Category: News

  • AT&T to provide free unlock codes for everyone! …except iPhone users

    iPhone literally locked to AT&TIt seems that all it takes is a class-action lawsuit to get some companies to start treating their customers right.

    As a settlement of said lawsuit, today it was announced that AT&T will provide customers with a free unlock code for their device after only 90 days of service. Now, now, don’t get too excited yet: it’s not quite as clear-cut as it may seem.

    The “90 days” doesn’t apply to “handsets for which AT&T has an exclusive sales arrangement with a manufacturer of less than 10 months”. If you have one of those handsets, I’m afraid you’ll have to wait a much-less-reasonable 10 months before you can get your mitts on an unlock code.

    “But what about those devices that have an exclusivity period of more than 10 months, like my iPhone?” I hear you ask. First of all: you’re a sharp little button, aren’t you? Second of all: stiff. AT&T aren’t obliged to offer you an unlock code at all. Ever.

    Now that I’ve got the bad news out of the way, here are the actual terms stating who is eligible, as stipulated by AT&T:

    (1) Customers with postpaid accounts who have completed a minimum of 90 days of active service and are in good standing and current in their payments.

    (2) Customers with prepaid accounts who have provided a detailed receipt or other proof of purchase of the handset.

    (3) Customers who own handsets for which AT&T has an exclusive sales arrangement with a manufacturer of less than 10 months will have to wait until the 10-month period expires before they can receive an unlocking code.

    If you want to opt out of the settlement or object to it, you have until June 4, 2010 to post mark your filing. The final approval hearing will be held July 2, 2010. For more information, visit www.attlockinglawsuits.com.

    Customers will also be limited to 5 unlock codes a year, so don’t think this is your ticket to an ebay-funded retirement just yet.

    [via Boy Genius Report]


  • Sex and the City 2 Premiere

    The “Sex and the City 2″ Premiere was held tonight at the New York City’s Radio City Music Hall. The four main actresses were all stunning during the night.

    Dressed in their designer gowns, Kim Catrall, Cynthia Nixon, Kristen Davis, and Sarah Jessica Parker walked the light blue carpet with hundreds of adoring fans taking photos. They all wowed the fans by with their jaw-dropping gowns and elegant look.

    Kim Cattrall very gorgeous in her gold embellished Naeem Khan floor-length gown. The dress hugged her curves and showed off her fabulous figure perfectly, even at 50 years old.

    Cynthia Nixon wore a form-fitting Carolina Herrera black gown with some gorgeous gold beading along the top of the bodice. She paired it with a jeweled clutch and stunning earrings.

    Kristin Davis was very pretty in pink in her Jean Desses for Decades chiffon gown. The strapless and straight to the floor style of the dress is perfect for her personality

    Sarah Jessica Parker caught everyone’s attention in a one-shouldered neon yellow Valentino gown, which she borrowed from the Valentino Collection. Her long, blonde, wavy hair and muted makeup perfectly complimented the bright gown.

    Related posts:

    1. Sex and the City 2 – the second trailer
    2. Annette Edwards: Clone of Jessica Rabbit?
    3. First Arab-American To Claim Miss USA Title – Rima Fakih Miss USA 2010

  • Aliens Leave a Pop Quiz In a Rapeseed Field [Aliens]

    Apparently bored with abducting yokels and being shot at by Will Smith, some erudite extraterrestrial has deposited a crop circle in England that puts our left brains to the test. What you’re looking at, Earthlings, is a complex mathematical theorem. More »










    ParanormalCrop circleResearchersCirclemakersEngland

  • Despite efforts globally, data centers still consuming an increasing amount of power

    green_datacenter.jpg
    No matter how hard they try, data centers just can help being power hungry! And that’s what everyone realized from the Uptime Symposium 2010 recently held in New York. Virtualization and power management techniques have been thought of and used before. Even manure has been used to make up for HP’s hungry data centers, but all this never seems to satisfy their hunger, for power.

    In early 2006, the U.S. Department of Energy predicted that data center energy consumption would double by 2011 to more than 120 billion kilowatt-hours (kWh), which isn’t really surprising, taken that the electricity usage from 2005 to 2008 by data centers has been increasing at an astounding 11% annually. And after all the efforts put into making them a bit more eco-friendly, the power stations haven’t seized on gobbling up power, instead increasing the consumption. New technology and a whole lot more cooperation by users around the globe might just help decrease power consumption by data centers before they meet their doom.

    [Computerworld]

  • HP’s solar powered Dick Tracy wrist-watch with a flexible plastic screen for the U.S. military

    hp_Dick_Tracy_watch.jpg
    Times are changing, swiftly, and the way we keep time is too. The U.S. military will soon have greener devices on their wrist, with Hewlett-Packards current development. These wrist-watches by HP will boast flexible display screens that will show up a load of information besides the time, including maps and strategic information to aide soldiers in combat. The watch, known as the Dick Tracy will use a plastic screen. Soaking in the sun will help power up the watch and have it ticking. The prototype of the watch will be up and functioning in a year by HP.

