Author: Serkadis

  • BBC Postpones iPhone App After Newspapers Feel Threatened

    Back in February, we noted that UK newspapers (the same ones who are blocking aggregators and putting up paywalls) were getting angry that the BBC was going to release an iPhone app. Their complaint was that it was somehow unfair, since the BBC is publicly funded, even though all it was really doing was taking its website and formating it better for the iPhone. Unfortunately, it looks like the BBC has agreed to put the whole thing on hold while it explores the issue. This is really unfortunate. At the same time that UK newspapers are locking up their content, they’re trying to force others to do the same as well. Of course, they don’t seem to realize that this won’t help them any. It certainly won’t help their business model. As for the BBC… well, it’ll be a bit more annoying, but I imagine most folks who want their BBC content will quickly open a browser and go straight to the website. But they won’t suddenly agree to pay Rupert Murdoch to access his news.

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  • Searchlight Tea Party, Thousands Hear Palin. CNN: ‘Dozens Of People’

    03.29.10 08:38 AM posted by Skip MacLure

    What a pathetic joke for a news organization… CNN has plumbed the depths of falsification again by telling viewers throughout the day, Saturday, March 27th, that there were ‘dozens’ of people, maybe hundreds at the Searchlight, Nevada Tea Party rally. It can only be described as a pathetic attempt at misinformation. They must have the pizza guy doing news editorial programming, which shouldn’t really surprise anyone given their perpetual low market ratings… it’s embarrassing to get beat by MSNBC.


    The Tea Party Express Bus, Searchlight, Nevada.

    If you are in the business of news prevarication, you could at least be a bit creative about it. But then that would take talent and that appears to be something that there is a severe dearth of at CNN. That could be the reason that they hired RedState’s Erick Erickson… goodness knows their stable could use the help.

    The latest figures I have on the rally held in Senator ‘Dingy’ Harry Reid’s backyard at Searchlight, Nevada, is that right around 20,000 people showed up to hear keynote speaker Sarah Palin. Palin, as usual, is taking massive amounts of abuse from the left. That’s to be expected and is a direct gauge of the fear they have for her. Obama can’t get more than a few thousand people to his bought-and-paid-for teleprompter extravaganzas. Sarah Palin gets more than that to a book signing. read more »

    http://www.conservativeoutpost.com/s…eople%E2%80%99

  • Watch: Battlefield: Bad Company 2 "VIP Map Pack 2" trailer

    So what can you expect in upcoming Battlefield: Bad Company 2 free VIP map pack update? Check out the sneak peek trailer after the jump.
     

  • NYTimes Has To Apologize, Pay $114k For Mentioning Singapore Had Father/Son Prime Ministers?

    The NY Times published an odd sort of “apology” last week, which is now getting a bunch of attention on Twitter:


    In 1994, Philip Bowring, a contributor to the International Herald Tribune’s op-ed page, agreed as part of an undertaking with the leaders of the government of Singapore that he would not say or imply that Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong had attained his position through nepotism practiced by his father Lee Kuan Yew. In a February 15, 2010, article, Mr. Bowring nonetheless included these two men in a list of Asian political dynasties, which may have been understood by readers to infer that the younger Mr. Lee did not achieve his position through merit. We wish to state clearly that this inference was not intended. We apologize to Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew and former Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong for any distress or embarrassment caused by any breach of the undertaking and the article.

    There’s so much that’s bizarre in this short paragraph that it’s difficult to know where to start. But, what may be even more bizarre is what the NY Time’s apparently left out. According to other reports, the NY Times also paid $114,000 to the father and son (and to a lawyer representing both). Either way, this whole thing is very odd. Why would a reporter for a respectable publication ever agree not to give an opinion on something? And why would the NY Times’ cave for merely stating that having a father and son both as prime minister’s represents something of a dynasty?

