Author: Serkadis

  • GRemote Pro Now On Sale

    GRemote is one of the greatest application to connect your device and your computer in a better way imagethan any other program even activesync can do. The application has been reviewed by us before, but it will be re-reviewed very soon because this time… it comes with HTC HD2 support.

    Yes that’s right HD2 support. The application comes with multi touch support, so if you are using Windows 7, or MacOSX ( I think), you can now use multi touch gestures to pinch and zoom, and other multi touch related features.

    This application can do it all, and now you can too, by trying it out for 14 days or even buy it now and only now for $9.95. This deal is for April only and you get this great application for 70% of the price.

    The features consist of:

    -special price $9.95 (regular $14.95) only in April 2010!!!
    -use your PDA as mouse, keyboard, joystick or remote controler to PC
    -control your PC over WiFi or Bluetooth
    -enjoy with GRemote and create new skins specially for your favourite application
    -define profiles for many applications in one applet
    -use your build-in GSensor as an analogue joystick to PC and mouse control
    -control any application you want!!!
    -browse your PC files using exprorer extension – new!!!
    -manage Winamp playlist directly from your phone – new!!!
    -define many actions to one button (e.g. change resolution, display OSD and Run application)
    -works with Windows Mobile and Android devices
    -compatible with Windows XP, Vista and Windows 7
    -lifetime updates free!!!

    You can download/Buy this application for $9.95 today, Here.


  • Report: GOP argues GM loan payoff just a TARP money shuffle

    Filed under: , ,

    While General Motors is busy making marketing hay from its early payoff of $5.8 billion in loans, Senator Chuck Grassley and House Representative Darrell Issa aren’t buying it. “It looks like GM merely used one source of TARP funds to repay another,” said Grassley of General Motors financial moves. Grassley has asked for justification of the creative money-shuffling from Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner.

    Meanwhile, Representative Issa is looking at the new fuel economy standards that went into effect last month. Documents about the negotiations leading up to the 35.5 mpg standard have been requested from GM, Ford and Chrysler, as well as Toyota, Honda, Nissan, Suzuki, Volkswagen and BMW. Issa contends that the standard only passed because GM and Chrysler were put in a hammerlock and forced to agree in exchange for bailouts.

    [Source: Detroit Free Press]

    Report: GOP argues GM loan payoff just a TARP money shuffle originally appeared on Autoblog on Sat, 24 Apr 2010 13:36:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Woman gives beloved saxophones to CBC student

    Published April 23

     
    Janie Brinkman, 73, of Kennewick, watches Rudy Guidry of Pasco play her late husband’s tenor saxophone Thursday at Columbia Basin College. Brinkman wondered what to do with two saxophones that belonged to her late husband when she read about the CBC student. Guidry is an accomplished sax and tuba musician who could never afford to buy his own instruments but didn’t let that stand in the way of learning to play. Brinkman met up with the 21-year-old at CBC and gave him her husband’s Yamaha alto and tenor saxophones. Photo by Richard Dickin of the Tri-City Herald
    , 2010
    By Dori O’Neal, Tri-City Herald staff writer

    Photo Gallery: Sax Donation

    KENNEWICK — Janie Brinkman, 73, thought she might sell her late husband’s two beloved saxophones.

    Then she read a recent Herald story about 21-year-old Rudy Guidry, an accomplished sax and tuba player who never could afford his own instruments.

    And that inspired the Kennewick woman to change her mind.

    “I know I could have sold the saxophones because they are in excellent condition. My husband loved them and took very good care of them,” she said. “But after reading about this boy, he sounded like the kind of young man who would take as good of care of them as my husband did, and that appealed greatly to me.”

    Guidry fell in love with music in grade school, started playing the marimba, then the recorder, clarinet, sax and finally the tuba.

    But he could never afford his own. So he borrowed instruments all through school, because even a new student model sax costs $1,500 or more. And a professional model can cost more than $4,000.

