Author: Serkadis

  • Quinn asks Duckworth to run for lieutenant governor post

    Gov. Quinn has asked decorated veteran and former congressional candidate Tammy Duckworth to pursue the lieutenant governor spot on the Democratic ticket this fall.

    Quinn says that Duckworth told him she has other considerations, including her job in the Veterans Affairs Department in Washington.

    He’s hoping to find someone to replace Scott Lee Cohen, who withdrew from the ticket following embarrassing domestic revelations.

    The final decision is with state party leaders.

    Read the original article from FOX Chicago News.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • One atom away from clean water

    Matter Network-By Tina Casey:A breakthrough discovery from Sandia National Laboratories could help keep a lid on the rising cost of chemical water treatment and make clean drinking water more affordable in “water challenged” areas of the world. Working with researchers at the University of California, the Sandia team substituted one atom in aluminum oxide, a common chemical used to coagulate impurities in water. The new compound promises a more sustainable way to decontaminate wastewater as well as purify drinking water. Next step: Sandia has partnered with the award-winning water technology company Kemira to bring the new compound into commercial production.

    Aluminum Oxide and Water Treatment
    According to writer Neal Singer of Sandia’s LabNews publication, the Sandia discovery solves one thorny problem in the use of aluminum oxide as a colagulant, its limited shelf life. The new compound resists aggregation so it can be stored for longer periods of time, preventing waste and easing supply logistics. Compared to other commercially available products, he new compound also appears to act more effectively in removing contaminants. It was made by adding a gallium solution to an aluminum solution, effectively adding an atom of gallium to the aluminum oxide clusters. The resulting compound maintains a more stable electrostatic charge, enabling it to bind contaminants more reliably under changing conditions such as pH, temperature, and turbidity.

    Read more>>

  • Santa Anita Park Race 6 Horse Racing Betting Pick Friday 2-19-10

    Our horse racing play on Friday will come from Race 6 at Santa Anita. This one is a straight maiden event for three year olds running 1 mile on the Santa Anita main synthetic surface. Post time is at 6:37PM Eastern Time and you can watch it on TVG. With our free pick we will play on #4 Close To The Edge to win.

    Close To The Edge will be ridden by Michael Baze and is trained by the hot Jeff Mullins. This three year old colt by Yes It’s True will stretch out after two second place finishes against straight maidens. He posted a nice 88 Brisnet rating back on January 23rd at Santa Anita going 7 furlongs. Trainer Jeff Mullins is a 23% winner going from sprint-sprint to routes. The trainer has 9 wins in 41 mounts at the current meet. The colts dam Lemon Twist is by Seeking the Gold.

    Play #4 Close To The Edge to win race 6 at Santa Anita 3-1 on the Morning Line.

    Post Time at 6:37PM Eastern Time televised by TVG

    Courtesy of Tonys Picks

  • Reminder: You Don’t Compete With Piracy By Being Lame, The DVD Edition

    It’s a point we’ve tried to make over and over again: you don’t compete with “piracy” by offering a product that’s a lot worse. And yet, so many people do. A bunch of you have sent over the following image that highlights this in the DVD world (tragically, no one seems to know who made this image — but if anyone knows, please tell us in the comments and we’ll add it to the post). It shows how an unauthorized downloaded copy of The Matrix lets you start watching it immediately. But if you purchase the legitimate DVD, it forces you to sit through multiple FBI warnings and multiple trailers for other movies, with no ability to skip past them. It’s humorous, but the point it makes is really important. When your product is less valuable (and yes, that includes being more annoying) than the unauthorized alternatives, you’re going to be hard pressed to get people to agree to pay you for your product.



    Click for larger version.

    Permalink | Comments | Email This Story





  • Aurora Christmas light deadline extended

    Aurora, Ill. –  If cold temperatures and heavy snows have kept some west suburban residents from taking down Christmas lights, they don’t have to worry.

    The city of Aurora’s giving them another couple of weeks.

    Officials announced Friday that the deadline to take down holiday decorations has been extended to March 15 due to the cold weather and snow of the last two months.

    The extension gives property owners another 18 days past the usual Feb. 25 deadline.

    Under Aurora’s seasonal decoration ordinance, outdoor holiday decorations cannot go up 60 days before the holiday and must be taken down 60 days after.

    The fine for violating the ordinance is $50, although city property inspectors will first give a courtesy notice, allotting 14 days to take down the decorations.

    According to city spokesman Dan Ferrelli, the vast majority of decorations are taken down without a fine.

    Read the original article from FOX Chicago News.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Wife of Texas man accused in plane crash expresses sorrow

    AUSTIN, Texas — A spokesman for the wife of the Texas pilot who slammed his plane into an Austin office building says she’s sorry for everyone affected by the tragedy.

    Rayford Walker says he’s a spokesman for Joseph Stack’s family. He read a statement from Stack’s wife, Sheryl Stack, while standing in front of a house across the street from the Stack home. The Stack home was set on fire Thursday before Joseph Stack crashed his plane into the building.