    For starters, the U.S. military will use the Dick Tracy (named after the comic-strip detective with his awesome wristwatch) on a small group of soldiers first, who are bound to enjoy the technology, before spreading out to the entire force. The flexible plastic display, unlike the usual glass ones is also unbreakable, and can withstand the shocks of a battle field. Dick Tracy is yet another green addition for the U.S. military, this time in the form of wrist-watches.

    [CNN]

  • Australian Minister Accuses Google of Being ‘Creepy’

    Australia has long been criticized for proposed plans to implement wide Internet censorship, as well as other moves that don’t really have their place in a supposedly democratic country. Stephen Conroy, the country’s communications minister and the man largely responsible for the Internet-filtering proposals, is fighting back agains… (read more)

  • New evidence on the job impacts of climate policy: Why now is the right time to cap carbon

    This was originally posted on the Huffington Post.

    Opponents of climate legislation often claim that now is the wrong time to put a price on carbon, with the economy just emerging from a recession. But a must-read study released by the well-respected, nonpartisan Peterson Institute for International Economics shows that the reverse is actually true: passing climate legislation would provide the economy with a much-needed shot in the arm.

    Trevor Houser and his co-authors use a widely respected economic model to analyze the impact on the U.S. economy of the American Power Act, the energy and climate legislation introduced last week by Senators Kerry and Lieberman. The study estimates that the legislation would more than double investment in the electric power sector, adding 203,000 jobs per year to the economy during the next decade relative to a “business as usual” scenario without policy. The reason is that when labor and capital are underemployed, as they are now, a policy that spurs new investment in the private sector will create jobs rather than simply taking them from other sectors. This lends quantitative support to the argument I’ve been making for over a year, which is that the fragile state of the U.S. economy strengthens the case for a cap on carbon rather than weakening it.

    To understand why this is such an important study, it helps to step back and think about what we know about the link between climate legislation and employment. The usual debates about the job impacts of climate legislation tend to follow parallel tracks that never intersect, with opponents focusing on jobs that might be lost, and proponents focusing on jobs that would be gained — but little analysis of what the net impact would be. So what would that net impact be?

    There are a couple of ways to think about this issue, depending on what time frame you are looking at. In the long run, the American economy is likely to gain from taking the lead in the clean energy revolution, just as our economy has always benefited from technological leadership. The world is heading onto a low-carbon path, and huge markets await for the firms that are able to develop and produce new technologies that generate renewable energy and promote energy efficiency. That provides a strong economic argument for a market-based cap on carbon, while will give American firms a powerful incentive to figure out new and better ways of cutting emissions.

    What about the short run? In general, the U.S. economy — like any market economy — tends to hover at some natural level of “full employment” that is determined by fundamentals like productivity, technological change, and the size of the labor force. This suggests that the main effect of a price on carbon will not be to change the overall level of employment, but to shift labor (and other resources like capital) away from carbon-intensive sectors and into cleaner sectors. Some sectors win, some sectors lose, but the overall level of employment stays the same.

    The key problem with this logic is that we are clearly not in a period of “full employment.” Even though the economy seems to be slowly emerging from the recession, unemployment is still very high. And there is capital sitting on the sidelines as well, held back not only by the recent crisis but also by uncertainty over the strength of the recovery and over the regulatory environment.

    When the economy is not in full employment, the picture changes fundamentally. Instead of reallocating resources from one sector to another, a price on carbon could have a positive impact by spurring demand for investment — leading to net job creation, even in the short run.

    This is precisely what the Peterson Institute’s study forecasts would happen under the American Power Act introduced last week by Senators Kerry and Lieberman. A cap on carbon would create powerful demand for new investment in clean energy, especially in the electricity sector. The Peterson Institute study projects that annual investment in the sector would more than double as a result of the legislation, increasing by nearly $23 billion a year. Precisely because our economy is operating below full employment, the result would be a net job increase of 203,000 jobs per year over the next decade, relative to the no-policy “business as usual” scenario — even taking into account the effect of higher prices on fossil fuels.

    This isn’t just theoretical. In a column in the New York Times last month, David Brooks reported that if climate legislation passed, the major electric power company FPL Group would likely invest roughly $3 billion more per year in wind and solar power. Similarly, NRG Energy would triple its new clean generation capacity. That’s the kind of investment that can produce real jobs in the short run.

    I'll have more to say about other conclusions of the Peterson Institute study in coming blog posts. In the meantime, Dave Roberts at Grist has a great take on it along with a summary of the key findings.

