Category: News

  • By the way, is anyone checking on nuclear-plant safety plans?

    by Jonathan Hiskes

    It gives me the willies
    to think about it, but it’s probably a good time for a hard look at our
    “backup” accident plans for nuclear power plants, now that we know how unbelievably
    unprepared the BP/Transocean/Halliburton Dream Team was for an accident on
    their Deepwater Horizon offshore drilling rig. I mean, BP’s worthless response plan involved protecting (Arctic) walruses in the Gulf of Mexico.

    Our dirty-energy economy
    requires us to undertake lots of enormous, risky endeavors that we keep happily
    out of mind until something goes wrong. Few of us thought about the perils of
    drilling into deeper and deeper ocean beds until the last month. Few of us
    thought about coal-ash waste—the toxic sludge left over from coal-fired electricity generation—until a
    retaining wall broke and a pond of it poured out near Kingston, Tenn., 18
    months ago.

    I hear from more people who say they’re concerened about the safety risks of factory meat and other
    industrialized food. But with this, too, we’re largely at the mercy of
    out-of-sight federal regulators with a lackluster record (see “ammonia
    burgers
    ”). The BP gusher is proving—again—that safety
    regulators who are in hock to insanely lucrative industries aren’t going to do an adequate job of
    protecting us.

    I’ve been happily
    clueless about backup plans for the nation’s 104 nuclear-power reactors (to say
    nothing of military sites). Now I’m realizing how foolish that is.

     

    Related Links:

    What if the oil spill just can’t be fixed?

    Fake BP Twitter account attracts lots of followers

    The 7 dumbest things in BP’s spill response plan






  • RF Surgical Scores $2.5M More

    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Medical device maker RF Surgical Systems, which is based in Bellevue, WA, and has R&D operations in San Diego, has raised $2.5 million in equity financing out of a total offering of $5 million, according to a regulatory filing. The company confirmed the funding today. It says it had raised approximately $21 million before this latest round, which is an extension to its Series A financing and comes from existing investors. RF Surgical Systems was founded in 2004 and has developed patented technologies for detecting and preventing retained surgical sponges in patients undergoing surgery. The company’s product was approved by the FDA in 2006.

    UNDERWRITERS AND PARTNERS



























  • Spy Shots: Next-gen BMW 6 Series caught topless without shame

    Filed under: , ,

    Next generation BMW 6 Series convertible – Click above for high-res image gallery

    BMW has had a remarkably steady flow of new product hitting the market in the last couple of years, and now that the latest 5 Series is starting to hit the streets and the X3 is coming this fall, one of the next models in line for a rework is the 6 Series.

    The new coupe and convertible will be the last of the “Bangle Butt” models to go under the knife, and none too soon. The redesigned convertibles have been running everywhere from Arvidsjaur, Sweden to the Nurburgring since last winter, but always with the top up. The latest batch of images from our intrepid spy shooters show a test driver enjoying a bit Munich sunshine in the spring.

    When the new 6 debuts publicly either later this year or early next we’re expecting it to feature much of the same design language we’ve seen on the latest 5, 7 and Z4, with tight side sculpting, stretched headlamps and an overall look that is both cleaner and more muscular than before.

    Spy Shots: Next-gen BMW 6 Series caught topless without shame originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 25 May 2010 18:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Gates Reiterates Defense Bill Veto Threat, But Not Because of ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’

    The “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” repeal provisions about to be inserted into the fiscal year 2011 defense authorization bill are getting all the attention. But don’t forget that the bill is a venue for a much different showdown between the Pentagon and Congress. Defense Secretary Robert Gates certainly hasn’t.

    For weeks now, Gates has done everything he can to get Congress not to put money into the bill for a second engine for the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, which he has repeatedly characterized as a “costly and unnecessary” engineering curiosity. He’s even made a legacy-building speech at the library honoring the patron saint of sensible defense spending, Dwight D. Eisenhower, holding out the engine as the crucible of a fight over Pentagon bloat. Again and again for the past several weeks, he’s told anyone who would listen that if the second engine is in the defense bill, he will recommend that President Obama veto the entire half-trillion-dollar bill.