    Now he’s headed off to Central Washington University this fall to continue his music studies — with a sax of his own.

    On Thursday, Brinkman met Guidry at Columbia Basin College, where he’s a student, and gave him her husband’s Yamaha alto and tenor saxophones.

    “It must have been the Lord speaking to me about what to do,” Brinkman said. “I think my husband would be pleased too.”

    When she handed Guidry the two brown leather cases, both were thrilled.

    “This is so awesome,” he said, flashing a huge smile. “It’s not enough to say thank you and doesn’t come close to telling you how incredibly excited I am by your generosity,” he told her.

    And although the two were strangers, Guidry pulled her into a bear hug that put an even bigger smile on her face as she fought back tears.

    “She worried she was going to cry today,” said Mary Schmeckel of Pasco, her friend of 28 years. “So far, she’s doing great, but I’ll bet she lets those tears go once we get back to the car.”

    As Guidry opened each case, he ran his hands tenderly across the shiny brass instruments, then put the tenor sax together and played a few bars before carefully putting it back into its case.

    “These truly were well taken care of,” he said. “I’ll do my best to care for them the same way.”

    Brinkman said her husband, Nelson, who died three years ago, loved playing the saxophones, though he never played professionally.

    “Nelson was always playing those saxophones,” Brinkman said. “I finally made him take them out to his garage and play them because it got so loud in the house.”

    When asked if he planned to name the saxophones, like BB King named his guitar Lucille, Guidry said, “I think I’ll have to get a little more familiar with these ladies before I name them.”

    At that, Brinkman laughed and said, “I know they’re in good hands now.”

    Additional news stories can be accessed online at the Tri-City Herald.

  • Volcano crisis: Sense vanishes in a puff of ash by Christpher Booker

    Article Tags: Christopher Booker, Headline Story, Met Office, Volcanic Ash Advisory Centre

    The closure of our airspace casts a highly disturbing light on the way we are governed.

    Last week, for the second time in a decade, a major crisis erupted out of the blue that cast a highly disturbing light on the peculiarly contorted way in which we are now governed. The Icelandic volcano shambles had striking parallels with the foot-and-mouth crisis of 2001.

    Both episodes involved a massive system failure in a complex new structure of supranational governance which was being put to the test for the first time, Both were made much worse by over-reliance on an inadequate computer model, which ended up causing unnecessary chaos and misery for hundreds of thousands of people and costing not millions but billions of pounds.

    What turned that shower of abrasive volcanic dust from a drama into a crisis was the central flaw in a new international system for responding to such incidents, which was put in place only last September. As everyone now recognises, the emptying of the skies which plunged Europe’s airlines into chaos was a grotesque overreaction to the reality of the risks involved.

    Source: telegraph.co.uk

    Read in full with comments »   


  • QVGA Windows Mobile 6.5 Lockscreen Skin

    Windows Mobile base is well known to be very unattractive, and a lot of development power is undergone image everyday to bring Windows Mobile into the attractive ages. Well those development is mostly for the newer WVGA devices but this one is specifically for QVGA.

    This is a Livven special that goes with the recently canceled GTX skin done by a friend of mine El Condor. The Skin remakes GTX’s look and design, with the all white slider and clock, and the transparent outlining and calendar. 

    The theme does not come with much details except it will only work with QVGA, but if requested he will make it capable with other screen resolutions.

    Note it’s not final, which means the notification sliders have not been skinned, but they’ll show up with the default look. Otherwise it should be working fine on 6.5.3, although I’m not sure with 6.5. Please provide feedback telling me if it’s working.

    If you have been looking for a new look for your device, please go here and download this Livven special.



  • Moon Phase App For WVGA Devices

    It seems everyday when I am walking outside in the dark, seeing the moon has become a hard task thanimage seeing my way home, well that doesn’t seem to be a problem with this app. The app was created by an XDA member who figured out how to keep track of the moon at all times, even in the brightest of days you will always know what shape and form the moon is taking.