  • Activision trademarks Guitar Hero: Warriors of Rock

    Siliconera went digging again down at the USPTO, and they found a new trademark filed by Activision for what sounds like a new Guitar Hero game.

  • Tareq & Michaele Salahi Apologize To The Obamas For “Misunderstandings”

    Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

    They’re back! Tareq and Michaele Salahi, the controversial couple who continue to deny that they crashed The Obamas’ White House State Dinner last November, dropped by The TODAY Show Tuesday — where they apologized to The First Family for any and all “misunderstandings” following the debacle.

    Puh-leeze!

    Of course, the Washington socialites were sure to play up their future business ventures; which reportedly includes a line of action figures, a 500-page book, and a stint on the upcoming Bravo docu-soap The Real Housewives of Washington, DC.


  • 13.5 Million Viewers Of ‘Lost Finale’ Voice A ‘Booo’ On Its Ending

    Catching up with the ‘Lost Finale’ and its ending, users were really sad to see how it all ended. 6 years has been a long time, a show which has been able to maintain or I may refer to growing user database day by day. After the show ended, everyone was either heard on phone calls to discussing it at the very next day at the office. People were sharing views while most of them being sad while some being angry of the ending. Some even shared a few hot words over the Director as viewers awaited the last episode as they would be glued to their television sets as some final match.

    Sunday night’s ‘Lost’ episode audience count was jumpy. 13 Million viewers, who watched the last episode which is not the same size of audience which was earlier recorded at 23 million when the first two episodes were aired at the second season, were found to be disappointed.

    Some 10 million opted out and instead watched the reality show, ‘Celebrity Apprentice’ and later were happy to hear from others that they didn’t watch the drama end. The reality show also witnessed the biggest crowd or viewer count since March 2008. Maybe one reason what I might think of the reality show gaining viewers as the drama hosted some 45 minutes of commercials. More than 70% People trend to switch between channels when ads are aired.

    For our regular readers, we even bring you the Lost Ending: Lost Finale Explained by one of our co-writers.

    Related posts:

    1. Critics, Fans Lost As ‘Lost’ Finale Gets Aired – Confused Ending
    2. Lost Ending: Lost Finale Explained!
    3. Law & Order Series Finale

  • Don’t Hold Your Next Academic Conference in Egypt or Pakistan

    Mark Mazzetti has a blockbuster piece in today’s New York Times about a secret order issued by Gen. David Petraeus last fall, with the aid of Adm. Eric Olson, that authorizes Special Operations Forces in the Middle East and South Asia to “fill intelligence gaps about terror organizations and other threats in the Middle East and beyond.” In practice — and a Petraeus spokesman declined comment here — that reportedly means engaging in covert action to fill those gaps. That means taking measures that the government would deny any knowledge of occurring (something the CIA is legally authorized to perform) rather than clandestine operations, in which the government merely denies involvement. Special operators can do clandestine stuff, but (typically) not covert stuff.

    What might this mean in practice? Mazzetti:

    General Petraeus’s September order is focused on intelligence gathering — by American troops, foreign businesspeople, academics or others — to identify militants and provide “persistent situational awareness,” while forging ties to local indigenous groups.

    Petraeus’ spokesman declined comment. But if that’s faithfully reported, it sounds a lot like uniformed personnel could assume civilian cover for intelligence purposes. And that carries the non-trivial risk of unaffiliated businesspeople or academics or journalists or tourists in the Middle East or South Asia being presumed to be spies — and, hence, targets — by local security forces or extremists. Foreign allied governments in the region might also not like the U.S. sponsoring “local indigenous groups” that might destabilize their countries or threaten their rule.

  • Simmons Quits Senate Race

    By DANIELA ALTIMARI
    Courant Staff Writer

    Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for Thumbnail image for rob0simmons_0525.jpgRepublican Rob Simmons, the one-time frontrunner for U.S. Senate, announced this morning that he is ending his campaign after losing his party’s nomination to multimillionaire Linda McMahon.

    “This is not an easy decision,” Simmons said this morning at a press conference. “This is not a happy decision. But I believe it’s the right decision.”


  • Pictures: Rob Simmons
  • Pictures: Connecticut Republican Convention
  • Simmons is releasing his campaign staff and curtailing fundraising efforts, but his name will remain on the primary ballot. He did not say whether he would endorse McMahon or vote for her in November.

    Simmons said he came to his decision “reluctantly and prayerfully.” Simmons, who had a long career in the military and is a military history buff, spent part of the weekend reading accounts of Civil War battles that showed in vivid detail the high toll that pursuing a lost cause can extract.

    The former congressman and Vietnam War veteran lost the Republican convention’s endorsement on Friday to the former World Wrestling CEO.