    None of that actually stopped the House Armed Services Committee from putting $485 million for the engine into the bill last week. My understanding is that the second engine is not currently in the Senate version of the bill that will go through committee mark-up tomorrow. But now that the White House has blessed a legislative maneuver to make the defense authorization bill the vehicle to repeal “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” a signature issue for the Democratic base, is Gates standing firm on his recommendation to veto a bill containing the second F-35 engine?

    “Absolutely, positively, unequivocally, yes,” says Geoff Morrell, Gates’s spokesman.

    It’s possible Gates won’t have to recommend any veto and Obama won’t have to consider using one. Although it’s more likely than not that the Senate committee will put funding for the engine in the bill, sometimes miracles happen. Over in the House, Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-Ore.) and Rep. John Larson (D-Conn.) announced today that they’re going to push their own amendment during the floor vote to block the money for the second F-35 engine.

    Those measures are perhaps the best chances for the politics of repealing “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” not to run smack into the politics of Gates’s efforts to curb defense waste. The “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” repeal votes in the House and especially the Senate committee tomorrow are already extremely close, according to Hill sources and LGBT repeal advocates. Who knows how a potential veto recommendation from Gates on a different issue would impact members’ calculations.

    Perhaps only two things here are clear. First, the congressional fight over repealing “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” isn’t the congressional fight that Gates wanted the defense authorization to be about, even if he did issue reluctant support for the move earlier today. And second, it’s possible that Obama will be put in the difficult position of having to choose between a core priority for his much-snubbed supporters in the LGBT community and a core priority for his defense secretary.

  • J. Allard’s Farewell Email to His Microsoft Team: "I Require No Assistance Finding The Door" [Blockquote]

    Earlier we discovered that J. Allard, the Father of the Xbox, is leaving Microsoft. This was the goodbye email he sent to his team: More »










    MicrosoftJ AllardXboxMonopolies and OligopoliesEconomic

  • Giannoulias getting White House support: Duncan, Messina to Chicago for fund-raisers

    WASHINGTON–Democratic Illinois Senate nominee Alexi Giannoulias will be getting help from the Obama White House. Education Secretary Arne Duncan and White House Deputy Chief of Staff Jim Messina are planning visits to Illinois to campaign for Giannoulias in June.

    My Chicago Sun-Times colleague Abdon Pallasch has a report below, at the click.

    Here’s what I learned: Messina and Duncan are coming in for fund-raisers, a few days apart. Duncan may also do a press event with Giannoulias.

    On Tuesday afternoon, I talked with White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs about the Illinois Senate race. The “White House is going to help the Democratic nominee in Illinois and we look forward to supporting the nominee and retaining the Senate seat.”

    I asked if more White House help was coming and Gibbs, referring to Duncan and Messina told me, “This is high level help and this is a very important race. I don’t think this is the last of it.”

    Obama on Tuesday headed to California to headline fund-raisers for Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) and the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee.

    How the news of Messina and Duncan coming to Illinois helps Giannoulias: More than the actual dollars Messina or Duncan generate at their events, the White House actually doing something tangible for Giannoulias helps donors who have been reluctant to write checks. GOP rival Rep. Mark Steven Kirk (R-Ill.) is millions of dollars ahead in fund-raising. The White House weighed in after the Giannoulias family Broadway Bank failed and Giannoulias was still standing–and had a poll showing he was neck and neck with Kirk.

    BY ABDON M. PALLASCH Political Reporter
    Following the hug and the shout-out President Obama gave Democratic Senate candidate Alexi Giannoulias at a downstate Quincy event a few weeks ago, the White House is poised to shower a little more love on the beleaguered former banker.

    Education Secretary Arne Duncan — a frequent hoops buddy of Giannoulias and the president — and White House Deputy Chief of Staff Jim Messina are planning back-to-back visits to Illinois to campaign for Giannoulias in June.

    As late as the morning of the Quincy event, reporters were pestering Giannoulias with questions about whether President Obama was giving his former close friend the cold shoulder following some rough hits in the press for Giannoulias when his family’s Broadway Bank was taken over by federal regulators and sold to MB Financial.