    In the statement, Sheryl Stack thanks her friends and family and offers her “sincerest sympathy” for the victims and their families. She also says she won’t comment further.

    Authorities say Stack was angry with the government and crashed his plane into the building. He killed himself and one person in the building.

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Boy! Tiger Woods Really Disrupted Wall Street Trading

    Check out this chart from Bloomberg showing volume before, during, and after Tiger’s mea culpa speech.

    The spike right after it finished tells the whole story.

    tiger trading

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • Lake in the Hills man gets probation on child pornography charge

    A Lake in the Hills man was sentenced Friday to 30 months probation, but no time in jail, on his admission that he possessed graphic child pornography on his home computer.

    Christopher Gidley, 35, of the 500 block of Pawnee Drive, also must register as a sex offender, continue with sex offender treatment and pay a $2,500 fine under the sentenced handed down by McHenry County Judge Joseph Condon.

    Gidley had faced a maximum two to five years in prison after pleading guilty in November to one count of child pornography. As part of that plea agreement, county prosecutors dismissed two additional counts of the same offense.

    He apologized in court Friday and asked for a chance to make up for his mistakes.

    “I had absolutely no intention of harming anyone,” he said. “I just want an opportunity to correct the situation.”

    Police arrested Gidley in July 2008 as part of a two-year federal probe into a ring of commercial child pornography Web sites, police said. Authorities seized his computer and later found several files of children involved in sexual acts, a prosecutor said Friday.

    “By viewing that, he encourages those behaviors to continue,” said Assistant McHenry County State’s Attorney Sharyl Eisenstein, who was seeking a two-year prison term for Gidley.

    But Gidley’s attorney noted that his client already has sought treatment and has no prior criminal record. His counselors, as well as McHenry County probation officials, do not believe he poses a threat to children, he added.

    “It’s pretty clear that they do no consider him a predator,” defense lawyer George Kililis said. “My client is not a risk to violent sexual behavior of any kind.”

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Veteran cop retires after seeing Nicarico saga to its end

    By 1996, Dave Hamm spent four decades hunting some of the suburbs’ most notorious thugs, thieves and murderers.

    But, instead of retiring, the veteran cop made a promise to stick around and help solve one final mystery – the infamous 1983 slaying of Jeanine Nicarico.

    Fourteen years later, months after a jury sentenced the 10-year-old Naperville girl’s murderer to death row, Hamm grudgingly retires today.

    “I don’t want to,” said Hamm, at 73. “In my mind, I’d like to go on forever but, it’s time for me to go.”

    Hamm was enjoying semiretirement in the mid-1990s, keeping peace in a DuPage County courtroom as a deputy sheriff, when then-State’s Attorney Anthony Peccarelli came to him with that final assignment.

    Hamm accepted the job offer to become a state’s attorney investigator and, for years, as Jeanine’s photo hung on his office wall for inspiration, he hunted leads in a dozen states in his quest to answer Peccarelli’s question.

    His doggedness helped lead to Brian Dugan’s death sentence a few months ago.

    Two other men, including Rolando Cruz, spent years on death row for Jeanine’s murder before 1995 exonerations. Coincidentally, Hamm served as the courtroom deputy during Cruz’s third trial. Hamm’s instincts told him Cruz was probably innocent.

    Later, after Peccarelli hired him, Hamm said he became convinced Dugan acted alone after interviewing witness upon witness who reported seeing only one man in a green car near the Nicarico home that day.

    Hamm continued the investigation after Joe Birkett took over the office’s helm.

    “There are thousands of people who are impacted by his great service,” Birkett said at Hamm’s recent retirement party. “You can’t count them all.”

    Hamm, known for his unfaltering recall of dates and names, as well as a saucy sense of humor, is widely regarded as the foremost authority on the sad saga. He uncovered many truths in a law enforcement career that dates back to late 1958.

    He stood nearly alone in the 1960s in welcoming DuPage County’s first black police officer to serve as his partner on the sheriff’s force, at a time when others refused. Decades later, Hamm was reunited with that partner, Bill Simmons – when Birkett named him the county’s first black chief of his investigations unit.

    Simmons, who shares Hamm’s deep faith, said he had a large influence on his life.

    “He’s got a lot of insight and wisdom,” Simmons said. “Dave’s a very humble man, but his mind is like a steel trap.”

    Hamm also served as a longtime Illinois State Police detective lieutenant. There, he pursued notorious horseman Silas Jayne, who was convicted of conspiracy in his brother’s 1970 fatal shooting in Inverness.

    It was while investigating Jayne that Hamm encountered Kenneth Hanson, a horse trader who Hamm became convinced was behind the unsolved Oct. 16, 1955 Peterson-Schuessler murders in which the three slain teen boys’ bodies were found near a Jayne stable.

    Hanson wasn’t an original suspect, but Hamm gave federal authorities his files when he retired from the state police in the early 1990s. They soon closed in on Hanson, who died in 2007 at 74 while serving a 200-year prison term for the slayings.