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  • Just In The Nick Of Time, Apple Gets The iPad Trademark

    You may recall, right after the Apple iPad announcement, people started noticing that Apple didn’t hold the trademark on the name. Instead, Fujitsu had a pending trademark on iPad and was saying it had no intention of giving up the name (and some others had trademarks on other “iPads” as well). However, it looks like just as the iPad is about to ship, Apple figured out how to make Fujitsu change its mind (I assume it involved truckloads of cash). Copycense points out that Apple has bought the “iPad” trademark from Fujitsu. It looks like the official transfer just happened on March 17th. Makes you wonder what Apple would have done if Fujitsu hadn’t been willing to sell the trademark.

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  • Visualizing the Trends in Climate Change Search Queries

    climate_change_trends.jpg
    The infographic movie “Climate Change Search Trends Visualized” analyzes how, when, where, and why people think about four different eco-buzzwords: “climate change”, “global warming”, “carbon footprint”, and “go green”.

    The investigation is based on contrasting and comparing the global trending data retrieved from Google Insights. Rather than examining the science behind the issue, this piece looks at the popularity of Google searches for environmental keywords.

    Watch the movie below.

    Via Virtual Music.


  • Ron Paul in Boise, Idaho

    Before giving his speech at the Morrison Center in Boise, Idaho last Saturday, Ron Paul attended a reception in honor of Idaho libertarian legend Ralph Smeed:

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  • Dead to Rights: Retribution goes gold

    Namco Bandai has announced that Dead to Rights: Retribution has finally gone gold, which means that development has ended and the game is now ready for distribution.
     

  • The wing returns! Subaru teases 2011 Impreza WRX STI ahead of NY Auto Show

    Filed under: , , ,

    2011 Subaru Impreza WRX STI – Click above for high-res image

    The day after mashing around an ice course in Park City, Utah, we sat down with one of Subaru’s product planners to discuss what the automaker has in store in the near-term. Our questions ranged from Subaru’s thoughts about adopting torque-vectoring all-wheel drive (“We’re looking into it.”) to what, if any progress was being made on the Toyobaru front (“No comment”).

    But when asked about a four-door version of the STI, our question was met with a slightly cocked head, a small smirk and a faint glimmer in the exec’s eye. Could a sedan be in the cards?

    Maybe. But judging by this solitary teaser of the 2011 Subaru Impreza WRX STI, it appears that the rally-bred hatch is getting an all-new wing inspired by Subaru’s dearly-departed WRC contender. We’ll know for sure on Thursday when the wraps officially come off at the New York Auto Show.

    The wing returns! Subaru teases 2011 Impreza WRX STI ahead of NY Auto Show originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 29 Mar 2010 19:40:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Job Market So Bad 260 People Applied To Scoop Poop

    Scoop Poop

    How bad is the job market?

    Here’s Mike “Mish” Shedlock of Sitka Pacific with an update:

    Want a job scooping poop? 260 people do. They applied for a job opening on Craigslist posted by Guy Palumbo, owner of Roscoe’s Ranch, a 24-kennel outfit. Please consider Recession’s untold story

    You want to be the kennel helper? You’re on the hook for the poop. You’ll spend part of every day scooping it up (if all digestive systems work as designed) or mopping it (when they don’t).

    “Usually I get high-school kids applying. Or maybe a college kid for the summer. I’ve never seen anything like this.” says Palumbo.

    Who now wants to be a dog-kennel assistant?

    • A laid-off graphic designer
    • A freelance photographer.
    • Two out-of-work teachers sent résumés.
    • Someone in their mid-40s who had worked as a financial controller at an environmental services company.
    • Past customer-service reps from WaMu, AT&T, J.C. Penney and Sprint.
    • Retail clerks and cashiers.
    • Out-of-work waiters.

    They may say the recession’s over, on paper or on the nightly news. Palumbo’s electronic stack of résumés says otherwise.

    “It’s simply amazing to me, and I still can’t believe it,” he said, “that from age 14 up into their 60s this many people are dying to be a minimum-wage dog-kennel assistant.”

    Keep reading at Mish’s Global Economic Trend Analysis >

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Rumormill: Honda to build road-going HSV-010 next year, pigs to take flight in 2012

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    Honda HSV-010 – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Straight out of the Snowball’s Chance and Swine Aeronautics department comes a report from Autobild that says the Honda HSV-010 is headed for production next year.