    The application can do a lot, all while looking fantastic with its dark blue design, and simple design.

    The features consist of:

    Visual picture of the moon phases and the percent of the illuminated area.
    Full names of all moon phases.
    Zodiac Sign the moon is in.
    Current moon’s age:  how far along the moon is in its full cycle.
    Moonrise and moonset times for your location.
    Amount of time from moonrise and to moonset.
    Calculations for the current and other dates.
    Network independence:  you can work anywhere in the world without Internet or cellular connections.
    Your current location determined by GPS or cellular network.

    The application only works for WVGA devices so TG01, HD2, TP2, DIAM2, and all WVGA devices can all know what’s up with the moon, and will never be left wondering.

    Read More And Download Here


  • Hyundai Genesis sedan gets the police package getup

    Filed under: , , ,

    This is interesting. As you cop-car fans well know, Ford recently introduced an all new Police Interceptor. After centuries decades of sticking with the body-on-frame, RWD Panther-platform Crown Victoria, Ford made the decision to go with the unit-bodied, front- or all-wheel drive Taurus chassis. They’ve beefed the full-size family hauler up to Herculean stature (claiming that it can withstand a 70 mph rear-end collision!) and by all accounts it should do just fine in the high speed pursuit biz. Still, to many officers and fans of the cars they drive, police cruisers should be driven via the rear wheels.

    That said, check out this Hyundai. A Genesis sedan to be specific, all done up in Korean police livery. Looks good, no? Especially with the blue and red lights poking out from the grill. If you’re wondering, the Genesis sedan has either a 3.8-liter V6 or a more muscular 4.6-liter “Tau” V8 up front. Both motors propel the rear wheels. For police duty, we’ll go ahead and assume that Hyundai went with the more potent Tau option, as South Korean coppers will no doubt make use of the 375 horsepower and 333 pound-feet of torque (slight asterisk – that’s on premium fuel. Should you opt for regular gas, the V8 makes “just” 368 hp and 324 lb-ft of torque).

    True, like the Taurus, the Genesis sedan is still a unit body, meaning that officers in pursuit won’t be able to drive over curbs at 50 mph without twisting the kimchi out of the structure. However, given the Genesis sedan’s better than average handling characteristics, they should have little trouble driving around said curb, and thereby bringing the perp to justice that much more quickly. No word on a super-pursuit Genesis Coupe-based cop car. Tip of the confession-extracting sap hat to Nathan!

    [Source: Chosun]

    Hyundai Genesis sedan gets the police package getup originally appeared on Autoblog on Sat, 24 Apr 2010 12:02:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • TCPMP New Skin

    Being the most functional video player Windows Mobile has got is not very easy, and the look suffers imagefrom that, well XDA has created a new skin. The skin was created by XDA Member bimbam69, who managed to get a new design, and feel to this great media player, but sadly it reminds me of the iPhone.

    This skin only works for the most recent build of TCPMP which can be downloaded on XDA also. The build features many video format, and includes support for more devices, but not the HD2’s multi touch function.

    If you don’t believe me, here is the feature list:

    Suport of FLV1 FLV4 videos and subtitle straight of the box.
    ffmpeg.plg now supports Cinepac, SVQ1, SVQ3, h.263, avc, mpeg4, flv1, flv4, on2Vp6.
    matroska.plg is mkv version 2.0 compliant.
    flac.plg has the latest 1.2.1 library
    equalizer works fine
    asap.plg has the latest library (still some problems exists)
    minor fixes to skin addon
    modified file open dialog
    modified playlist dialog
    reincluded mpc.plg and optionaly tta.plg (for tta.plg see extras.zip)

    As you can see TCPMP is still the best and most feature pack. I will be using this skin on my HD2 once I get a good reason to, but for now, it should be worth a try.

