guide from now until the end of time, giving you the latest in hot gift ideas for you and yours. Why are we doing this so early? Because we have so much to give away this year it’s scary. That said, let’s hit the slopes and shush our way into Gift Guide Nirvana.

    What do you need to do? Well, first you have to click through to our gift guide and keep your eye on daily posts for news of what we’re giving away. We’re starting off with the five days of Peek Pronto: five full days, one Peek Pronto each day. How do you win? Just comment with your actual email and we’ll pick a winner a day from this post. We’ll also run other giveaways concurrently with this one, so fear not.

    Good luck and thanks for reading!


  • Sprint HTC Hero now $99

    We’ve been told now by a couple tipsters that the Sprint HTC Hero is now going for $99 with a 2-year agreement at Best Buy locations. No word on whether Sprint will end up discounting the device directly.