    Why are we so skeptical? Aside from the fact that taking the HSV from the tracks of Japan to the streets of tomorrow would be a task of epic proportions, the last time we talked about the GT500 racer with Honda’s high performance team they began tearing up about the NSX successor’s stillborn status.

    Regardless, ze German rag reports that the HSV-010 will undergo a slight makeover in the transition from race car to road car, with a slightly narrower track, more sculpted sides and the removal of the Cessna-sized rear wing.

    A V8 will supposedly still be nestled up front, but instead of the SuperGT car’s 3.4-liter V8, a 500+ horsepower 5.0-liter will take its place.

    So, is the Lexus LFA finally going to get a worthy competitor from it’s cross-town rivals? We’ll continue our regularly scheduled breathing regime until we get an official word from Honda, but the possibility of an NSX revival – for real this time – has us panting a little bit harder.

    Gallery: Honda HSV-10 GT

    [Source: Autobild]

    Rumormill: Honda to build road-going HSV-010 next year, pigs to take flight in 2012 originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 29 Mar 2010 19:24:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Daily U-Turn: What you missed on 3.29.10

    First Drive: 2011 Ford Mustang GT changes the game

    In the battle for Pony Car supremacy, the 2011 Mustang GT finally has the weapons to not only match, but beat the competition. And the V6 version finally puts its rental car roots to rest.

    Ford Focus RS500 hacks out onto the Internet ahead of schedule

    Ford may be trying to pull a fast one by naming its hottest Focus the RS500, but with 345 and 325 lb-ft of torque being channeled to the front wheels, the badge will be the least of your concerns.

    Daily U-Turn: What you missed on 3.29.10 originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 29 Mar 2010 19:20:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Geohot: Don’t update when PS3 firmware v3.21 comes out

    Hot off the the heels of the upcoming PS3 firmware 3.21 announcement that disables the “Other OS” feature yesterday, George Hotz fires back at Sony and promises to “look into a safe way of updating to retain

  • South China’s Worst Drought in a Century 2010

    chinadrought-20100329

    2010March29: From NCDC, NOAA: “At the end of March, moderate to severe drought persisted in the provinces of Yunnan, Guizhou, southern Sichuan, and northwestern Guangxi in South China. Since fall 2009, drought conditions have affected more than 60 million people and ruined billions of dollars worth of crops in southwest China (Source: BBC News). According to a director at the Yunnan Land Resources Bureau, this is the worst drought in a century for parts of this province” (NCDC, NOAA).

    Reference: NCDC, NOAA http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/sotc/?report=hazards&year=2009&month=2&submitted=Get+Report

    Image Description: Map courtesy: Division of Climate Impact Assessment/NCC/CMA. Image Location: NCDC/NOAA http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/sotc/?report=hazards&year=2009&month=2&submitted=Get+Report Image Permission: This work is copyrighted and unlicensed. However, it is believed that the use of this work to illustrate the subject in question, Where no free equivalent is available or could be created that would adequately give the same information, on Interlinked Challenges, hosted on servers in the United States by Michigan State University, qualifies as fair use under United States copyright law.

  • IndyCar: 2010 Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg [SPOILER ALERT]

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    2010 IndyCar Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg – Click above for high-res image gallery

    The IndyCar season kicked off a couple of weeks ago with a trip down South as the teams took the action to Sao Paulo, Brazil. This weekend they returned to the States, to the streets of St. Petersburg, Florida, for the second race of 2010, the Honda GP. While the Brazilian race had its fair share of bad weather, which shook up the running order and produced a lengthy red flag period, at St. Pete’s the teams could have put arks on the grid. The rainfall was biblical.

    Will Power was on pole, starting this race where he ended the last one, in the number one position. Behind Power on the grid were three different teams in the next three positions, Tony Kanaan in the Team 7-Eleven Andretti Autosport car, Scott Dixon for Target Chip Ganassi Racing and Justin Wilson for Team Z-Line Designs/DRR Dreyer & Reinbold Racing. The field was pretty tightly bunched in qualifying, with Kanaan’s teammate, Ryan Hunter-Reay missing out on the Firestone Fast Six by just 0.0014 of a second. He wound up in seventh behind Penske’s Helio Castroneves and stablemate Marco Andretti.