    But Obama made clear later that day that he still considered Giannoulias to be a “soon-to-be-senator.” Obama himself is not expected to start campaigning for Democratic challengers until the fall, said Giannoulias spokeswoman Kathleen Strand.

    In the coming months, Obama is expected to concentrate on shoring up support for Democratic incumbent senators, she said.

    Giannoulias’ Republican opponent, Rep. Mark Kirk, is expected to attract a steady stream of big-name Republican endorsements and donations. Even Democratic Rep. Jesse Jackson Jr. is considering staying neutral in the race to help his friend Kirk.

  • The Google Pac-Man cost companies $ 120 million around the world

    The Google Pac-Man cost companies $ 120 million around the worldOn Friday, the Internet browser celebrated 30 years of Pac-Man putting on their home page their version of the game. The idea, according to a study, was irresistible to workers throughout the world.

    The legendary Japanese video game Pac-Man was irresistible to workers around the world, according to a study, Google PacMan devoted five million work hours.

    Last Friday, the Internet browser decided to pay homage to Pac-Man’s 30th birthday. Nostalgia gripped the workers around the globe and made them to stay tree times more on the page than normally.

    That translated into productivity losses is accounted for $ 120 million, according to the study of RescueTime company specializing in software for monitoring how and where workers navigate. The company developed this study from a sample of 11,000 users.



    According to the study, that day the 11 seconds on average which usually take to do a search, lengthened to more than triple: 36 seconds.

    On average, estimated that the in the working hours employees usually do about 22 searches on Google. If you multiply that number by the amount of extra seconds of each visit, he concludes that workers spent 4.8 million hours on the web (the equivalent of around 550 million years).

    And the economic data translation, considering an average salary of $ 25 an hour, was that the Pac-Man caused a loss to the productivity of companies around the world U.S. $ 120 million.

    “Fortunately,” the authors of the study say, that “75% of users did not realize that you could play by pressing the ‘Insert Coin’.”

    Related posts:

    1. PacMan 30th anniversary: Google PacMan game
    2. Pac-Man 30th Anniversary! Third Day With Playable Google Logo
    3. Last Day of Pac-Man 30th Anniversary! Enjoy While It Lasts

  • Why Are These People Laughing at Alarcon’s Political Hypocrisy?

    What sane person could oppose Proposition 15 — the pilot project for clean money campaigns for Secretary of State candidates in 2014 and 2018?

    What kind of scoundrel would use the debate over such a small step toward ending political corruption and bringing fair elections to California that he would go into a moralistic diatribe against the Republican candidates for governor while ignoring how union and special interest money has made LA City Hall a mockery of democracy?

    Richard Alarcon, that’s who…the Council member under criminal investigation because he doesn’t or at least didn’t live in his district.

    Meanwhile, if you want to support Prop. 15, Rock the Boat and Common Cause are holding a fund-raising event Tuesday June 1 at the Echo, 1822 W. Sunset Blvd. at 8:30 p.m. with Jeremy
    Dawson
    of Shiny Toy Guns (DJ Set), White Apple Tree, & Buddy Akai, $8 in advance, $10 at the door.

  • Fake BP Twitter account attracts lots of followers

    by Agence France-Presse

    WASHINGTON—The Twitter account claims to be that of British Petroleum’s public relations department, but the messages are a little bit, well, odd for a company battling a massive oil spill.

    “Please do NOT take or clean any oil you find on the beach. That is the property of British Petroleum and we WILL sue you,” reads one “tweet” from the account @BPGlobalPR.

    “If we had a dollar for every complaint about this oil spill, it wouldn’t compare to our current fortune. Oil is a lucrative industry!” says another.

    “Proud to announce that BP will be sponsoring the New Orleans Blues Festival this summer w/special tribute to Muddy Waters,” reads a third.

    The fake account was created on May 19 by an unknown Twitter user and has quickly attracted more than 23,000 followers—four times more than the real BP Twitter account @BP_America.

    Other messages on @BPGlobalPR:

    “The good news: Mermaids are real. The bad news: They are now extinct.”

    “The ocean looks just a bit slimmer today. Dressing it in black really did the trick!”