    Hamm also chased leads in the 1982 Tylenol killings in the suburbs in which seven people died of cyanide poisoning.

    He and his wife, Mary, married for 50 years, have two sons and four grandchildren.

    “The Lord has protected me in a lot of situations,” said Hamm, who recalled a Westmont police call in which he was “one-trigger-squeeze away from eternity.”

    He said: “It’s been a great ride.”

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Elgin boy ‘in the arms of Jesus’ now

    A standing-room-only crowd packed Grace Evangelical Church in Elgin Friday morning to pay final respects to Joel Hasken, a 12-year-old autistic boy who was full of energy, loved the mail and mail carriers and had faith in Jesus.

    Joel died Feb. 12 from a brain tumor, but not after postal workers from Elgin made him an honorary letter carrier after a parade in front of his east side home earlier that day.

    At his funeral Friday his parents recalled better times before Joel was diagnosed with cancer a couple months ago.

    Joel’s father, Lloyd, recalled good times camping, hanging out at the pool and playing hide and seek, when Joel inevitably would give away his hiding spot by laughing out loud.

    “I know he’s up in heaven and he’s going to find all those hiding spots,” he said.

    Joel’s mother, Faith, recalled some of the struggles of raising an autistic child, but noted how she could get Joel to do simple tasks like putting on his seat belt by making it a family race.

    “The biggest memory for me is just laughing with Joel,” she said. “I know the first thing Joel is going to say when we get to heaven is, ‘I beat you.’”

    Faith Hasken recalled how Joel, the middle of her three kids, loved to drench his food in ketchup, ride his bike, sometimes refused instructions so he could learn on his own and enjoyed getting the mail because it was part of a daily routine.

    “He had his own way of learning and he wanted to figure out things on his own sometimes,” she said. “He just loved to (get the mail). That was his thing, whether bills got lost or not.”

    During the services, his cousins placed notes and letters in a white mailbox next to his gray coffin, which was flanked by flowers. Dozens of mail trucks accompanied the funeral procession to Bluff City Cemetery in Elgin.

    Church Pastor Dave Bohyer said Joel’s life on earth may have ended but a new one has begun in heaven.

    “Joel was very active. That is an understatement. He was very friendly. That’s an understatement. And he loved to laugh,” he said. “Joel was taken up in the arms of Jesus Christ, the safest place in the world and the most loving place in the universe.”

    Read the original article on DailyHerald.com.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Honda developing new hybrid system for large cars like Odyssey, Pilot

    Honda is making strides towards developing hybrid systems for use in larger cars, according to the company’s head of automobile research and development. “We’ve left the research stage and entered the field of development,” Tomohiko Kawanabe, chief operating officer of automobile r&d at Japan’s No.2 automaker.

    Right now, Honda’s hybrid system is based off of a single motor which limits the size of the vehicles it can move, unlike the Prius, which is able to move heavier vehicles by virtue of its two-motor system. Honda had previously abandoned their diesel based strategy to improve fuel-economy in 2008, and is focusing on a hybrid system capable of powering larger vehicles like the Odyssey and Pilot.

    Click here to price the Honda Pilot.

    An exact ETA on the new technology could not be obtained, but Kawanabe said that we can expect roughly the same three-year time frame that it takes to develop a standard vehicle. A diesel engine is still in the works for the Indian and European markets, where a diesel offering is almost a prerequisite for competition.

    2011 Honda Odyssey Concept:

    – By: Stephen Calogera

    Source: Automotive News (Subscription Required)


  • CHART OF THE DAY: Wall Street’s Gravy Train Is About To Hit A Brick Wall

    The major banks are loving the uber-steep yield curve that allows them to borrow money on the cheap, and then lend it back to the government at a fat yield.

    Well, that’s just about over. Bernanke has signalled the beginning of the rate-hike cycle (driving up the cost of short-term borrowing) and as this historical chart of the 2year-10-year yield spread (via Waverly Advisors) indicates, the curve just can’t get any steeper.

    In fact if history is any guide, it’s about to collapse big time.

    chart of the day, yield spread 2Y-10Y


    Get This Delivered To Your Inbox

    You can get this dropped in your inbox every afternoon as The Chart Of The Day. It’s a simple. It’s convenient. It’s free. All we need is your email address, country and postal code.  Sign up below!

     

     

     

     


    Please Note: Business Insider will never share your information with any other companies. You also have the ability to unsubscribe from these newsletters at any time simply by following the unsubscribe link located at the bottom of each email

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • Uncharted 2: Among Thieves Wins Big At 13th Annual Interactive Achievement Awards


    Escaping with 10 outstanding awards, Uncharted 2: Among Thieves for the PS3 by Naughty Dog and Sony Computer Entertainment ran over the competition at the 13th Annual Interactive Achievement Awards. Hosted by stand-up comedian and video game enthusiast Jay Mohr at the Red Rock Resort in Las Vegas, the evening brought together renowned leaders from the gaming industry to recognize their outstanding achievements and contributions to the space.