    It looked like another exciting race was ahead, but it would have to wait until Monday, as IndyCar decided to postpone the race because of the rain. Follow the jump to see how it unfolded when the green finally came out in Round Two of the 2010 IndyCar Championship run.

    [Photo Source: Chris Jones, Dan Helrigel / IndyCar.com]

    Continue reading IndyCar: 2010 Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg [SPOILER ALERT]

    IndyCar: 2010 Honda Grand Prix of St. Petersburg [SPOILER ALERT] originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 29 Mar 2010 18:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Judge: Gene Patents Are Invalid

    In a huge ruling, U.S. District Judge Robert Sweet has said that gene patents are invalid. As you may recall, last May, the ACLU was the first to finally challenge whether or not genes could be patented. There was a lot of back and forth over the case, with many saying that a ruling against gene patents would throw a wrench into the business plans of many companies, because so many biotech/medical companies have been relying on the idea that gene patents must be valid for so long. But just because many companies relied on a mistaken understanding of patent law, doesn’t mean that it should be allowed to continue. The judge made the point clear when it came to gene patents, saying that they:


    “are directed to a law of nature and were therefore improperly granted.”

    The case was brought against Myriad Genetics, who will surely appeal, so this is nowhere close to over. But it involved a test for breast cancer, that Myriad basically had a monopoly over — and the claim was that this not only made it more difficult for women to get tested, but it also greatly discouraged other research in the field. In part, this was because the patents that Myriad held were incredibly broad.

    Patents, of course, are not supposed to be granted on things found in in nature — and it’s hard to argue against the idea that genes are found in nature. Supporters of gene patents often claim that they’re not really gene patents, but a patent on identifying the gene, which is a nice semantic game that the judge clearly saw through. This is a huge step forward for encouraging more real research into genetic testing, rather than locking up important information.

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  • And Now Let Us Analyze Likely Long-Term Stock Returns

    It has been some time since we have looked at stock market valuations and expected future returns. I made a large point in Bull’s Eye Investing that long term returns are closely correlated with the valuation of the stock market upon entry. In fact, I argue that secular bull and bear markets should be viewed in terms of valuation and not prices. The market clearly goes from high valuations to low and back to high again over very long periods of time. The average length of a secular bull or bear cycle is 17 years.

    Based on valuations, we are still in a secular bear market. But clearly we are in a bull phase, which within long term secular bear cycles are quite normal. They make for good trading opportunities. But should you invest now with a view to holding for 10-20 years?

    This week’s Outside the Box from my friend Prieur du Plessis of Plexus Asset Managment looks at what long term return expectations might be from today’s stock market valuations. He offers us a range of expectations which I think should help you in your investment decision making process.

    Dr Prieur du Plessis is chairman of Cape Town-based Plexus Asset Management and author of the Investment Postcards from Cape Town blog: http://www.investmentpostcards.com (Subscribe to e-mail updates of new articles by clicking on “Subscribe to Updates” in the top right-hand corner of the blog site and providing an e-mail address.)

    I am on my way back to Dallas from a quick trip to Washington DC. The cherry blossoms are beautiful, even if the weather is gray.

    John Mauldin, Editor
    Outside the Box


     

    US stock market returns – what is in store? 

    By Dr. Prieur du Plessis

    Surging stock markets since the lows of March 2009 have caught most investors by surprise, especially as new pieces of the economics puzzle are not always rosy and do not quite seem to support an overly bullish case. In short, investors are increasingly struggling to make sense of the most likely direction of stock prices.

    Are we perhaps nearing the end of a cyclical bull phase in a structural bull market? Or will strong earnings growth ensure the longevity of the bull? Or is a “muddle-through” trading range in store? It seems to be a case of so many pundits, so many views.