    “Thousands of people are attacked by sea creatures every year. We at BP are dedicated to bringing that number down. You’re welcome!”

    Toby Odone, a BP spokesman, told Advertising Age that the company is aware of the fake account but has apparently not taken any steps to have it removed.

    “I’m not aware of whether BP has made any calls to have it taken down or addressed,” Odone told Ad Age. “People are entitled to their views on what we’re doing and we have to live with those. We are doing the best we can to deal with the current situation and to try to stop the oil from flowing and to then clean it up,” he said.

    The @BPGlobalPR feed is not the only attempt at humor on Twitter regarding the oil spill.

    Another account, @common_oil_spil, purports to be the Twitter feed of the oil spill itself. It spits out terse messages such as “belch” and “glug, glug, glug” or references to the various attempts to plug the well such as “golf balls?”

    Related Links:

    What if the oil spill just can’t be fixed?

    By the way, is anyone checking on nuclear-plant safety plans?

    The 7 dumbest things in BP’s spill response plan






  • WordPress For BlackBerry Updates to v2.1

    WordPress for BlackBerry updated today, and it has really come a long ways from where it once was. Signing in is significantly easier, it is easier to access more things. And I’ll post what the changelog is  for you, and if you use WordPress, it’s definitely worth the update. And being a free application that’s extremely useful, what are you waiting for? Check it out…

    A picture may be worth a thousand words, but WordPress sure makes putting them all your words together so much easier.

    The change log is as follows from the WordPress for BlackBerry Blog:

    • Ability to show comprehensive site stats for WordPress.com sites and for self-hosted sites running the WP.com stats plugin
    • Ability to add audio recordings to a post/page
    • Ability to post media files that are not tied to post/page
    • Ability to add a signature on posts created from the mobile app
    • “1- click” share to WordPress within the native BlackBerry Browser and File Explorer
    • Improvements on GPS support
    • Redesigned GUI with touch support

    The following languages are also supported along with the thanks for the contributors:

    • English
    • Italian
    • Finnish [Thanks Apuasi]
    • French [Thanks Yann Nave]
    • Indonesian [Thanks Kate of Pixel Insert]
    • German [Thanks Frank Wessel]
    • Portuguese (Portugal) [Thanks José Fontainhas]
    • Japanese [Thanks Nao]
    • Spanish [Thanks danivloven]

    It’s really a change in how the app responds as well, faster response time, easier log ins, it’s just really a very nice welcomed update. If you have WordPress for BlackBerry, update it now. If not, you can download it at the following link. Whether you have a WordPress or not, as it gives you the opportunity to sign up for a free one.

    Download your WordPress for BlackBerry v2.1 for free here

    [via: WordPress for BlackBerry]

    You’re reading a story which originated at BlackBerrySync.com, Where you find BlackBerry News You Can Sync With…

    This story is sponsored by the new BlackBerry Sync Mobile App Store. Grab your free copy today at www.GetAppStore.com from your BlackBerry.

    WordPress For BlackBerry Updates to v2.1

    Related posts:

    1. WordPress For BlackBerry Updates To v1.1, More Added Support WordPress updated their app to the newest version, 1.1. According…
    2. WordPress For BlackBerry Updates Big to Beta v0.9.0.134 Thanks to Mauricio from BlackBerry Rocks, who announced the…
    3. WordPress for BlackBerry App Updates to Version 1.0 – Brings new Features! The WordPress for BlackBerry App has been updated to…

  • MasterCard Is Making It Easier To Pay By Mobile Phone


    Mastercard Tap & Go

    MasterCard said today it will let third-party developers tap into its payment systems, so they can be used for online or mobile applications. By opening up its services, the credit card company becomes more competitive in the next generation of platforms, which are the target of more than a dozen or so start-ups that have raised millions of dollars to make paying by cell phone more ubiquitous.

    Through the program, developers will be able to bypass having to get a merchant agreement, setting up the system and making the consumer enter data each time. Instead, developers could use the new open platform to embed a payment feature in virtual games or in e-commerce apps on Twitter or Facebook, or to build an app that sends a text message to the card’s owner before a purchase is made, The New York Times reports.