    The 13th Annual Interactive Achievement Awards honored successful game designer and Activision co-founder, David Crane with the AIAS’ first Pioneer Award. Entertainment Software Association (ESA) founder, Douglas Lowenstein was honored with the Lifetime Achievement Award. Gaming legend behind successful titles, Crash Bandicoot and Spyro the Dragon, Mark Cerny, was inducted into the Hall of Fame, one of the organization’s highest honors.

    “The interactive world continues to grow and move forward every day. While we have seen tremendous advances in the community, I believe this is only the beginning,” said Joseph Olin, president, AIAS. “With the help of the tremendously talented men and women here tonight, we will continue to create games that inspire each other to continue pushing the envelope.”

    These peer-based awards recognize the outstanding products, talented individuals and development teams that have contributed to the advancement of the multi-billion dollar worldwide entertainment software industry.

    Here are the awards Uncharted 2 won:

    Game of the Year:
    – Producer: Sam Thompson
    – Creative Director: Amy Hennig
    – Game Director: Bruce Straley

    Outstanding Achievement in Game Direction
    – Producer: Sam Thompson
    – Creative Director: Amy Hennig
    – Game Director: Bruce Straley

    Adventure Game of the Year
    – Producer: Sam Thompson
    – Creative Director: Amy Hennig
    – Game Director: Bruce Straley

    Outstanding Achievement in Story – Original
    – Writers: Amy Hennig, Neil Druckmann, Josh Scherr

    Outstanding Achievement in Original Music Composition
    – Composer: Greg Edmonson

    Outstanding Achievement in Animation
    – Lead Animators: Josh Scherr, Jeremy Lai-Yates, Mike Yosh

    Outstanding Achievement in Visual Engineering
    – Technology Director: Pal-Kristian Engstad

    Outstanding Achievement in Art Direction:
    – Art Directors: Erick Pangilinan, Robh Ruppel

    Outstanding Achievement in Game Play Engineering
    – Lead Game Play Programmer: Travis McIntosh

    Outstanding Achievement in Sound Design
    – Sound Designer/Audio Lead: Bruce Swanson

  • Former Toyota lawyer says it destroyed legal evidence on SUV rollover accidents

    All the PR work in the world may not be able to save Toyota, as a former ToMoCo lawyer has made it known that the company is in possession of certain documents that show that it has destroyed legal evidence concerning SUV rollover accidents. As would be expected, the House Oversight Committee issued a subpoena for said records to include them in its investigation into the reported unintended acceleration problems on certain Toyota and Lexus vehicles. Toyota President Akio Toyoda agreed yesterday to testify before the committee on Feb 24.

    The subpoena was issued to Dimitrios Biller, a former Toyota lawyer based out of the company’s North American headquarters who had handled rollover cases between 2003 and 2007. Toyota had won a temporary injunction from a court-appointed arbitrator barring Biller from releasing the documents. Biller’s attorney said that he intends to fully comply with the subpoena, and ship the documents as per committee instructions by the Feb. 23 deadline. Mr. Biller is in possession of about 6,000 documents.

    Toyota sued Billings after he left the company for his alleged divulsion of confidential information; they seek $33.5 million in damages. Billings in turn filed a racketeering suit alleging Toyota destroyed engineering and testing evidence related to more than 300 rollover suits.

    -By: Stephen Calogera

    Source: Automotive News (Subscription Required)


  • 200-HP Citroen DS3 Racing confirmed for Geneva [w/video]

    Filed under: , , ,

    Citroën DS3 Racing – Click above for high-res image gallery

    A year ago we got our first peak at the new Citroën DS3 in a darkened alcove off the French brand’s main stand in Geneva. As Citroën prepares to start building the DS3 for the road, it’s tasked its racing department – the same division that’s created so many WRC-winning rally cars – to create a hotter version, and the DS3 Racing is headed to the Geneva Motor Show.

    Only 1,000 examples of the DS3 Racing will be built when production begins in the second half of this year. All of them will be motivated by a 1.6-liter turbocharged inline-four that has been extra pressurized to bump output from 156 horsepower to a full 200 hp. Getting power to the ground is always a challenge in a front-wheel drive car, so the suspension and steering have been worked over by the motorsports crew. More robust springs and dampers and a new wheel and tire package lower the car by 15 millimeters and extend the track by 30 mm. Four pot calipers on the front help to dissipate kinetic energy when the time comes to slow down the party.

    Assorted carbon-finished (we’re not sure if its actual carbon fiber) bits around the bumpers, wheel arches and rocker panels add to the “performance” image while the show car in Geneva will be further “enhanced” with DS3 Racing graphics. Inside, the front seats have been swapped in favor of more bolstered buckets to fully utilize the handiwork of the rally team’s modifications. Given how much fun a John Cooper Works Mini can be, we expect the DS3 Racing will be equally up to the task of bombing the back-country. Full details in the press release after the jump, along with a video of the DS3 Racing in action.