    It is one thing to trade the market’s rallies and corrections, but this is easier said than done, with not many people actually getting it right with any degree of consistency. Others are of the opinion that the recipe for creating wealth is simply to follow the patient approach, saying that “it’s time in the market, not timing the market” that counts. But “buy-and-hold” investors in the S&P 500 Index are still 25.5% down from the levels of 10 years ago, the Dow Jones Industrial Index a similar 23.5% lower and the Nasdaq Composite Index a massive 52.5% under water.

    This gives rise to the all-important question: does one’s entry level into the market, i.e. the valuation of the market at the time of investing, make a significant difference to subsequent investment returns?

    In an attempt to cast light on this issue, my colleagues at Plexus Asset Management have updated a previous multi-year comparison of the price-earnings (PE) ratios of the S&P 500 Index (as a measure of stock valuations) and the forward real returns (considering total returns, i.e. capital movements plus dividends). The study covered the period from 1871 to March 2010 and used the S&P 500 (and its predecessors prior to 1957). In essence, PEs based on rolling average ten-year earnings were calculated and used together with ten-year forward real returns.

    In the first analysis the PEs and the corresponding ten-year forward real returns were grouped in five quintiles (i.e. 20% intervals) (Diagram A.1).

    S&P forward returns

    The cheapest quintile had an average PE of 7.7 with an average ten-year forward real return of 11.4% per annum, whereas the most expensive quintile had an average PE of 23.4 with an average ten-year forward real return of only 3.8% per annum.

    This analysis clearly shows the strong long-term relationship between real returns and the level of valuation at which the investment was made.

    The study was then repeated with the PEs divided into smaller groups, i.e. deciles or 10% intervals (see Diagrams A.2 and A.3).

    jmotb032910image002

    jmotb032910image003

    This analysis strongly confirms the downward trend of the average ten-year forward real returns from the cheapest grouping (PEs of less than six) to the most expensive grouping (PEs of more than 21). The second study also shows that any investment at PEs of less than 12 always had positive ten-year real returns, while investments at PE ratios of 12 and higher experienced negative real returns at some stage.

    A third observation from this analysis is that the ten-year forward real returns of investments made at PEs between 12 and 17 had the biggest spread between minimum and maximum returns and were therefore more volatile and less predictable.

    As a further refinement, holding periods of one, three, five and 20 years were also analyzed. The research results (not reported in this article) for the one-year period showed a poor relationship with expected returns, but the findings for all the other periods were consistent with the findings for the ten-year periods.

    Although the above analysis represents an update to and extension of an earlier study by Jeremy Grantham’s GMO, it was also considered appropriate to replicate the study using dividend yields rather than PEs as valuation yardstick. The results are reported in Diagrams B.1, B.2 and B.3 and, as can be expected, are very similar to those based on PEs.

    jmotb032910image004

    jmotb032910image005

    jmotb032910image006

    Based on the above research findings, with the S&P 500 Index’s current ten-year normalized PE of 20.3 and ten-year normalized dividend yield of 2.1%, investors should be aware of the fact that the market is by historical standards expensive. As far as the market in general is concerned, this argues for unexciting long-term returns, possibly a “muddle-through” trading range for quite a number of years to come.

    Although the research results offer no guidance as to calling market tops and bottoms, they do indicate that it would not be consistent with the findings to bank on above-average returns based on the current ten-year normalized valuation levels. As a matter of fact, there is a distinct possibility of some negative returns off current price levels.

    * Dr Prieur du Plessis is chairman of Cape Town-based Plexus Asset Management and author of the Investment Postcards from Cape Town blog: http://www.investmentpostcards.com (Subscribe to e-mail updates of new articles by clicking on ” Subscribe to Updates” in the top right-hand corner of the blog site and providing an e-mail address.)


     

    You can sign up to receive John Mauldin’s weekly Outside The Box newsletter here >

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  • If File Sharing Is Costing Hollywood So Much Money, Why Do They Want To Pay So Little To Stop It?