    He observed that he had more than enough support at the nominating convention to force a primary: He wound up with 46 percent of the convention vote.

    “Speaking for myself and my family, however, we understand the mathematical reality of competing against an opponent with unlimited financial resources who has already invested … $16.5 million in this campaign.”

    “There are few Americans who have served their country with more courage, integrity and purpose than Rob Simmons,” said state Republican Party Chairman Chris Healy in a prepared statement. “He has risked his life to preserve our freedom.”

    “Rob’s decision today was difficult but speaks to all of what he has dedicated his life to — service,” Healy said.

    Simmons entered the Senate race in the winter of 2009, when a politically ailing Sen. Christopher Dodd was the presumptive Democratic nominee. Throughout the spring and summer and into the fall, Simmons sat atop public opinion polls.

    Then McMahon entered the race in September and began spending millions on television ads and direct mail.

    Throughout the increasingly bitter campaign between Simmons and McMahon, Simmons had said he would abide by the convention’s choice and not force a primary. However on Friday he announced a change of heart and said he would primary McMahon for the party’s nomination after all.

    Late Monday, the Simmons campaign sent out a press release alerting reporters to the press conference this morning at the Radisson Hotel in New London.

    “If that’s the decision he’s made, I know it was a difficult decision,” said state Sen. John Kissel of Enfield, a longtime Simmons supporter. “I’m proud of Rob if he’s come to that conclusion. …It would be right for the party and right for Rob.”

    McMahon, a political outsider who has never held elective office, has enormous resources. She said she would spend up to $50 million of her vast fortune on the campaign.

    Peter Schiff, another Republican candidate for Senate, said Tuesday that he now looked forward to a two-person race for the Republican nomination. He did not meet the 15 percent threshold to automatically qualify for a primary at last weekend’s convention, but he intends to gather signatures to petition his way onto the Aug. 10 ballot.

    “I am a true political outisder and real grassroots candidate,” Schiff said in a written statement. “There is a reason why I am the choice of Tea Party leaders, political newcomers and independents, and why Linda McMahon, the darling of the establishment, has become the ultimate insider.”

    The Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, meanwhile, ignored Schiff’s campaign in promoting Democrat Richard Blumenthal‘s candidacy and targeting McMahon’s.

    “We now likely have a race in Connecticut between a crusading attorney general with a long record of delivering for Connecticut families and a wrestling mogul who made her millions peddling violence to kids, hiding widespread steroid abuse, and sending her employees into dangerous situations in exchange for their glory and her profit,” the committee said in a release.

    “But Rob Simmons is only the latest Republican moderate to fall in their bloodletting civil war. Republicans have nominated extremists in Florida and Kentucky and appear well on their way to doing so in Colorado, Wisconsin and Nevada. The battle between the Republican establishment and the fringe of their party does not seem to be a close one. The moderates keep losing.”

    Full Text of Rob Simmons’ Campaign Announcement

    (Above photo by ANDREW POMETTI / FOX CT)

  • Skobbler first totally free turn-by-turn navigation app for iPhone

    Filed under: ,

    Skobbler has introduced a completely free, turn-by-turn navigation app for the iPhone, with one new and unusual detail: you help play the role of cartographer. Sort of like Linux for thoroughfares, you download the Skobbler app and then use CloudMade, a community-sourced mapping to add “hyperlocal” detail to the map, which Skrobbler then updates on its servers. The more information gets added by community mappers, the more detailed and up-to-date the instructions are available to the nav-app’s users, with updates pushed to the program in real-time. We’re unsure of how granular the details are in the current CloudMade maps, but the app is free and this could be your chance to be a pioneer.

    [Source: Mac Daily News]

    Skobbler first totally free turn-by-turn navigation app for iPhone originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 25 May 2010 08:29:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Stergios Botzakis

    Stergios Botzakis
    Assistant Professor
    Theory and Practice in Teacher Education

    Expertise:
    Stergios Botzakis can discuss adolescent literacy, content area literacy, media literacy and graphic novels. His research includes secondary education and popular culture.

    Expertise Categories: Adolescent Literacy | Content Area Literacy | Media Literacy | Graphic Novels

    Contact Information

    Email: [email protected]
    Phone: 865-974-6159
    Web: http://web.utk.edu/~tpte/faculty/sbotzakis.html

  • BP “Beyond Patience” (But Here to Stay)

    With pressure mounting on Washington to hold BP accountable for the growing oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, politicians and Obama administration officials are ramping up the tough talk and, in the case of one senator, a little name calling.

    “In my mind, BP no longer stands for British Petroleum. It stands for Beyond Patience,” said Senator Dick Durbin.

    The Illinois Democrat was part of a bi-partisan Senate delegation that toured the Louisiana coast with Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano and Interior Secretary Ken Salazar.