    Internally, MasterCard has been using the APIs in-house to create iPhone applications, such as MasterCard ATM Hunter and MasterCard Easy Savings, but Garry Lyons, MasterCard’s Group Executive of R&D, said: “Opening these and other APIs to the global development community developers will provide developers the opportunity to leverage MasterCard’s leading payment platforms and come up with new ideas that may not have been previously considered or thought possible.”

    In the Times article, MasterCard says that while mobile payments for digital goods has started to take off, “it’s still really hard to buy a physical item from your phone.” Last week, we wrote about how phones are not a practical replacement for cash because of 40 to 50 percent cut a carrier demands if the charge appears on the cellphone bill. Other limitations have revolved around the hardware, and having compatible payment scanners in the store with chips in the phone.

    MasterCard is not the only one shifting their approach. PayPal opened its platform late last year, and other start-ups like mopay, Zong, Boku and Paris-based Hi-media, are hopeful they can transition from mostly digital goods to physical goods over time. Interested developers should contact MasterCard at [email protected] in order to learn more on how to participate in the program.


  • NCBI ROFL: Study proves chocolate bars different from bones. | Discoblog

    Accuracy of comparing bone quality to chocolate bars for patient information purposes: observational study

    “Within our area of practice relating to osteoporosis and fragility fracture we have noticed a tendency to compare normal, healthy bone to the finely honeycombed structure of a Crunchie (Cadbury Trebor Bassett; Bournville, Birmingham) chocolate bar and to compare abnormal, osteoporotic bone to the coarser structure of an Aero (Nestle UK; York) bar. Although this explanation is readily appreciated by patients and clinicians it struck us that the comparison may not be completely valid as no work has been published on the fracture potential of each bar… To enable us to provide accurate data to our patients we studied the fracture risk for each chocolate bar.

    choco_bar_dropped_bone


    We randomly purchased 20 chocolate bars (10 Crunchie and 10 Aero) from a reputable high street confectioner; the number of bars was limited by research funds and our rural environment…

    The end point of the study was fracture. Firstly, we allowed each bar to topple from its standing height in the centre of a tile. We then dropped each bar horizontally on to the centre of the tile from increasing heights until fracture, defined as a break in the cortex; we did not regard mild deformity as a fracture. The tests were carried out at a temperature of 22oC after the bars had had eight hours to reach a steady state temperature. We used a bone densitometer (Discovery-C; Hologic, Bedford, MA) to carry out dual energy x ray absorptiometry (whole body) on one Aero and one Crunchie, with bone mineral density being used as a surrogate for measuring chocolate density. Height was measured with a tape measure (Olympia (5 m/16 ft) Power Return Tape; Olympia (UK); Reading, Berks)…

    Our data provide evidence of the disparity between chocolate density and fracture rates. The use of Crunchie and Aero bars to explain bone health and fracture risk to patients, although palatable, is not justified. In practical terms we believe that the findings should contribute to the provision of improved patient information and education by enlightened healthcare professionals. The study serves to remind clinicians that both chocolate density and bone mineral density form but one component of fracture risk. The accurate assessment of fracture risk should ideally take into account other measurable indices that contribute to fracture risk in addition to that provided by chocolate density and bone mineral density.”

    bone_candy_bar_comparison
    Read the full article here.

    Image: BMJ

    Related content:
    Discoblog: NCBI ROFL: Parachute use to prevent death and major trauma related to gravitational challenge.
    Discoblog: NCBI ROFL: Acronym win: the CHUMP study
    Discoblog: NCBI ROFL: The nature of navel fluff.

    WTF is NCBI ROFL? Read our FAQ!


  • Konnet PowerV Duo Charges 2 Wiimotes, 2 USB Devices [Chargers]

    Having an induction charger for your Wiimotes is a necessity. Having one that can charge your Wiimotes and two USB devices at the same time might be a little extravagant. Thankfully, at $35, the Konnet PowerV Duo a justifiable extravagance. More »










    USBBusinessHardwareUniversal Serial BusOperating Systems

  • What if the oil spill just can’t be fixed?

    by David Roberts

    The BP Gulf oil disaster is reaching an interesting phase. People’s gut instinct, their first reaction, is to find someone to blame. They blame BP for negligence; the Obama administration for its tepid response; the Bush administration for lax regulatory enforcement. People have been casting about for some way to compartmentalize this thing, some way to cast it as an anomaly, an “accident,” the kind of screwup that can be meliorated or avoided in the future.