    A bunch of folks have sent over the story that TorrentFreak posted about Warner Bros. UK looking to hire a technology-savvy student for a year to be on its “anti-piracy” team. The job involves finding file sharing sites, monitoring them, and sending takedown notices. Fun stuff. But what caught my eye is that the job pays £17,500 for 12 months (or about $26,000). Considering that the industry pushes to fine people more than that amount per file shared, it certainly seems to be cheaping out to offer so little to the knowledgeable student they’re hiring. If file sharing is really “costing” the industry so much, wouldn’t the industry actually pay well to stop it?

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  • Ron Paul: The “Right” to Healthcare is Based on Theft and Coercion

    Healthcare and Economic Realities

    by Ron Paul

    With passage of last week’s bill, the American people are now the unhappy recipients of Washington’s disastrous prescription for healthcare “reform.” Congressional leaders relied on highly dubious budget predictions, faulty market assumptions, and outright fantasy to convince a slim majority that this major expansion of government somehow will reduce federal spending. This legislation is just the next step towards universal, single payer healthcare, which many see as a human right. Of course, this “right” must be produced by the labor of other people, meaning theft and coercion by government is necessary to produce and distribute it.

    Those who understand Austrian economic theory know that this new model of healthcare will cause major problems down the road, as it has in every nation that ignores economic realities. The more government involves itself in medicine, the worse healthcare will get: quality of care will diminish as the system struggles to contain rising costs, while shortages and long waiting times for treatment will become more and more commonplace.

    Consider what would happen if car insurance worked the way health insurance does. What if it was determined that gasoline was a right, and should be covered by your car insurance policy? Perhaps every gas station would have to hire a small army of bureaucrats to file reimbursement claims to insurance companies for every tank of gas sold! What would that kind of system do to the costs of running a gas station? How would that affect the prices of both gasoline and car insurance? Yet this is exactly the type of system Congress is now expanding in health insurance. In a free market system, health insurance would serve as true insurance against serious injuries or illness, not as a convoluted system of third party payments for routine doctor visits and every minor illness.

    While proponents of this reform continue to defy all logic and reason by claiming it will save money, I worry about cataclysmic economic events. Already investors are more reluctant to buy US Treasuries, fearing that the healthcare bill, along with other spending, will cause government debt to explode to default levels. I had the opportunity last week to address my concerns with both Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, especially about the potential for the coming serious inflation. I am not optimistic that these important decision makers truly understand what is coming, why it is coming, and how best to deal with it.

    The Federal Reserve finds itself in an unprecedented and unenviable position. To keep up with government spending and corporate irresponsibility, it has increased the monetary base by nearly $1.5 trillion since September of 2008. Excess bank reserves remain at historically high levels, and the Fed’s balance sheet has ballooned to over $2 trillion. If the Fed pulls this excess liquidity out of the system, it risks collapsing banks that rely on the newly created money. However, if the Fed fails to pull this excess liquidity out of the system we risk tipping into hyperinflation. This is where central banking inevitably has led us.

    The idea that a handful of brilliant minds can somehow steer an economy is fatal to economic growth and stability. The Soviet Union’s economy failed because of its central economic planning, and the U.S. economy will suffer the same fate if we continue down the path toward more centralized control. We need to bring back sound money and free markets – yes, even in healthcare – if we hope to soften the economic blows coming our way.

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  • Blue Grotto (Grotta Azzurra)

    Image of Blue Grotto (Grotta Azzurra) located in Capri, Italy | Early postcard showing the Blue Grotto

    Blue Grotto (Grotta Azzurra)

