Category: News

  • Dell Streaks spotted walking the plank in Seattle

    Dell Streak

    It’s not every day that you see Dell Streaks in the wild.  Actually, considering that the phone isn’t released, it’s more like never.

    Seattle Times writer Brier Dudley spotted four of the Android-powered MIDs strapped to a plank, along with two computers.  Apparently, AT&T network technicians were testing their ability to send correct E-911 information across Big Blue’s airwaves.  From what I can tell, there were three black units and one crimson red one in testing, leading me to believe that the pink and orange versions may be coming at a later date.

    With a public showing like this, we can’t be too far off from an official release.  Anyone planning on picking one up?

    Via Engadget


  • La FIA afirma que modificará la regla del Safety Car

    Tras el incidente sucedido en la última vuelta del GP de Mónaco 2010 cuyos protagonistas fueron Fernando Alonso, Michael Schumacher y el Safety Car (coche de seguridad). La FIA ha anunciado que modificará dicha normativa para evitar que vuelva a suceder lo mismo.

    Recordemos que Schumacher adelantó a Alonso en la última curva cuando el reglamento afirma que al haber salido el Safety Car a pista debería esperar hasta crucar la línea de meta. Aun así, el comunicado publicado por la FIA cita lo siguiente:

    Los problemas detectados durante la última vuelta del Gran Premio de Mónaco mostraron la falta de claridad en la aplicación de la norma que prohibe los adelantamientos detrás del coche de seguridad. Se aclarará el procedimiento que deben cumplir los monoplazas cuando la última vuelta esté controlada por el coche de seguridad al tiempo que se garantiza que la señalización a los equipos y pilotos se muestre más clara.

    Por último y para aquellas personas que no pudieron ver esa carrera, aquí os dejo el vídeo en el que se puede ver toda la polémica:

    Related posts:

    1. Mercedes SLS AMG, el Safety Car de la Fórmula 1
    2. Kimi Raikkonen afirma que la Fórmula 1 es monótona
    3. La FIA confirma cambios en el reglamento de la Fórmula 1
  • Google Sued Over Street View Wi-Fi Issue [Google]

    As expected, the quiet brouhaha over Google accidentally collecting personal Wi-Fi network details when cruising in the Street View cars has turned into a lawsuit, with two Oregon citizens suing them for potentially millions. More »










    GoogleSearchingSearch EnginesGoogle StreetViewCompanies

  • Leading Economic Indicators Decline for First Time in a Year

    Is the recovery running out of steam? You might think so, considering that the Conference Board’s Leading Economic Indicators Index fell in April. Last month it decreased for the first time in more than a year. The drop was slight — just 0.1%, but it contrasts with the 0.2% increase expected by economists. What happened?

    The index is made up of ten indicators that can help to predict how the U.S. business cycle is trending. They are aggregated at certain weights depending on their relevance to the economy. Here’s a chart from the Conference Board showing some history:

    leading economic indicators - 2010-04.PNG

    The red line, titled LEI, is the Leading Economic Indicator Index. That’s where there was a decline for April. The blue line is the Coincident Economic Indicator Index, which shows how the economy is doing currently. It continued to rise, as expected.

    According to the report, the decline in building permits and supplier deliveries (vendor performance) played a huge part in index’s April small fall. Other components that had a negative effect included real money supply, average weekly initial unemployment claims, consumer expectations, and manufacturers’ new orders for consumer goods. The positive indicators included the interest rate spread, stock prices, average weekly manufacturing hours, and manufacturers’ new orders for nondefense capital goods.

    This is not particularly good news. The index had been growing significantly for the past year. Even if it doesn’t continue to trend negative, hitting a plateau would imply a weak recovery going forward. Of course April’s decline was small and could just be a blip. If the index continues to move downward, however, then there is definitely reason to worry.