    “We will keep our boot on their neck until the job gets done,” Salazar said.

    The metaphor seems to suggest the interior secretary is resigned to an uneasy, but permanent, partnership with BP in the oil spill cleanup — contrasting with his comment over the weekend:

    “If we find that they’re not doing what they’re supposed to be doing, we’ll push them out of the way appropriately.”

    At a Monday White House briefing, Coast Guard Commandant Thad Allen said, “To push BP out of the way would raise a question: To replace them with what?”

    Allen acknowledged the federal government lacks BP’s expertise and deep sea equipment to handle an oil spill 5,000 feet below the surface.

    But a report today from the Associated Press is raising questions about BP’s track record in handling massive spills. According to the AP, BP led the Alaska oil industry consortium responsible for handling the failed initial containment efforts during the 1989 Exxon Valdez oil spill in Alaska.

    Visiting oil-contaminated Fourchon Beach, BP’s chief executive officer acknowledged he had underestimated the environmental impact of the Deepwater Horizon spill.

    “I’m as devastated as you are by what I’ve seen here today,” Tony Hayward told reporters. “We are going to do everything in our power to prevent any more oil from coming ashore and we will clean every last drop up.”

  • Paper super-capacitors bring forth a future with electronics made of paper

    paper-super-capacitor.jpg
    Ever dreamt of a paper world with all your electronics made out of paper? You don’t need to be an origami fan to dream about things like that anymore. Paper electronics might just pop up in the future, thanks to the researches at Stanford University, who’ve come up with a technology to make this dream into a reality. Paper super capacitors have been stumbled upon by printing carbon nanotubes onto paper. These can be printed onto everything and involves the coating of both sides of a piece of paper with polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF).

    The treated paper bonds to the super capacitor, just like ink and paper bonding and works efficiently, with minimal capacitance loss after 2500 charge-discharge cycles. If all goes well, the future might have electronic devices made of paper, that we can dispose of easily when out of use and recycle, keeping away the trouble of recycling e-waste that we face today.

    [Inhabitat]

  • Competitiveness Council of the EU confirms hydrogen vehicles as ultra-low-carbon mobility option

    The EU Competitiveness Council on May 25, 2010 indicated in its conclusions on the EU Clean and Energy Efficient Vehicles Strategy that “hydrogen vehicles remain a valid ultra-low-carbon mobility option in the mediumterm perspective, as affordability of the car and of the fuel is achieved; also NOTES that hydrogen vehicles and electric vehicles are mutually complementary”. It also referred to hydrogen vehicles, together with electric batterty vehicles as a highly promising ultra-low-carbonpower-train technologies, as they have the potential, according to the Council,  to:
    a. address the challenges of climate change and fossil fuel dependency;
    b. cut local air pollution and noise fro
    m transport and  contribute to improving the air quality, in particular in cities and urban zones;
    c. enable synergies with smart grids and therefore promote renewable sources of energy and offer a possibility of energy storage;
    d. offer an opportunity to revitalise the industrial fabric in Europe by fostering innovation,growth and jobs;
    e. offer, in particular if combined with electricity generated from safe and sustainable sources of energy, including renewables, a superior well-to-wheel energy efficiency and can therefore contribute significantly to the objective of transport decarbonisation.
    The Council also stressed the need to focus on research excellence in order to ensure that alternative power-trains receive targeted research financing, including innovative energy storage and conversion technologies, such as batteries, fuel cells and the necessary respective infrastructure.
    Last but not least the Council ”calls on
     the Commission to consult Member States and stakeholders and to rapidly come up with guidelines on potential financial incentives for consumers to buy greenvehicles in order to stimulate the market uptake of clean and energy-efficient vehicles, without giving preference to any particular technology as well as exploring the potential ofpublic procurement and of grouped purchases for large vehicle fleets within the existing legal framework for public procurement. Non-financial incentives, at national or regional level, could also be explored by the relevant actors.”

    More info on the Council conclusions can be found here.

  • DISASTER IN EAST TENNESSEE

    In December 2008, one of the largest environmental disasters in U.S. history unfolded at the TVA’s Kingston coal plant when a massive coal ash holding pond burst. A year and a half later, communities are still feeling the impact — and there are fears that without federal action a similar disaster could strike elsewhere.

    A special Facing South investigation by Sue Sturgis

    ashbergs_caption.jpgShortly before 1 a.m. on Dec. 22, 2008, a dike holding back an 84-acre pond of wet coal ash at the Tennessee Valley Authority’s Kingston plant near Harriman, Tenn. ruptured and collapsed following weeks of heavy rains. A billion gallons of muddy, gray coal ash loaded with arsenic, lead and other contaminants poured across the nearby Emory River to the neighborhood along Swan Pond Road.