    [Source: Citroen]

    Continue reading 200-HP Citroen DS3 Racing confirmed for Geneva [w/video]

    200-HP Citroen DS3 Racing confirmed for Geneva [w/video] originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 19 Feb 2010 14:55:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Apollo Organizes Clean Energy Events in Missouri and Indiana

    This week, on the day before the one-year anniversary of the signing of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA), the Missouri Apollo Alliance partnered with the St. Louis Urban League to highlight the creation of 39 new jobs associated with a weatherization assistance program made possible by ARRA funding.

    “This is a shining example of how investing in green jobs can help revitalize the economy, while also saving low-income citizens money on their energy bills,” said Emily Andrews, executive director of the Greater St. Louis Green Building Council and a member of the Missouri Apollo Alliance steering committee. “If we follow this model with further investments in energy efficiency and weatherization, we’ll see a windfall of good, green jobs throughout the country.”

    Weatherization assistance for eligible applicants may include installing wall and ceiling insulation; plugging air leaks with caulking; installing weather stripping; dryer venting; glazing and repairing windows and doors; minor duct repair; furnace repair or replacement; and hot water tank repair. Studies have shown that weatherization reduces household energy costs from $260 to as much as $700 over the course of a year.

    “In addition to cutting the energy costs, these services also increase safety and enhance the quality of life for the residents of St. Louis city,” said Urban League President Jim Buford.

    Todd Weaver, CEO of Legacy Building Construction, spoke about the people his company has employed to work on weatherization projects. “These jobs change lives,” he said. “They may start at entry level, but they lay the foundation for advancement into careers as crew chiefs, pre-weatherization and post-weatherization auditors.”

    The event was covered by local media outlets, including St. Louis’s NBC affiliate and the St. Louis Business Journal. For more on the St. Louis Weatherization Assistance Program, visit www.ulstl.org. To learn more about the federal government’s weatherization efforts, visit the U.S. Department of Energy website.

    Hot on the heels of our successful event in Missouri, the Indiana Apollo Alliance will be holding its own event next week—a business roundtable. The roundtable, which is being co-sponsored by the National Wildlife Federation and the Richard G. Luger Center for Renewable Energy, will convene a panel of clean energy business leaders to discuss how Indiana can lead the way in the new clean energy economy, and how investing in clean energy technologies and manufacturing is the key to creating millions of good-paying jobs across the country. Speakers will include Jerome Ringo, former president and current board member of the Apollo Alliance; Larry Schweiger, president of the National Wildlife Federation; Jeffery Metcalf, regional director for Amaresco; John Stowell, VP of Environmental Health Policy for Duke Energy; Noel Davis, president & founder of Vela Gear Systems; and Ethan Rogers, manager of energy efficiency services at Purdue University.

    With 9.9 percent of Indiana residents unemployed, the solution for long-term job growth may lie in the state’s booming clean energy industry. A Pew Charitable Trusts national economic study showed that green jobs grew nearly two and a half times faster than overall job creation between 1998 and 2007. During that time, clean energy jobs in Indiana grew by 17.9 percent. Today, Indiana is home to more than 1,200 clean energy companies, which employ more than 17,000 people across the state.

    Three Cheers for State and Local Apollo Alliance Victories

    Speaking of state Apollo Alliances, we’d like to take this opportunity to congratulate our state and local Apollo affiliates for all of their achievements in 2009. Read on for a sampling of their accomplishments, from the creation of new green jobs training programs to the passage of various types of clean energy legislation.

    * In April 2009, the Los Angeles City Council approved a first-in-the nation plan to create jobs, cut carbon emissions, and revitalize the inner city. The council voted to support a plan to green retrofit city buildings that will create hundreds of new jobs at a time when Angelenos are confronting high rates of unemployment, and federal officials are looking to cities and states for “shovel ready” projects to boost the economy. The ordinance, which will also connect the retrofitting to green jobs training programs that link underserved communities to careers in the clean energy economy, was brought to the city council by the Los Angeles Apollo Alliance, which is convened by SCOPE (Strategic Concepts in Organizing and Policy Analysis).

    *In 2009, the New York City Apollo Alliance played a key role advising and participating in the development of the New York City Green-Collar Jobs Roadmap, a comprehensive, step-by-step plan for how to grow New York City’s green economy in a sustainable, prosperous and just manner. The Roadmap was published in October 2009 by the Center for American Progress and Urban Agenda, which convenes NYC Apollo. It was the culmination of an 18-month process in which more than 170 stakeholders from businesses, labor unions and community-based organizations collaborated and developed a plan to grow an equitable green economy in New York City.

    * Oregon Apollo and its partners, including the Oregon AFL-CIO, Citizens Utility Board, and Oregon State Building and Construction Trades Council, strongly supported the Energy Efficiency and Sustainable Technology (EEAST) Act of 2009, which was signed into law in July 2009. EEAST makes available a low-cost loan that can be applied to weatherizing homes and small businesses and producing renewable energy. The loan can be paid back on the property owner’s energy bill over a long period of time—20+ years. Apollo and its partners played a key role in ensuring that energy efficiency and renewable energy jobs created by the program will be high-quality jobs.