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  • Collins Amendment Becomes New Battleground

    There are three amendments to watch today before Sen. Harry Reid (D-Nev.) calls another vote to end debate of Sen. Chris Dodd’s (D-Conn.) financial regulatory reform bill.

    The first is Sens. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) and Carl Levin’s (D-Mich.) bill strengthening the Volcker Rule, which would force banks to separate their commercial and investment banking functions by banning depository banks from trading with their own funds. The second is Sen. Maria Cantwell’s (D-Wash.) amendment closing a major loophole in Sen. Blanche Lincoln’s (D-Ark.) derivatives proposal. The final is Sen. Susan Collins’ (R-Maine) amendment requiring higher capital requirements for some financial firms.

    I’ll turn to Mike Konczal, a Roosevelt Institute fellow, for an explanation of what Collins’ amendment does:

    First off, this amendment makes it clear that bank holding companies follow capital rules that are at least as tough as those imposed on banks. This is the essence of the shadow banking problem: if you want to act like a bank you have to be regulated like a bank.

    This amendment also makes clear that if you are engaged in riskier activities than a bank, you must hold more capital. Examples it gives of risky activities it mentions are “significant volumes of activity in derivatives, securitized products purchased and sold, financial guarantees purchased and sold, securities borrowing and lending, and repurchase agreements and reverse repurchase agreements.” You know, the things that caused the last crisis and could cause it all over again.

    This amendment also implies, in conjunction with the last paragraph, that banks will need to hold more capital when it comes to scope of businesses. The more high-risk business lines that a bank has, including ones that we can’t even think of yet, the more capital it has to hold. It tells the regulators that, when they aren’t certain, to require more capital….

    This is probably the real fight. “Yes we’ll hold more capital as long as massive amount of risky debt turned into ’safe’ equity through the shenanigans of our financial engineers can count as that capital.” Do we need to do that all over again?

    That last paragraph gets at how important these amendments are. The Merkley-Levin proposal — initially one the Obama administration supported — clearly reduces risk in the banking system. So does Collins’ amendment. And Cantwell’s provision needs to be in the final bill, to ensure that the derivatives language is not toothless. These aren’t fringe priorities. These aren’t window-dressing. These aren’t amendments to score political points. They are provisions to make sure the bill works — provisions that in the first place should not have been tabled to the last minute.

  • Activists seize control of politics

    Via Prison Planet.com » Prison Planet

    JOHN F. HARRIS & JIM VANDEHEI
    Politico
    Thursday, May 20, 2010

    For any politician with the usual instincts for self-protection, the lessons of Tuesday’s primaries could not be more clear: This could happen to you.

    Arlen Specter lost in Pennsylvania even though the party-switching Democrat was recruited and backed by a sitting president. Rand Paul won in Kentucky even though the Republican was regarded as an eccentric renegade by that state’s political establishment.

    The 2010 electorate has swallowed an emetic — disgorging in a series of retching convulsions officeholders in both parties who seem to embody conventional Washington politics.

    (ARTICLE CONTINUES BELOW)

    Activists seize control of politics 150410banner1

    The anti-establishment, anti-incumbent fevers on display Tuesday are not new. The ideologically charged, grass-roots activists flexing their muscle in this week’s primary showdowns are the same breed as primary voters who four years ago stripped the Democratic nomination away from Sen. Joe Lieberman of Connecticut, who later won as an independent.

    What’s now clear, in a way that wasn’t before, is that these results reflect a genuine national phenomenon, not simply isolated spasms in response to single issues or local circumstances.

    This is a stark and potentially durable change in politics. The old structures that protected incumbent power are weakening. New structures, from partisan news outlets to online social networks, are giving anti-establishment politicians access to two essential elements of effective campaigns: publicity and financial support.

    Full story here.

  • Hitachi Maxell develops magnetic tape cartridge with 50TB capacity

    Just in January this year, we reported about a very special magnetic tape that was developed by Fujifilm and IBM and that stores a whopping 35TB of data. But yesterday Hitachi Maxell has announced that its new high-capacity magnetic tape even offers 50TB. No wonder Maxell and and its partner in the development of the tape, the Tokyo Institute of Technology, are speaking of a “world record”.