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    The toxic tidal wave hit suddenly, taking sleeping residents by surprise. It damaged a total of 42 homes, pushing one house completely off its foundation and rendering three others uninhabitable. It tore down trees, pushed boats off docks, washed out a road and a railway, ruptured a major gas line, broke a water main, and ripped down power lines. No people died in the disaster, though a dog that had been tied up in the yard of one house was buried by the coal ash and couldn’t be rescued in time.

    Some residents didn’t realize what had happened until after dawn, when they awoke to a landscape that one survivor described as looking like “a movie scene on the ugliest planet imaginable.” The sludge covered almost half a square mile of once-beautiful riverfront land, reaching six feet deep in places. A popular local fishing cove was filled with coal ash, the massive chunks sticking up 20 feet in the air like dirty icebergs.

    Since the disaster, TVA has been scraping up the spilled ash from the land and dredging it out of the waterways, with the main channel of the Emory set to reopen this week. But the company estimates that 500,000 cubic yards of spilled ash will remain in the river because workers simply can’t get it all out. And while the EPA previously advised people against swimming, tubing and other activities near the disaster site because of the risk of contact with toxic ash, the agency and state officials are now saying that the remaining coal ash presents minimal health risks — though they’re still recommending that people wash off after leaving the water.

    The effects of the Kingston disaster will be felt for a long time. How could something like this happen? And could a similar coal ash tragedy strike elsewhere?

    ‘Appropriate safety modifications were not made’

    collapsed_impoundment_caption.jpgThe catastrophic collapse at Kingston was the culmination of problems that for years had been plaguing the plant’s impoundments — those massive and usually unlined holding ponds where the waste is dumped after burning coal for power. But TVA had repeatedly failed to fix those problems, and an inadequate regulatory system failed to address them.

    A July 2009 report by TVA’s Inspector General found that red flags were raised as far back as 1985, when an internal memorandum written by a TVA engineer cited concerns about the stability of the Kingston coal ash storage facilities — concerns echoed in two 2004 reports by external engineering consultants hired by TVA.

    The Inspector General’s report also noted that a 1987 internal TVA memorandum stated that the impoundments had become “quite high with increasing risk and consequences of a breech” and recommended more rigorous inspection standards. That led to discussions about managing the ash ponds under the company’s dam safety program, but TVA ultimately decided not to do that. On top of that, local residents had reported leaks in the dam going back as far as 2001, and the utility itself acknowledged that there had been leaks there in 2003 and 2006.

    “TVA could have possibility prevented the Kingston Spill if it had taken recommended corrective actions,” according to the report. “For reasons that are still not entirely clear, appropriate safety modifications were not made.”

    TVA has also drawn criticism from affected residents and environmental advocates for not being straightforward about the scale and impact of the Kingston spill. At first, the utility dramatically underestimated the amount of ash released and incorrectly claimed that no dead fish were found downstream of the disaster.

    TVA described coal ash as consisting primarily of “inert material not harmful to the environment.” In reality, coal ash contains potentially harmful levels of toxic arsenic, lead and mercury. The utility also likened the radioactive threat from the coal ash to radioactivity in table salt, even though researchers with Duke University in North Carolina found significant levels of cancer-causing radioactive elements in the ash.

    TVA has even been accused of manipulating science methods to downplay water contamination caused by the spill, with evidence showing that it may have intentionally collected water samples from relatively clean spots in the Emory River. As Pennsylvania hydrogeologist Bob Gadinski told The Nation, it appears  that TVA “isn’t interested in properly mapping the contaminants in that river.”

    At the same time, the company created difficulties for independent researchers monitoring contamination from the spill. In December 2008 TVA police issued a warning ticket for criminal trespass to Upper Watauga Riverkeeper Donna Marie Lisenby for trying to access the spill site by kayak to take samples — though she was on a public waterway and there were no signs indicating the river was closed. Then in early 2010, TVA blocked Lisenby and other researchers from accessing an established sampling point along the Emory because they weren’t wearing hardhats and safety vests. When they asked permission to return to shore to get the equipment, TVA refused.

    “It’s been a story about hiding the truth from the people, and preventing the truth tellers from being able to tell the truth,” Lisenby said.

    And while TVA commissioned a study of the impoundment’s failure by the Los Angeles-based engineering firm AECOM, TVA’s Inspector General found that it designed the study in a way that minimized management’s liability and provided no lessons for the company to draw on.

    The IG’s 2009 audit report said TVA’s actions seemed more focused on avoiding lawsuits than learning lessons from the disaster. As the report concluded, “TVA has urged everyone just to ‘move forward’ without further examination of what responsibility TVA management may have had for the disaster that occurred on December 22, 2008. TVA management handled the root cause analysis in a manner that avoided transparency and accountability in favor of preserving a litigation strategy.”