    * In October 2009, the Green Justice Coalition, an Apollo Alliance affiliate based in Boston, won a major victory for equity and economic development by convincing the Energy Efficiency Advisory Council (EEAC) of Massachusetts to not only develop long-term goals for increasing energy efficiency throughout the state, but also to commit to make the energy efficiency program and jobs associated with it accessible to low-income communities. For example, the Green Justice Coalition worked with the EEAC and utilities to design an innovative financing mechanism that includes a commitment by the utilities to procure $300 million in external funding over the next two years to set up a revolving loan fund. Low- and moderate-income homeowners can access these funds to pay for energy efficiency retrofits, which can be paid back incrementally through utility bills.

    * In June 2009, the Oakland Green Jobs Corps graduated its first class. The program, which is among the first training programs of its kind, was developed and proposed by the Oakland Apollo Alliance, which is convened by the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights and IBEW Local 595. The group won support from the Oakland City Council, which allocated $250,000 in seed money to create the program. Funds were awarded to a partnership between Laney Community College, Cypress Mandela Training Center, and Growth Sector – a workforce intermediary.

    *In October 2009, New York Gov. David Paterson signed legislation creating the Green Jobs/Green New York (GJ/GNY) program. The bill commits the state to investing $112 million on a program to retrofit and weatherize private homes and small commercial buildings. Over the next five years, the program’s implementation will create thousands of jobs in the home and commercial building retrofit industry. The New York State Apollo Alliance was part of a broad coalition of labor, workforce training, clean energy, and environmental groups that joined together to support the green jobs initiative, which is poised to become the centerpiece of New York’s efforts to become a more energy-efficient state.

    To read more about these and other state and local Apollo Alliance victories, visit ApolloAlliance.org. To find out about an Apollo Alliance affiliate near you, click here.

  • Naperville native Lysacek takes figure skating gold

    VANCOUVER, British Columbia (AP) — Naperville, Ill. native Evan Lysacek won the Olympic gold. Evgeni Plushenko won the argument.

    The quad, the toughest jump there is in figure skating, is the way of the future. It has to be for the sport to keep progressing. Plushenko is right there.

    Only the judges didn’t see it that way on Thursday night.

    They made Lysacek the champion, even though he didn’t land or even attempt the devilishly hard jump with four revolutions.

    Plushenko did do a quad, and he got only the silver, but he could still have the last word.

    Take a look around.

    In snowboarding, Shaun White is throwing down ever-crazier moves, pushing the boundaries of his sport.

    In Alpine skiing, racers are putting life and limb on the line every time they click into their bindings and head downhill.

    In the process, they helped NBC clobber “American Idol” in the television ratings.

    Viewers, in short, like stuff that’s new and they like risk.

    But figure skating? Well, quads were a staple for the top men before the sport rewrote its points system after the Salt Lake City judging scandal in 2002.

    Now, they are a dying breed.

    No matter which way you spin it, and in skating they spin it better than anyone, that does not represent progress.

    “It’s not men’s figure skating,” Plushenko said contemptuously. “Now, it’s dancing.”

    Lysacek’s routine was super, but conservative, too. With his big frame, sleeked-back Pierce Brosnan hair and sober black costume, he oozed power and control. His opening combination of jumps was velvet-smooth.

    It could not be said that he was an undeserved winner.

    But it wasn’t edge-of-seat stuff, either. His jumps were at best triples, not quads. The envelope was not pushed.

    He micromanaged his way to gold. Plushenko went for a bigger bang, but his jumps weren’t as clean.

    In layman’s terms, it would be the difference between a nice, solid and reliable pickup truck and the far edgier but not as practical Lamborghini that snowboarder White has in his garage.

    Lysacek practically admitted as much, saying that he had shown “a complete package” of skating moves, not just giant jumps.

    “If it was a jumping competition they’d give you 10 seconds to go and do your best jump,” the American said.

    As long as skating’s points system stays as it is, this argument will rumble on and on.

    At the moment, landing a quad properly can bring big rewards. Plushenko got 14.6 points for the quad and triple toeloop with which he opened his program.

    It was a sight to behold. Plushenko spun so fast that it was a wonder he didn’t drill into the ice on landing.

    But quads are risky, because they are so hard to do well. Skaters who don’t manage to pull them off, like bronze medalist Daisuke Takahashi, can be heavily penalized. Takahashi fell hard attempting his quad and got just one point for it.

    So many skaters don’t attempt them. They play it safe with easier moves they are more confident of landing.

    But who, honestly, likes safe?

    Not Plushenko.

    “We need to change the system, judging system, because quad is quad. If Olympic champion, he doesn’t know how to jump quad, no, I don’t know.”

    His manager, Ari Zakarian, was more succinct: “We are going in the direction of becoming ballet on ice.”

    He suggested that in the wake of this defeat, Plushenko might not compete when the games move to his native Russia in four years time.