    The tape boasts a density of 45.0Gb/in2 (69.8Mb/mm2), as opposed to the 29.5 billion bits per square inch Fujifilm/IBM offered. Maxell says that by using a special, super-thin film that was developed by the Tokyo Institute of Technology, future tape cartridges could even exceed 50TB in storage capacity.

    Expect the new tapes to be used by data centers in the not too distant future.

    Via Akihabara News


  • Breaking: EPA demands BP use less toxic dispersant for oil disaster

    The Environmental Protection Agency informed BP officials late Wednesday that the company has 24 hours to choose a less toxic form of chemical dispersants to break up its oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, according to government sources familiar with the decision, and must apply the new form of dispersants within 72 hours of submitting the list of alternatives.

    Well, better 600,000 gallons (!) late than never (see “Out of Sight: BP’s dispersants are toxic — but not as toxic as dispersed oil” and “BP chooses more toxic, less effective dispersants“).

    While this is clearly uncharted waters for many federal agencies, EPA should never have approved the Corexit dispersants for use in this quantity.  It just shows one more time that nobody is planning for the worst-case scenario — hint, hint swing Senators who stand in the way of climate action this year (see “Lisa Murkowski proposes to fiddle while Alaska burns” — and everybody swallowed the BP self-certified, self-delusion (see BP calls blowout disaster ‘inconceivable,’ ‘unprecedented,’ and unforeseeable).

    The WashPost has more on this point:

    The move is significant, because it suggests federal officials are now concerned that the unprecedented use of chemical dispersants could pose a significant threat to the Gulf of Mexico’s marine life. BP has been using two forms of dispersants, Corexit 9500A and Corexit 9527A, and so far has applied 600,000 gallons on the surface and 55,000 underwater.

    “Dispersants have never been used in this volume before,” said an administration official spoke on condition of anonymity because the decision hasn’t been formally announced. “This is a large amount of dispersants being used, larger amounts than have ever been used, on a pipe that continues to leak oil and that BP is still trying to cap.”

    The new policy applies to both surface and undersea application, according to sources, and comes as EPA has just posted BP’s own results from monitoring the effect underwater application of chemical dispersants has had in terms of toxicity, dissolved oxygen and effectiveness.

    An EPA official said the agency would make an announcement on the matter later today.

    After BP conducted three rounds of testing, federal officials approved the use of underwater dispersants late last week, but environmentalists and some lawmakers have questioned the potential dangers of such a strategy.

    On Monday, Rep. Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) sent a letter to EPA administrator Lisa P. Jackson questioning the approach, given that Britain banned some formulations of the dispersant the government is now using, Corexit, more than a decade ago.

    In the letter, Markey warned, The release of hundreds of thousands of gallons of chemicals into the Gulf of Mexico could be an unprecedented, large and aggressive experiment on our oceans, and requires careful oversight by the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and other appropriate federal agencies.”

    EPA has a list of its approved dispersants on its Web site.

    I’m not certain why we need a constant reminder that worst-case scenarios often play out.  That’s especially true if people’s  believe that they can’t occur lead them to take actions that make such scenarios more likely, as in the case of BP (see “The three causes of BP’s Titanic oil disaster: Recklessness, Arrogance, and Hubris“) or as in case of the nation and the world when it comes to human-caused global warming.

    Responsible government planning must be based around plausible worst-case scenarios.  Indeed, in most other areas of national security, like military planning, it is.

  • 7 Ways DVDs Still Dominate Blu-ray

    I’m an admitted Blu-ray whore and adore the format for its glorious picture and sound, but there are nagging shortcomings of the newfangled HD format that prevent me from prosthelytizing its virtues to all who will listen.