    We are, however, drifting toward a whole different kind of place. Tomorrow BP is attempting the “top kill” maneuver—pumping mud into the well. If it doesn’t work, well … then what? Junk shot? Top hat? Loony stuff like nukes? Relief wells will take months to drill and no one’s sure if they’ll work to relieve pressure. It’s entirely possible, even likely, that we’re going to be stuck helplessly watching as this well spews oil into the Gulf for years. Even if the flow were stopped tomorrow, the damage to marshes, coral, and marine life is done. The Gulf of Mexico will become an ecological and economic dead zone. There’s no real way to undo it, no matter who’s in charge.

    I’m curious to see how the public’s mood shifts once it becomes clear that we are powerless in the face of this thing. What if there’s just nothing we can do? That’s not a feeling to which Americans are accustomed.

    Once we know that accidents can be catastrophic and irreversible, it becomes clear that there is no margin of error. We’re operating a brittle system, unable to contain failure and unable to recover from it. Consider how deepwater drilling will look in that new light.

    The thing is, we’re already operating in those circumstances in a thousand different ways—it’s just that the risks and the damages tend to be distributed and obscured from view. They’re not thrust in our face like they are in the Gulf. We don’t get back the land we destroy by mining. We don’t get back the species lost from deforestation and development. We don’t get back islands lost to rising seas. We don’t get back the coral lost to bleaching or the marine food chains lost to nitrogen runoff. Once we lose the climatic conditions in which our species evolved, we won’t get them back either.

    We’re doing damage as big as the Gulf oil spill every day, and there’s no fixing it. Humanity has grown in power, wealth, and appetite to the point that there is no more margin of error anywhere. We’re on a knife’s edge, facing the very real possibility that for our children, all the world may be one big Gulf of Mexico, inexorably and irreversibly deteriorating.

    Perhaps if the public gets a clear taste of this, they’ll step back and contemplate whether the kind of energy we use is really as “cheap” as it looks. Maybe they’ll stop thinking about how to drill better and start thinking about how to avoid drilling altogether. Because some mistakes just can’t be undone.

    Related Links:

    By the way, is anyone checking on nuclear-plant safety plans?

    Fake BP Twitter account attracts lots of followers

    The 7 dumbest things in BP’s spill response plan






  • Intellect, rigor, tradition

    In the welcome shade of the verdant trees outside Harvard Hall on this scorching morning (May 25), Trevor Bakker ’10 and 71 other Phi Beta Kappa honorees lined up in their caps and gowns for the traditional fife-and-drum procession to Sanders Theatre.

    “It’s the beginning of a celebration,” said the Holland, Mich., senior, who said he landed among the University’s highest achievers without ever drinking coffee. “There are a few of us.”

    At Harvard, 24 juniors are elected to Phi Beta Kappa every spring, and 48 seniors each fall. Membership cannot exceed 10 percent of the graduating class.

    The Literary Exercises have been a Harvard tradition since the 18th century, and take place each year on Tuesday of Commencement Week. Harvard’s Phi Beta Kappa chapter, called Alpha Iota of Massachusetts since 1995, is the oldest continuously running chapter in the United States.

    Today’s Literary Exercises, the 220th, included three musical interludes by the Harvard-Radcliffe Collegium Musicum. The last (another tradition) is Harvard’s “College Hymn,” which exhorts new graduates “for Right ever bravely to live.”

    To help the graduates find rightness, two addresses are at the heart of the exercises ceremony. One is by a poet, who reads a work written for the occasion. The other is by an “orator,” a guest invited to offer timely discourse.

    This year’s Phi Beta Kappa poet was D.A. Powell, a Georgia-born writer who teaches English at the University of San Francisco. He was once the Briggs-Copeland Lecturer in Poetry at Harvard.