    ‘Some horrible nightmares’

    pam_topmiller_caption.jpgAny hopes TVA had for avoiding litigation over the disaster were dashed in March 2010, when a federal judge ruled that plaintiffs in seven suits would be allowed to argue that the company was negligent in the use and maintenance of the Kingston coal ash pond. In all, more than 500 plaintiffs have filed more than 50 lawsuits against the company in connection with the spill.

    “This is a tremendous victory in the effort to hold TVA accountable for the severe damage it has caused to residents and the environment,” said Elizabeth Alexander, one of the attorneys representing plaintiffs suing the company. “The Court held that TVA must answer for its alleged negligence that directly led to one of the largest environmental catastrophes in our country’s history.”

    The court’s decision wasn’t a complete win for the plaintiffs, as the judge ruled that they couldn’t ask for punitive damages or a jury trial. But the ruling rejected claims by TVA — a federally owned but independently financed corporation serving almost 9 million customers in seven Southern states — that it’s immune from legal action as a government agency. The court held that once a policy decision has been made, the government is accountable for its negligence in implementing it.

    While the lawsuits wind through the courts, residents near the Tennessee plant continue to grapple with the lingering health risks unleashed by the disaster. TVA has bought out more than 140 property owners, but other affected residents say the utility isn’t offering them fair compensation for their property, or their property isn’t considered close enough to qualify.

    The spill dumped 2.66 million pounds of 10 toxic pollutants into the Emory and nearby Clinch rivers — more than all the surface-water discharges from all U.S. power plants in 2007, according to a report from the Environmental Integrity Project. Independent tests sponsored by EIP and United Mountain Defense and conducted more than two months after the disaster found levels of some toxic metals including arsenic, cadmium and lead exceeding Clean Water Act standards designed to protect aquatic life as well as humans who come in contact with the water.

    The ash also accumulated on the land, where it can dry out and become an air pollutant — a concern since EPA found dangerously elevated levels of arsenic in coal ash samples taken from a road at the disaster site.

    Residents blame the ash spill for a range of ailments they began experiencing after the disaster. Gary Topmiller and his wife, Pam, live across the river from the failed impoundment. In the months following the spill, Pam Topmiller’s eyes regularly swelled shut until the couple installed air filters in their home.

    Connie Kelley, a resident of the area directly impacted by the spill, reported other problems: “Since the spill I have been having a lot of headaches, eyes burning and itching, coughing, nose bleeds and some horrible nightmares. I never had a nightmare in my life until this.”

    Dumping on the disadvantaged

    ruby_holmes_caption.jpgThe toxic nightmares that haunt residents near TVA’s Kingston plant are now disrupting the peace of another community in Perry County, Ala. That’s where the company — with EPA’s approval — chose to dispose of the 3 million cubic yards of coal ash scraped up from the spill site.

    For the past year, Tennessee’s toxic sludge has been shipped 320 miles south to the Arrowhead Landfill near Uniontown, Ala., a facility owned by Perry County Associates and managed by Phill-Con Services and Phillips & Jordan. TVA said it chose the site because it was accessible by train, underbid other candidates and had the capacity to handle all the ash. Under Alabama law, coal ash isn’t regulated and doesn’t have to be placed in a lined landfill like Arrowhead; however, ash from the Kingston spill is considered remediation waste and is regulated more strictly.

    For Perry County, Ala., the coal ash shipments are being touted as a much-needed financial boost: The fee paid by the landfill operators is expected to increase the county’s annual budget from $4.5 million to $7.5 million.

    “The economic development opportunity, along with safe environmental management practice, has put renewed hope back into a once-proud county,” Perry County Commissioner Albert Turner Jr. testified to a U.S. House committee in December 2009.

    But not everyone has been so enthusiastic. Community leaders and environmental advocates pointed out that Perry County is almost 70 percent black, with more than 31 percent of its families in poverty — a classic case of environmental injustice.

    The disparity is even starker when one looks at the community closest to the dump: Uniontown, Ala. is 88 percent African-American with almost half of its residents living in poverty, according to 2000 Census data. Residents called on EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson to protect them from the toxic waste.

    “There’s a sense among the population that we’ve been thrown under the bus,” Robert Bamberg, a white catfish farmer and organizer of Concerned Citizens of Perry County, told the New York Times last year.

    The decision to allow TVA to dump its coal ash in Perry County was among a number made by EPA Region 4 that were highlighted in a September 2009 report by Professor Robert D. Bullard, director of the Environmental Justice Resource Center at Georgia’s Clark Atlanta University. Bullard called on the EPA national office to investigate Region 4’s historic treatment of black communities in the Deep South.