    Here are 7 ways that I’m still longing for DVDs when I’m watching Blu-rays:

    Blu-rays are more expensive. Most new Blu-rays are north of $20, while DVDs are generally less than the figure. When you buy a lot of movies the extra charges add up. Which leads me to my next point…

    You’ve already bought all these movies a million times. I’ve purchased The Princess Bride at least three times on incrementally better DVD releases, then did so again when the movie came out on Blu. And I paid more for the movie the fourth time than I did the first three. If you want to update your collection to HD, it will take a while, cost a lot and remind you of the pain you felt when you realized your VHS collection was worthless.

    Blu-rays won’t play on most computers. Unless you spring for a new PC with a Blu-ray drive or buy a cumbersome dongle, you won’t get to catch up on Breaking Bad on your laptop while you’re using your TV to play Tecmo Bowl Kickoff late at night.

    You can’t rip Blu-rays to your hard drive. Unless you’ve got access to some double-secret stealth programs, a ton of hard drive space and the hacking skills to allow your Blu-ray enabled PC to copy the movies, you’re out of luck. With a DVD, you just pop it in, open that mildly sketchy program your tech geek friend told you about, and you’ve got a back-up copy to stream or watch on your PC whenever you like. Ripping DVDs isn’t legal, but if you’re just keeping the copy for yourself, what’s the harm?

    Blu-rays rarely pick up where you left off. When I’m watching a DVD on my Xbox 360 or PS3 and I turn off the film to come back to it later, the system always remembers how far into the film I was before I had to bail. With Blu-rays, this magic kicks in maybe 20 percent of the time. Sure, you can set manual bookmarks, then pull them up through a cumbersome process, but DVDs only require you to press “play.”

    HD bells and whistles only benefit works of art. My favorite genre is the dumb comedy, which doesn’t get funnier in anamorphic 1080p in Dolby digital 5.1. I own Clerks on Blu-ray but it feels unnatural to watch it that way. I long for the grainy VHS copy of the movie taped off of cable that found its way into my freshman year dorm.

    You can’t lend Blu-rays to non-geek friends. Unless the Blu-ray comes in an all-to-rare — although growing in popularity — Blu-ray/DVD combo pack, you’re not going to be able to let Blu-less friends borrow them. As someone who loves to discover obscure movies and then pressure coworkers to watch them, I often have to end my spirited raves with “yeah, you really should rent it” rather than “I’ll bring it in tomorrow and force you to watch it.”

    If you too are a Blu-ray fanatic, what do you miss about DVD?

  • R2D2 Be Mixin’ Dem Phat Beatz [Star Wars]

    Who knew that R2D2 was such an accomplished DJ? Mixing in soundbites and robot blip bleep bloops from sci-fi films, this music video is definitely worth your attention. More »










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  • Sony’s Upcoming TV Has An Intel Atom CE4100 Processor And Runs Google Chrome, Flash 10.1


    Sony is definitely set to debut a new television during the Google I/O conference, according to our most trusted sources. This will be the most advanced TV ever released by Sony to date, and was built in collaboration with Google and Intel as previously reported. The TV will be based on the current monolithic design influenced Sony BRAVIA NX800 (shown above), and will most likely come in 46″ and 52″ screen sizes – although we would not be surprised if it only came in one size.

    The most interesting aspect of the television will be the Intel Atom processor inside; we’re nearly certain that it will have the 45nm-based Intel Atom 1.2GHz CE4100 series processor (PDF). What are the capabilities of this processor?

    More than one would think.

    The CE4100 has full MPEG-4/H.264 support, Flash 10.1 support, 3D graphics capability, high-end audio and can also capture and decode uncompressed 1080p video. The chip also features an integrated NAND controller, along with support for DDR2 and DDR3 memory. The TV will also run the Google Chrome internet browser, and have the full version of Flash 10.1. However, the real power play is that the TV will most likely support the upcoming Chrome Web Store, as well. This could open up the opportunity for the TV to run thousands of applications later this year. We were not able to confirm if the TV will have built-in flash/hdd storage.