    Powell, a prize-winning experimental poet, read his new poem “Panic in the Year Zero,” whose title was inspired by a 1962 movie about nuclear apocalypse. He is a lover of puns and edgy themes, including AIDS. His first three collections of poetry — “Tea,” “Lunch,” and “Cocktails” — are considered a trilogy on the disease.

    “In the time I have been alive,” said Powell, “we have lived under the threat of some sort of extinction. And I think that the mission of this poem is to say: enough.” As he writes:

    Enough with the apocalypse, already.

    Think of all the history you’ve read. It started somewhere.

    It started at absolute zero, is what you thought.

    Just because you couldn’t know what came before.

    But imagine: something did.

    Doing the honors as orator was Natalie Zemon Davis, A.M. ’50, LL.D. ’96, a pioneering cultural historian of the early modern period who teaches at the University of Toronto and is professor emerita at Princeton University. Her discourse, a glimpse at past orations and what they promise for the future, was titled “The Possibilities of Friendship.”

    Davis is a figure of some renown in the history of women and gender, and in 1971 at the University of Toronto co-founded one of the first courses on the subject in North America.

    Her oration marked how the concept of friendship — a central Phi Beta Kappa value — has waxed and waned over the years, as traditions of “sentimental union” through literature vied with stricter measures of academic excellence. But friendship is a mark of hope and excellence in the modern world, said Davis, who looked at the cooperation among Palestinian and Israeli doctors, whose nations are riven by war.

    Friendship can “blaze anew,” she said, “illuminating a landscape that may seem desolate but can still carry within in it bridges of truth, truth-telling, and understanding.”

    The Literary Exercises are also traditionally when the winners of the annual Alpha Iota Prize for Excellence in Teaching are announced. Prizes this year went to Lawrence Buell, Powell M. Cabot Professor of American Literature; Benjamin M. Friedman, William Joseph Maier Professor of Political Economy; and Richard J. Tarrant, Pope Professor of the Latin Language and Literature.

    Caps and gowns

    Caps and gowns

    Senior Phi Beta Kappa honorees congregate outside Harvard Hall before processing to Sanders Theatre.

    Excitement builds

    Excitement builds

    Johanna Rodda ’10 (from left), Liza Flum ’10, Caroline Bleeke ’10, and Diana Wise ’10 chat excitedly in the soaring heat before heading to PBK’s Literary Exercises, a Harvard tradition since the 18th century.

    Keeping the beat

    Keeping the beat

    Rap-rap-rapping her drum, Rachel Hawkins ’12 leads the procession of PBK honorees — and lets everyone know it.

    A green scene

    A green scene

    Amid the greenery of the Yard, PBK honorees mingle with attendees in a relatively small Commencement fete — on Commencement morning, the Yard fills with more than 30,000 visitors.

    There they go

    There they go

    PBK honorees make their way to Sanders Theatre, where they’ll be delighted by the poetry of D.A. Powell and an oration by Natalie Zemon Davis, A.M. ’50, LL.D. ’96, a pioneering cultural historian.

    No frowns here

    No frowns here

    Phi Beta Kappa inductee Trevor Bakker ’10 is just one of the 72 seniors being honored for academic excellence. And, surprisingly, he did it all without coffee’s jolt. “There are a few of us,” he said.

    The stage is set

    The stage is set

    Inside grand Sanders Theatre, the stage is illuminated with scholars who are winners of the annual Alpha Iota Prize for Excellence in Teaching.

    Steady now

    Steady now

    Director of choral activities Jameson Marvin conducts the Harvard-Radcliffe Collegium Musicum for three songs, including “College Hymn,” which exhorts new graduates “for Right ever bravely to live.”

    'The Possibilities of Friendship'

    ‘The Possibilities of Friendship’

    Natalie Zemon Davis, A.M. ’50, LL.D. ’96, takes the podium for her speech, “The Possibilities of Friendship,” which offered a glimpse at past orations and what they promise for the future.

    Three in a row

    Three in a row

    Harvard College Dean Evelynn Hammonds (center) is flanked by President Drew Faust and Everett Mendelsohn, continuing education/special program instructor and research professor of the history of science.