    Download it



  • Can Networking Be Made Cool Again?

    Remember when networking was cool? When I started my career in 1997 as a wet-behind-the-ears intern in Yankee Group’s data communications practice, networking was the coolest thing around. Billions of dollars were flowing into the market to drive the emerging Gigabit Ethernet wave, build out the Internet core and jump-start the carriers (CAPs/IXCs/ CLEC/BLECs) that had been spawned by telecom deregulation the year before. Some, such as Juniper, Foundry, Extreme and F5, became well-known players in the space, while others, like Qtera, Xros and Sirocco, were gobbled up in billion-dollar-plus acquisitions, never to be heard from again. Far more were crushed in the collapse of the Internet and telecom bubble, leaving behind little more than memories of over-the-top launch parties.

    Source: Dow Jones VentureSource

    And as the chart above makes clear, networking and communications have fallen out of favor, with VC investment in the segment decreasing faster than VC investment in technology overall. While this data is admittedly a little coarse, and mixes telecom and data networking together, it nonetheless makes clear the direction such investments are taking. Indeed, as anyone investing in networking and communications will tell you, there just aren’t that many new ideas walking in the door. Many investors who made their living at layers 1-4 have moved onto cleantech, digital media and the online advertising economy. So can networking be made cool again?

    It can, and here’s why:

    M&A Landscape — Cisco catalyzed a significant change in the M&A landscape with the introduction of its Unified Communications System. By declaring open war on HP, IBM, and Dell, Cisco has made networking relevant again for the major OEMs who need a networking story — and subsequently turned them into potential startup acquirers. The market capitalizations of Juniper, F5 and Riverbed mean they could pay a price that would make the VC math work, and virtualization’s impact on networking puts VMware and Citrix into the mix as well. Three years ago, it was more or less Cisco or bust. Today there’s a long list of companies that could be home for VC-backed networking startups.

    One part data center + one part cloud + one part virtualization=hot startup — Yesterday’s networking gear isn’t well-suited to today’s application workloads, traffic patterns and multitenant business models. Legacy architectures evolved from the LAN and designed for email and enterprise client server applications won’t cut it when it comes to those based on Map Reduce, nor will they work for collaborative filtering, putting together a Facebook page or renting CPU cycles by the hour. The data center has/will emerge as a distinct category of networking products. Legacy constructs like VLANs and subnets are wrapping cloud providers up in webs of complexity and management headaches, causing them to leave money on the table as servers fail to be fully utilized. Customers want SLAs but deep visibility into network behavior and performance remains elusive. Solving these issues will require not just new routers, but new ways of thinking about building networks.

    Commoditizing forwarding — Much has already been written by James Hamilton of Amazon and others about the commoditization of networking and the router vs. mainframe comparison. Imminently, dense, non-oversubscribed 10GE switches will be available from ODMs for any OEM that wants to put a badge on them. Silicon and reference designs from Broadcom/Dune and Fulcrum will take new levels of price performance into the heart of the Cisco chassis switching lines. While they won’t have the full Cisco feature set, they won’t have the outrageous gross margins either. As this ecosystem emerges and technologies like OpenFlow and other efforts to bring the routing out of routers take hold, these advanced features may be provided by a community of third-party applications, decoupled from propriety chassis and operating systems.

    Capital efficiency –- Building a networking company no longer requires $50-$100 million of venture funding. The appliance model is well understood in networking. An Intel Nehalem server can forward a lot of packets (PDF)! Perhaps more interesting, the virtual appliance model has emerged, meaning firewalls, load balancers and WAN optimization products can now be downloaded and run on hosts.

    It’s ironic that as Sun Microsystems gets absorbed by Oracle, its long-held mantra — “the network is the computer” — has never been more true. For proof, look no further than social networking, search, SAAS and the cloud. And with them comes a host of interesting networking problems to solve. In other words, there hasn’t been a better time to start a networking company in recent memory. So what are you waiting for? Find some buddies and a whiteboard, and dream up something new.