    “Nearly four decades of Region 4 harmful and discriminatory decisions have turned too many black communities into the dumping grounds, lowering nearby residents’ property values, stealing their wealth, and exposing them to unnecessary environmental health risks,” Bullard wrote.

    He noted that EPA Region 4 justified the Perry County decision in its “Frequently Asked Questions” page by declaring the landfill to be in “an isolated area, surrounded by large tracts of property, farms and ranches.” But as Bullard pointed out, there’s an established black community on two sides of the landfill, with a population large enough to support three churches.

    And now there’s evidence that the health threats to nearby Perry County residents are becoming a reality: In February 2010, Hurricane Creekkeeper John Wathen of Alabama filed a complaint with the EPA documenting serious problems at the facility. They include runoff tainted with cancer-causing arsenic at levels more than 80 times the U.S. safe drinking water standard; an excessive amount of wet waste being dumped into the landfill, threatening the structural integrity of the protective liner; and toxic coal ash falling from overloaded, uncovered trucks and spilling along the haul road. To date, the EPA has declined to act on his complaint.

    “Why is Perry County being treated like this?” asked Wathen, who called for the ash shipments to be halted until the problems are fixed. “Are the people in Perry County any less valuable than the people of Kingston, Tenn.?”

    Meanwhile, Florida attorney David Ludder has announced plans to sue the landfill operators for violations of the Solid Waste Disposal Act and the Clean Air Act on behalf of 155 local residents. He had previously planned to sue the facility’s owners, but they filed for bankruptcy in January 2010 — a move that prevents any new lawsuits from being filed against them until the bankruptcy proceedings are settled.

    Ludder’s notice of intent to sue argues that the odors from the landfill are “injurious to human health and welfare, interfere with the enjoyment of life and property, are unpleasant to persons, tend to upset appetite, lessen food intake, interfere with sleep, produce irritation of the upper respiratory tract, and cause dizziness, headache, nausea and vomiting.”

    Last week, TVA announced that it would stop sending the spilled coal ash to the Alabama landfill this fall and begin storing the ash at an unlined facility near the disaster site in Tennessee. Storing the ash on site will be cheaper than shipping it out of state, giving the company a shot at keeping cleanup costs under $1.2 billion, TVA officials told the Associated Press.

    With millions of cubic yards of TVA’s coal ash destined to remain in their community for the foreseeable future, the residents of Perry County will be living with fallout from the Kingston spill for years to come. In the meantime, other communities across the country are facing problems of their own from coal ash — the result of a failing regulatory framework that only now, a year and a half after the Tennessee disaster, some leaders in Washington say they want to fix.

    * * *

    TOMORROW: Power Politics: How energy interests have kept coal ash from being regulated as a hazardous waste — and the looming battle in Washington to change the way coal ash is treated under law.

    * * *


    Sue Sturgis is an
    investigative reporter and editorial director of Facing South. This
    piece is the second installment in an in-depth, week-long series on the
    growing national problem of coal ash and the political battle over
    regulations. To read the first installment, titled “Coal’s Dirty Secret,” click here.

  • Piloto sobrevive a grave acidente na Republica Tcheca

    O piloto italiano Giorgio Bartocci, incrivelmente conseguiu escapar vivo de um grave acidente, no qual seu carro se chocou violentamente contra o muro e se incendiou completamente em questão de segundos.

    Bartocci estava pilotando uma Lamborghini Gallardo, durante uma etapa do Trofeo Lamborghini realizado no circuito Brno, na Republica Tcheca. Segundo informações, o piloto foi levado para um hospital das proximidades e seu estado de saúde é estável, apesar de ainda permanecer internado na UTI.

    Logo após a batida, Bartocci não conseguiu sair do carro, que já estava totalmente incendiado. Graças a rápida ação da equipe de apoio e de bombeiros, o piloto foi resgatado a tempo do meio dos destroços e encaminhado para o socorro especializado. Além do video acima, veja a seguir fotos impressionantes do acidente.

    Acidente Lamborghini Gallardo
    Acidente Lamborghini GallardoAcidente Lamborghini GallardoAcidente Lamborghini Gallardo

    Fonte: Globo


  • Video: Multitouch on the Sprint Evo 4G


    [YouTube link]

    Let’s take a quick look at multitouch on the Sprint Evo 4G, shall we? In daily use, it’s been holding up just fine. Pinch-to-zoom works as it should, and the touchscreen is as responsive as you’d expect.

    In comparing it to the Nexus One — which has well-documented quirks with its touchscreen — the Evo 4G seems to pass our little test OK. (And here’s our video of multitouch on the Verizon Droid Incredible, too.) The points didn’t follow my fingers quite as quickly as I might have liked, but, again, real-life use hasn’t been impacted.

    This is a post by Android Central. It is sponsored by the Android Central Accessories Store