    The glowing blue Nymphaeum of Emperor Tiberius

    “Instantly we were in a vast vault, where all gleamed like ether. The water below was like a blue-burning fire, lighting up the whole. All around was closed in: but, beneath the water, the little opening by which we entered prolonged itself almost to the bottom of the sea, forty fathoms in depth, and expanded itself to about the same width. Thus the powerful sunshine outside threw a reflected light upon the floor of the grotto, and streaming in now like fire through the blue water, seemed to change it into burning spirit. Everything gave back the reflection: the rocky arch—all seemed as if formed of consolidated air, and to dissolve away into it. The drops of spray tossed up by the movement of the oars, fell red, like fresh rose leaves. It was a fairy world ” – Hans Christian Anderson, The Improvisatore
    Visitors to Capri’s famous Grotta Azzura, or “Blue Grotto”, must lie in the damp bottom of a rowboat, aimed straight at the cliffs. The oarsman waits for a lull in the tides, and ducks through the low opening in the cliff face. Inside, the waters glow brilliant otherworldly blue against the darkness of the cave above.
    In Roman times, the grotto was the personal swimming hole of the Emperor Tiberius, who moved the capitol of the Roman Empire to the island in 27 AD. Tiberius is remembered at Capri for his lavish residence at Villa Jovis, atop a thousand foot drop to the Mediterranean, over which he was reputed to have tossed dissenters. He was succeeded by the infamous Caligula, who also spent time on the island as young man. In Tiberius’ time, the grotto was decorated with several statues, as well as resting areas around the edge of the cave.
    The grotto was re-discovered by the outside world in 1926 by the German poet August Kopisch, who wrote about it in his book Entdeckung der Blauen Grotte (Part. Ill, Chap. VI). Word spread quickly, and Capri and the grotto became part of the Victorian era Grand Tour. It has been described by some of the best travel writers of the era. Not much has changed since Mark Twain’s 1869 visit, recorded in Innocent’s Abroad:
    “The entrance to the cave is four feet high and four feet wide, and is in the face of a lofty perpendicular cliff — the sea-wall. You enter in small boats — and a tight squeeze it is, too. You can not go in at all when the tide is up. Once within, you find yourself in an arched cavern about one hundred and sixty feet long, one hundred and twenty wide, and about seventy high. How deep it is no man knows. It goes down to the bottom of the ocean. The waters of this placid subterranean lake are the brightest, loveliest blue that can be imagined. They are as transparent as plate glass, and their coloring would shame the richest sky that ever bent over Italy. No tint could be more ravishing, no lustre more superb. Throw a stone into the water, and the myriad of tiny bubbles that are created flash out a brilliant glare like blue theatrical fires. Dip an oar, and its blade turns to splendid frosted silver, tinted with blue. Let a man jump in, and instantly he is cased in an armor more gorgeous than ever kingly Crusader wore.”
    The island of Capri is riddled with caves and grottos, and the Blue Grotto was not a mystery to locals. Known locally as Gradola, it had been avoided as it was said to be inhabited by monsters or evil spirits.
    The Blue Grotto is 60 meters long by 25 meters wide. The clear blue waters below the boat are 150 meters deep. The unearthly blue light effect is caused by the refraction of daylight through the above water cave opening and a larger submerged opening. The acoustics inside the grotto are famously beautiful. At the back of the main cave, three connecting branches lead to the Sala dei Nomi, or “room of names”, named after the graffiti signatures left by visitors over the centuries. Two more passages lead deeper into the island, before it becomes inaccessible. For many years it was thought that the fissures at the back of the cave may have been ancient stairways leading up to the Emperor’s pleasure palaces, but it now seems that these are merely natural passages which narrow and then end, no palace in sight.
    Three statues of the sea gods Neptune and Triton were recovered from the grotto floor in 1964 (now on display at a museum in Anacapri), and seven statue bases were found in 2009. The Roman historian Pliny the Elder described the statues in the grotto as “playing on a shell” – the position of the now missing arms of the Triton statue, usually depicted with a conch shell, indicate that these were the statues that he saw in the 1st century AD. Four more statues may yet be hidden in the sandy depths.
    Swimming in the grotto is now forbidden, both for safety reasons and to preserve the water clarity, however some intrepid swimmers enter after hours on their own. It is a popular tourist destination on the island, but no less rare, or beautiful, a natural phenomenon for it.
    A new project by the association Marevivo aims at restoring the Grotto to its Roman appearance, with (copies of) the Roman statues in place.
    The Blue Grotto can be reached by boat from Marina Grande, or bus from Anacapri, or by walking the well-marked path. All access to the Grotto is closed on windy days or when there are waves.

    Read more about Blue Grotto (Grotta Azzurra) on Atlas Obscura…

    Category: Watery Wonders, Curious Caves
    Location: Capri, Italy
    Edited by: Annetta