    Alex Benik is a principal at Battery Ventures

    For more on cloud computing, virtualization and other related topics, join The GigaOM Network at its annual Structure conference June 23-24 in San Francisco.

  • Live Blogging from PrimalCon 2010 – Day 2

    PrimalCon day2

    Hello, everyone! This is the editor of Mark’s Daily Apple, Aaron Fox, reporting from the field. Check back throughout the day for text, photo and (maybe, fingers crossed) video updates.

    7:14 am: Recharging for the big day ahead of us

    Pic1 2

    7:50 am: Energizing gentle movement session with Angelo

    Pic4 2

    Pic5 2

    Pic3 2

    8:04 am: Group beach hike

    Pic6 2

    Pic9 1

    Pic2 2

    Pic11 1

    Stay tuned for updates!

    Get Free Health Tips, Recipes and Workouts Delivered to Your Inbox

    Related posts:

    1. Live Blogging from PrimalCon 2010 – Day 1
    2. Barefoot Ted Speaking at PrimalCon 2010
    3. Announcement: PrimalCon 2010 and The Primal Blueprint Cookbook Offer

  • Schumacher reportedly getting new chassis for Spanish GP

    Filed under: , ,

    Critics have given Michael Schumacher a hard time all season so far over what can charitably be characterized as lackluster performance. Leading figures at the Mercedes-Benz GP team, however, have magnanimously attributed the problems to their car. But if his young teammate Nico Rosberg is currently second in the championship, having reached the podium twice so far this season (doubling his record from four seasons at Williams), then how can you blame the car?

    The answer may be coming as soon as May 9, when the circus heads to Barcelona for the Spanish Grand Prix. According to reports, Mercedes will give Schumacher a new chassis design to try out at the Catalunya circuit. If the new car suits Schumi better than the current one, they’ll presumably have him run it for the remainder of the season. But given Rosberg’s performance in the current chassis, the smart money would be on Nico continuing with the existing machinery, meaning that the team could – in a Formula One rarity – wind up running two different cars in a bid to defend the championships it won last year under the Brawn GP banner.

    [Source: Autocar]

    Schumacher reportedly getting new chassis for Spanish GP originally appeared on Autoblog on Sat, 24 Apr 2010 10:49:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • GM picks Goodyear tires, Aloca wheels for 2011 Chevrolet Cruze Eco

    2011 Chevrolet Cruze ECO

    General Motors has announced its plan to outfit the 2011 Chevy Cruz Eco with Goodyear’s Fuel Max radials and Alcoa Automotive’s lightweight forged aluminum wheels. Alcoa says that the 17-inch wheels taken by GM are 20% lighter than comparable products, contributing to overall weight reduction as the Cruz is capable of 40 mpg economy during highway driving.

    Not only does the use of the forged aluminum wheels reduce mass to lower consumption and increase efficiency, but it also improves driving performance by reducing unsprung weight.

    The Alcoa deal is one that will be in place for a number of years, with the wheels being manufactured at the company’s facility in Cleveland. The Cruz is expected to hit showroom floors this coming fall, but GM has yet to furnish sales expectations.

    Click here for more news on the Chevrolet Cruze.

    Refresher: The 2011 Chevrolet Cruze’s base LS model is powered by a 136-hp 1.8L 4-cylinder engine, while the Eco, LT and LTZ model get a 1.4L turbo 4-cylinder Ecotec engine making 138-hp and a maximum torque of 148 lb-ft. The 1.4L turbo models are expected to have a cruising range of more than 500 miles and the Cruze Eco is estimated to get an EPA fuel-economy rating of 40 mpg on the highway. All 2011 Cruze models will be available with a 6-speed manual or a 6-speed automatic transmission.