    Other specifications of the TV include full HD 1080p playback (of course), built-in Wi-Fi, 4 HDMI connections, USB, Motionflow 240Hz refresh rate, Edge LED lighting, BRAVIA Engine 3, BRAVIA Internet Video/Widgets, and is DLNA Certified.

  • The Wait Is On: Ducati announces demand oupaces availability of Multistrada 1200

    Filed under:

    Mutistrada 1200 is versatility Ducati style-click above for high-resolution image gallery

    It’s been said that absence makes the heart grow fonder. If you took one good look at Ducati’s most versatile motorcycle ever, the Mutistrada 1200, and immediately came to the decision that you just can’t sleep soundly until one is parked safely in your garage, well, we have good news and bad news.

    The good news is that you are not alone, as prior to its official launch, Ducati claims to have pre-sold more than 500 units. Let this serve as reassurance of your impeccable taste and buying expertise, and also a warning that your heart may just be growing fonder, which is the bad news.

    After the official launch over the upcoming weekend, Ducati expects orders to more than double. In a press release, the masters of anticipation Italian company reveals that the failure to expect the unexpected will lead to a sixty-day wait for “2010’s Hottest Motorcycle,” as Ducati calls it. Look on the bright side – at least you will have time to figure out all of the different riding modes! View the full press release after the break.

    [Source Ducati]

    Continue reading The Wait Is On: Ducati announces demand oupaces availability of Multistrada 1200

    The Wait Is On: Ducati announces demand oupaces availability of Multistrada 1200 originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 20 May 2010 09:39:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Gulf Oil Spill Oil Reaches Loop Current

    The NOAA announced that a “small” amount of oil from the BP oil spill has reached the Loop Current, a warm Gulf current that passes through east to the Florida Straits and could spread any oil up the East Coast.

    In 10 days time it could start hitting Florida shores, probably in the form of tarballs.

    On the bright side, the NOAA said, “the oil may get caught in a clockwise eddy in the middle of the gulf, and not be carried to the Florida Straits at all.”

    Oil From Deepwater Horizon Spill Enters Loop Current -NOAA [WSJ]

    PREVIOUSLY:

    Tarballs Hit Key West
    BP Sucking Off 1,000 Barrels/Day From Spill, Only Thousands More To Go
    BP’s Oil Cap Misses, Crude Still Spews
    BP Sending Massive Funnel To Contain Oil Spill

  • College Board, Choosing a Suitable College

    After graduating high school, the next step is to look for a possible college to go to.

    In the United States there are several known Universities that offer very tough college education such as the Harvard University, Stanford University, University of Utah, and University of California Los Angeles to name a few. However, not all students are willing to or able to, or both willing and able to go to the known universities that most top students aspire for some personal reasons.
    Here are the tips that you can use to help you decide on where to go after finishing high school.

    1. know your interest
    2. decide on the course to take
    3. identify your capacity to pay for the tuition
    4. identify your capacity to get a scholarship, SAT scores
    5. identify your willingness to travel to go to school
    6. get a list of the universities that suit your capacity to pay/get a scholarship and willingness to travel offering the course chosen
    7. apply for the top 5 universities
    8. keep track of the application and do your best

    It is always important to find a university that will fit the student’s goal and his profile.

    Related posts:

    1. High School Teacher Sent Nude Photos of Herself to a Student!
    2. Mount Vernon High School Wall Collapsed
    3. College Students: Adderall And its Side Effects

  • Lawmaker: 2008 We Asked Souder About Affair

    Fox News has learned that in 2008 Rep. Mark Souder, R-Ind., was confronted by two members of his congressional staff about what then appeared to be an in appropriate relationship with staffer Tracy Jackson.

    This is according to Marlin Stutzman, former U.S. Senate candidate in Indiana, who announced Thursday he wants to be Souder’s replacement on the Indiana’s 3rd District ballot.