    If “the quad is not going to be appreciated, probably (he) will never try to go for the Olympics,” Zakarian said. “Now, he just finished (his program) and he says, ‘You know what? That’s it.’ He says, ‘I don’t see any future here.”‘

    Plushenko, asked later about those comments, said: “Who said? My manager? He lied to you, he is joking.”‘

    Perhaps. Time will tell.

    But the risk of skating standing still is not so funny.

    Read the original article from WBBM News Radio.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • Peterson pre-trial hearing drawing to close

    JOLIET, Ill. (AP) — A renowned pathologist says the 2004 death of Drew Peterson’s ex-wife was no accident.

    Michael Baden (BAH’-den) is the former chief medical examiner of New York City. He contends Kathleen Savio not only drowned in her bathtub, she was beaten.

    Peterson has pleaded not guilty to killing Savio. Baden testified Friday at a hearing to determine what hearsay evidence will be allowed at the former Bolingbrook police officer’s upcoming trial.

    Savio’s family asked Baden to conduct an autopsy in 2007 after Peterson’s fourth wife, Stacy, disappeared. Savio’s death was originally classified as an accident, but it’s now been reclassified as a homicide.

    Baden was the third pathologist to testify at Peterson’s hearing. Two said Savio’s death was a homicide, while a pathologist called by the defense believes it was an accident.

    © 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Learn more about our Privacy Policy.

    Read the original article from WBBM News Radio.

    Distributed via Chicago Press Release Services


  • EEStor Musings



    This is a good piece of digging on the EEStor topic.  He uncovers that there is clearly more going on than the surface claims been made that some have shown to be unlikely, yet not impossible.  To date they have proven that they can manufacture a capacitor powder of the necessary size to support their claims.
    That the material then may have superior capacitance is possibly a function of proprietary knowledge and this report tracks us through the right doors.  This was not going to be figured out in a garage cut of from the type of support a large lab can give.
    At the end of the day, the powder performs or does not.  Surely that can be demonstrated today.  I will go further.  They could not have attracted their present partners without tricking up a pretty impressive bench test that blew away resistance.  I have to think such a test is possible and is simply not been shown off.  I can think of all sorts of good reasons for this in terms of proprietary protection.
    They have actually told us a lot which tells me that they have plenty in the vault.
    In the meantime we have to wait impatiently just like management for the mavens to make up[ a demo that looks pretty.
    WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2010
    One of the more interesting aspects of following the EEStor story is the belief among numerous reputable individuals that what EEStor has claimed to do is impossible. Skeptics say there are no known materials, in the capacitor realm, that can store between 10 and 20 thousand Joules/cc (EEStor’s proposed energy density) due to phenomena known as saturation & breakdown respectively. While most academics are cautious about saying something is impossible, some are confident enough with regard to EEStor to say it will never happen.
    What seems to be a unanimous opinion among those skilled in the art of capacitor materials is that the mechanism EEStor is exploiting to gain incredible energy density can not be a simple dipole system because the ion would be stretched outside the unit cell. (gross oversimplification: the toothpick can only be bent so far before it breaks…yielding toothpick…. pieces). But the data and presentation of EEStor’s program as found in it’s patents seem to suggest a simple dipole system is in use.
    The question that arises, however, is how could Kleiner Perkins’ Bill Joy, John Doerr & John Denniston (all of whom have been active in the EEStor project) invest A N Y T H I N G in a project like EEStor’s? What sort of shoddy due diligence lead Kleiner Perkins to part with at least $3Mil of their clients’ money (especially since much of that money comes from endowment funds from competent universities like MIT)? Well, fair reader, let me tell you.
    According to numerous sources, Kleiner Perkins hired none other than THE pre-eminent US University in the field of material science, ie, Penn State University to evaluate EEStor’s claims. The verdict of the hired guns Dr. Tom Shrout and Dr. Joe Dougherty? N O T  I M P O S S I B L E (You hear that John Miller?)…which you should quickly note is about 18,000 kilometers away from “likely to work.” This verdict seems to imply Penn State was not provided with prototypes but rather only data. Sources close to these researchers point out that Shrout & Dougherty, although under strict NDA with Kleiner & EEStor, will comment mostly in the negative concerning EEStor’s chance for success.
    It was in this atmosphere, a few years ago that Professor Clive Randall gave a presentation (at least twice) on several hyped technologies including EEStor’s. The simple thrust of that presentation was that EEStor positions their technology as exploiting a simple dipole system which the physics show cannot produce enough energy density to support their claims. Case closed, right?
    It was closed for all of the academics at Penn State until a funny thing happened about 16 months ago. One of the leading material researchers was approached by a mystery VC company who wanted to know all over again if there just might be an EEStor mechanism capable of providing the energy density that’s been claimed. “Absolutely impossible” was the written reply “on the basis of a simple calculation.” The mystery VC company then sent a representative to discuss with researchers “some additional information.” [Note: thisinformation couldn’t be found in an academic journal or spoken about at some academic conference].
    The result of that meeting lead at least two prominent & senior Penn State researchers to an amazing discovery: it seems “sometimes a leopard can change its spots.” But have ALL of the leopards changed their spots? No. This is primarily because even among a seemingly tight nit group like the PSU Materials Research Institute not all information is shared among colleagues. Although some researchers pretend not to know that Shrout and Dougherty were in possession of proprietary EEStor data, others genuinely did not know it due to what appears to be true professional discretion. But this discretion works in the opposite direction as well making what you are reading a possible source of enlightenment for persons who have been working at PSU for years.
    A theory that a mechanism exists which can store more than 20,000J/cc is afoot at Penn State. But it cannot be talked about. Actually, it can be talked about but the talkers can’t be named although if you read this blog, you would be in a proper position to form a theory.
    So, what happens next? In the ordinary course of things, you might one day find an academic journal article spelling out the details of the mechanism in question. But in this one tiny special case, due to the ownership intention of the mystery VC company, you will not learn about it until a patent is published. …or until you continue reading this blog, which ever comes first. (Muahaha)
    I want to state emphatically that the VC company is in no way tied to any traditional capacitor or supercapacitor companies…giving one further reason to wonder how such an entity could stumble upon SOMETHING that causes Penn State leopard spots to change.
    What can be said about this theory under analysis at PSU? First, the researchers have already demonstrated to their own satisfaction that some mechanisms exist which cannot be explained with simple ferroelectric models. Data has been collected in support of the theory. The mechanisms do not seem to be captured by the traditional definitions of capacitors OR batteries but some sort of hybrid in between both. The possible energy density is enormous.
    For purposes of continuity, it should be re-echoed here that there are other ties between EEStor and Penn State. First, EEStor’s Carl Nelson was a colleague of deceased & long time PSU researcher Bob Newnham, having taught him how to drive a car actually. Secondly, EEStor’s patents reference work done by a Dupont researcher namedIan Burn. Burn is currently working under the umbrella of the Center for Dielectric Studies and has told me that he actually spoke to Dick Weir a couple years ago regarding the patents and stories that were emerging. According to Burn, Weir was not amenable to dialogue.
    Another interesting tie between EEStor and Penn State comes via a mutual benefactor of sorts, WS Investments, which is the investment fund of law firm Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati. The fund is managed by Mario Rosati and according to crunchbase.com it includes an investment in May 2008 with Strategic Polymer Sciences. SPS Inc. is a startup company focused on high energy density capacitors among other things and consists of many former and current Penn State researchers. Yes, an EEStor competitor. Where is Rosati’s head in all of this? Law SchoolCheck out the course he’s teaching this semester at Berkely. (MUhahah)