    2011 Chevrolet Cruze Eco:

    – By: Steve Calogera

    Source: Automotive News (Subscription Required)


  • Alfa Romeo TZ3 Corsa unveiled at Villa D’Este

    Filed under: , , , , , ,


    Alfa Romeo TZ3 Corsa – Click above for high-res image gallery

    The Zagato-designed Alfa Romeo TZ3 Corsa has been unveiled at the Villa d’Este concours, and frankly, it’s spectacular. Driven by the Alfa 8C Competizione’s V8, the TZ3 is very much in keeping with its 60s-era predecessors, the TZ1 and TZ2, sporting similar detail elements and the same near-breadvan profile. Also like the originals, this is a legit racing car. Unlike its forbears, however, the new machine wears aluminum bodywork stretched over a tube frame and carbon-fiber chassis. Power, as indicated before, is also of thoroughly modern origin.

    Zagato says the TZ3 was commissioned by German collector Martin Kapp as a special celebration of 100 years of racing from Scuderia Ferrari, Alfa Corse, Autodelta, and Scuderia Zagato. On that “special” bit, we think it’s safe to say, “Mission accomplished.” With class and panache to spare. Official PR pics are in the gallery below, and a full live gallery is posted at OmniAuto. Be sure to pay them a visit as well. Thanks for the tip, Claudio!

    [Source: Zagato (PDF link) via OmniAuto.it]

    Continue reading Alfa Romeo TZ3 Corsa unveiled at Villa D’Este

    Alfa Romeo TZ3 Corsa unveiled at Villa D’Este originally appeared on Autoblog on Sat, 24 Apr 2010 09:13:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Chrysler expects sales to increase by 20% in April

    Chrysler Group is anticipating year-over-year sales for April to be up 20% this year, according to company spokesperson Kathy Graham.

    Such a gain would mark the second time the manufacturer saw such an increase in 28 months, after having realized a 1% gain for February. Through cost cutting maneuvers and the introduction of the Dodge Ram Heavy Duty pickup truck, Chrysler has been able to show an operating profit for Q1 2010 of $143 million. Their sales figures are also up from Q4 last year, having moved 318,00 units and increasing that figure to 334,000 for Q1.

    Optimistic that the fallout from the bankruptcy is over, Chrysler officials are really enthused about products rolling out, especially the all-new 2011 Jeep Grand Cherokee, set to hit showroom floors this July. New products seems to be the cornerstone upon which Chrysler’s comeback strategy is built, and dealers seem to be just as enthused about that as company officials.

    – By: Steve Calogera

    Source: Automotive News (Subscription Required)


  • Jo Nova opens her diary, spectator.co.uk

    Article Tags: Joanne Nova

    The Spectator gave me an unusual assignment. An open-ended request to gather thoughts over a couple of weeks and note them in a diary. It’s an interesting genre because it brings out messages that might not come to life otherwise. This was printed in the Australian Edition of The Spectator Magazine, out today

    I glow. I find that I’ve made it to a select list of global sceptics touted by Oxfam. Apparently my ‘network’ influence is comparable to NASA (judging by the size of the balls). Hilarious! The consultancy that produced this is named — in a parody of itself — Unsimplify. They don’t seem to realise that any half-wit can ‘complexify’. But it’s high praise from my opponents about my apparent global political influence: ‘A small group of dedicated people… succeeded in accomplishing the most impressive PR coup of the 21st century.’ Shucks. The late nights feel worthwhile. I’m beaming.

    Unfortunately, the global network chart itself is so meaningless it’s self-satire. Oxfam paid for this ‘research’. It’s a scandalous waste of donors’ money. Is the world in danger from anthropogenic climate change? We won’t find out by following ‘html link networks’. (The evidence, man, the evidence…) David and I laugh late into the night about it though.