    'Panic in the Year Zero'

    ‘Panic in the Year Zero’

    Before reading his poem “Panic in the Year Zero,” poet D.A. Powell said, “In the time I have been alive, we have lived under the threat of some sort of extinction. And I think that the mission of this poem is to say: enough.”

    Over here!

    Over here!

    Sarah Yun ’10 (front) and Melissa Tran ’10 look for friends and relatives inside the theater.

    Photo slideshow: Phi Beta Kappa Literary Exercises 2010

    Kris Snibbe/Harvard Staff Photographer

  • Fiat taking Chrysler production back to China within four years

    Filed under: , ,

    As recently as two years ago Chrysler and Chery were more than cozy and working on Chinese-market products that would eventually make their way this way. Nothing ultimately came of it, but Chrysler hasn’t given up on the Chinese dream. Or more accurately, Fiat hasn’t given up on the Chinese dream on behalf of Chrysler.

    Fiat, which has had its own setbacks in trying to find the right joint venture required to do business in China, is now working with Guangzhou Auto. It isn’t clear how or even if Chrysler would immediately try again, since The Pentastar’s “models were as popular as Chen Shui Bian towards the end of their tenure.”

    Another route would be for the Chrysler Group to let Jeep lead the charge, since the Jeep brand and small SUVs are a more welcome option for Chinese buyers. It is inevitable that Chrysler will keep trying to crack the world’s largest auto market, and if we were presumptuous enough to suggest a way to do it, we’d only need two words: Dodge Hornet.

    [Source: China Car Times]

    Fiat taking Chrysler production back to China within four years originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 25 May 2010 17:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Dell Streak Heading To The UK June 2010

    Found under: Dell, Streak, Mini 5, Android, Google, Tablet, O2, June, Summer,

    The sexy Dell Streak is coming to the UK next month this is a device running Android if you have forgotten and Dell is calling it a tablet. What we have here is a feature rich device that is packing a 1GHz snapdragon processor so you know it is a fast one sadly they chose to implement Android 1.6 instead of 2.1.The display is a neat 5 WVGA capacitive touchscreen it just looks so gorgeous and should work really well when watching videos and viewing pictures. There is also 2GB interna

    Read More

    Read more in mobile format

  • Greenhouse owners rebuild after winter storm

    From Your4state.com

    MIDDLETOWN, MD – The heavy snow that slammed the Four State region in February seems like so long ago, but many are still dealing with the aftermath. One Middletown man, whose greenhouse collapsed under the weight of the snow, is rebuilding and he’s taking the “green” in greenhouse to a whole new level.

    >>Watch the video

  • Mindy McCready 911 Call

    A rep for country singer Mindy McCready has fired back at reports that the country star suffered a drug overdose in her Fort Myers, Florida home this week, instead insisting the crooner’s mother “overreacted” when she called 911 after finding the troubled McCready passed out early Tuesday after taking prescription painkillers for an injury to her toe.

    The star has a history of alcohol and drug abuse, and even attempted suicide in the summer of 2008.


  • Seat belt usage hits record high 84%, 45 million Americans still not buckling up

    Click it or Ticket

    Ray LaHood, U.S. Secretary of Transportation, said yesterday that while seat belt use has increased to a record high 84 percent nationwide, 45 million Americans are still not buckling up. LaHood said that the Department of Transportation is now kicking off its Click It or Ticket program, a national enforcement mobilization that encourages all motorists to wear their seat belts. Those caught not wearing their seat belt will be ticketed.

    “We’ve made great strides to get Americans to buckle up, but we must not rest on our laurels,” said LaHood. “Not wearing your seat belt is a serious, life-threatening practice. If you are one of the 45 million Americans who won’t buckle up, our Click It or Ticket enforcement mobilization will be looking for you.”

    “On any given day about 38 people who are not buckled-up are killed in motor vehicle crashes, according to statistics from the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA),” DOT said in a statement. “In 2008 alone, nearly 14,000 unbuckled passenger vehicle occupants lost their lives on U.S. roadways. Nearly half of them could have been saved if they had been belted. Click here to view map.”

    The “Click It or Ticket” campaign is set to run from May 24 through June 6, 2010.

    – By: Omar Rana