    So, what does it all add up to? What are we left with here? Well, as per usual, for you fair reader, you have a new set of tea leaves…familiar territory, right?

  • Microsoft – “I don’t know if any Windows Mobile 6.5 device today meets (the) specifications” to upgrade to Windows Phone 7

    noupgrade At a recent interview with CNET Asia Aaron Woodman, Microsoft Mobile Communications Business Director revealed that no Windows Mobile 6.5 devices will get upgrades to Windows Phone 7 series.

    When asked if users of the current Windows Mobile software can upgrade to Windows Phone 7 series, he said:

    Woodman: I don’t know if any Windows Mobile 6.5 device today meets those specifications.

    He went on to reveal the Qualcomm would be the only provider of processors for phones running Windows Phone 7, leaving any hopes of a Tegra device dashed.

    Woodman: We will provide the OS primarily to software developers in March. Every 7 Series device will have a Qualcomm chip. It will be touch-based. There won’t be any non-touch, but that’s not saying there won’t be any keyboard devices, so they will all be touch and capacitive. There is a single aspect ratio. It will have Wi-Fi and GPS and other services which we will talk about soon.

    Regarding Windows Mobile 6.5, he revealed that the OS will live on as long as enterprise wants it.

    Woodman: We don’t have a specific timeline for Windows Mobile 6.5. It still has a lot of demand and value for both OEMs and customers today. The reality is that demand will determine the lifespan of Windows Mobile 6.5. So as long as OEMs and customers find value there, we’ll continue to support and sell the product.

    Windows Mobile 6.5 will also be the only version of the OS that OEM’s are allowed to skin.

    Lastly the  head of Mobile Services, Manish Ladha, for Microsoft Asia, revealed a lack of integration plans for Microsoft’s online services going forward.

    Ladha: Hotmail, Messenger and Photos are the more popular ones. There’s also Spaces, but it’s not that prominent. SkyDrive is a very popular service on the PC. However, we have a similar service which is called MyPhone.

    It seems there’s some duplication of services. Does Microsoft plan to combine them moving forward?
    Ladha: I won’t call it duplication of features. It’s just that on the phone, there is no Windows Live SkyDrive for mobile. Instead, it’s MyPhone. So it’s ultimately performing the same actions.

    It seems to me Microsoft still has a way to go to develop a coherent strategy for all of their customers, both business and consumer, which would also encompass all their services. Do our readers agree?

    Read the full interview with much more detail at CNET Asia here