    Another day I post my reply to a professor who went out of his way to embarrass himself on ABC Unleashed. He claims he’s talking evidence, but instead talks about Ivan Milat, AIDS, the length of the IPCC report, and somehow he thinks that scoring lots of Google Scholar hits is a reason to set up a trillion dollar market. I’m thinking ‘delusional’. While I’m unmercilessly tough on his reasoning, 40,000 black ants have set up a six-lane highway in our dining room. But I don’t want to be too mean, so I block off the crack in the wall, and put down a sheet of paper with honey on it. I’m hoping they will congregate there for dessert, and I can move them outside with their free meal. It’s futile. Six ants order sweets and 40,000 ants start hunting for another exit. I laugh at the irony. I outwit a professor, but the ants outwit me.

    Click source to read FULL article by Joanne Nova

    Source: spectator.co.uk

    Read in full with comments »   


  • Nintendo Weekend Warrior – ups and downs in sales

    The Nintendo Wii and DS have been holding up very strong on the Japanese sales charts, but they will have to bow to Sony for this week. On a more positive note, Just Dance 2 pulls a

  • Care for a limited edition Final Fantasy XIII DualShock 3?

    Square Enix and Sony already released a limited edition white-pink PS3 (qjnet/playstation-3/lightning-pink-final-fantasy-xiii-console-price-hike.html) for Final Fantasy XIII. This one’s running a little late, but here’s the white-pink controller that should go with it.

  • Multi-Processes in Browsers: Chrome, Internet Explorer, Firefox and WebKit

    With the web becoming such a big part of everyone’s life, the web browser is probably the most important piece of software in any computer or device. But, with great power comes great responsibility, browsers are constantly a target for nefarious individuals up to no good. Add to this the ‘unpredictability’ of web coding and buggy plugins and you have a recipe for disaster.

    With so many potential points of failure, it’s up to the browser makers to ensure tha… (read more)

  • You Could Not Make It Up: On the Hoax of the Climate Change Hoax by Jake Whitney Freelance journalist and contributing writer for Guernica Magazine

    Article Tags: You could not make it up

    Climate change ‘skeptics’ have been singing a victory song in recent months. Emboldened by this winter’s record snow, errors in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s 2007 report, and the phony scandal they dubbed ‘ClimateGate,’ their growing clamor has taken a toll on public acceptance. According to a Gallup poll released last month, Americans are now about evenly split on whether the threat of global warming is exaggerated and whether scientists agree on its causes and dangers. This in the face of clear scientific consensus.

    Ninety seven percent of climatologists agreed that climate change is real and largely man-made in a poll released last year. At least 60 major scientific organizations across the globe also concur, while not one of any repute holds an opposing opinion. (A few have not yet committed.) As to the list of 700 dissenting scientists that Senator Inhofe and other skeptics frequently cite, an analysis by the Center for Inquiry found that less than 10 percent of them were climate scientists, and only about 15 percent had ever been published in peer-reviewed climate science literature. Moreover, another four percent seemed to agree with the scientific consensus and so were, presumably, mistakenly included. One of the “scientists” turned out to be a Kentucky weatherman without a college degree..

    Source: huffingtonpost.com

    Read in full with comments »   


  • After 40 years of Earth Day, we’re still surviving by Jon Ferry, The Province

    Article Tags: Opinion

    Well, I survived Earth Day. But only just. Thanks to all the hot air and greenhouse gases being spewed into the atmosphere, especially from that nasty Icelandic volcano, the global temperature likely went up by at least a couple of degrees.

    But here it was simply a lovely spring day, the kind that reminds us we live in one of the cleanest, most pollution-free cities on the planet (except, of course, when the potheads cloud it over during their annual toke-in).

    Nevertheless, the relentless drive to make the Lower Mainland ever cleaner and greener continues to consume our province’s most creative minds.

    The reason? There’s a lot of green in it, especially when you consider the hundreds of millions of dollars in grants and subsidies up for grabs by environmental insiders — and the excuse it gives government to grab those dollars back and more from regular taxpayers through various eco-levies.

    Source: theprovince.com

    Read in full with comments »