    Stutzman says he and another staffer confronted Souder on the allegations and Souder denied there was an inappropriate behavior or a relationship with Jackson.

    On Tuesday, Souder announced his resignation from Congress, citing his affair with a staffer, later identified as Jackson.

    Stutzman also confirms that he is friends with both Tracy Jackson and her husband, Brad, but Stutzman says he did not know about the Souder/Jackson affair until Souder’s announcement on Tuesday.

  • Destination ImagiNation Returns to UT Knoxville

    Destination ImagiNationThe staff at UT Conferences is making last-minute preparations for Destination ImagiNation’s Global Finals event, which runs Tuesday – Friday, May 26 – 29, and will utilize campus residence halls, the Tennessee Recreation Center for Students (TRECS), Thompson-Boling Arena, the Knoxville Convention Center and other venues.

    Students will begin arriving on campus Monday, May 24, for event registration at TRECS.

    UT Conferences has prepared an Employee Survival Guide to inform UT faculty and staff about the week’s activities. View the Employee Survival Guide here.

    Global Finals brings together 16,000 participants from across the U.S. and more than 38 countries for teams to showcase their solutions to Destination ImagiNation’s team challenges.

    “We’re thrilled about this year’s Global Finals,” said Chuck Cadle, CEO of Destination ImagiNation. “This is the 10th year we’ve held the event at the University of Tennessee and we can’t thank the UT Conferences staff enough for their help in holding this event.

    “Global Finals is the annual culmination of the Destination ImagiNation program, and we’re all very excited to see the many creative ways teams have solved our challenges,” Cadle added.

    Past research studies have shown that the Destination ImagiNation event has an annual economic impact of $20 to $25 million on the Knoxville area.

    Destination ImagiNation Inc. is a non-profit organization that provides educational programs for students to learn and experience creativity, teamwork and problem solving.

    The program is offered primarily in after-school settings, in which students work in teams to solve mind-bending challenges and present their solutions at tournaments.

    Teams are tested to think on their feet, work together and devise original solutions that satisfy the requirements of the challenges. Participants gain more than just basic knowledge and skills — they learn to unleash their imaginations and take unique approaches to problem solving.

    UT Conferences and the UT Conference Center provide professional meeting management services, conference facilities and dining services to businesses, professional groups and educational meetings for the university as well as for the private sector. For more information call 974-0250.

  • Oil Spill in Louisiana, Is Florida Next?

    Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal says heavier oil is now contaminating his state’s coastal marshes. Before, contamination was limited to a light, oily sheen.

    Traveling with the governor, Billy Nungesser, the president of the coastal community of Plaquemines Parish said the oil has “laid down a blanket in the marsh that will destroy every living thing there.”

     

    As the BP oil spill begins to creep into coastal wetlands in Louisiana, scientists are also monitoring its potential impact on the Florida Keys.

    The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reports that a “small portion” of the oil spill has reached the Loop Current — a large flow of warm water in the eastern Gulf of Mexico that feeds into the Florida Straits and, eventually, the Gulf Stream.

    FOLLOW JONATHAN ON TWITTER, FACEBOOK AND KYTE.

    Researchers caution that the Loop Current is difficult to predict and it’s still unclear whether any oil from the BP spill will reach the Florida Keys. If it does, it would take at least a week, which experts say would allow time for both chemical dispersants and natural evaporation processes to mitigate the oil’s effects on the keys.

    Earlier this week, several tar balls washed ashore in the Florida Keys. But the Coast Guard has determined they are not related to the BP oil spill. The origins of these tar balls remains a mystery.

  • Restoring Balance between People and Nature through Wildlife Habitat Design


    During the Dumbarton Oaks symposium on “Designing Wildlife Habitats,” a range of ecologists and landscape architects analyzed various aspects of the relationship between people and nature, and how these relationships take form in natural, managed, and even restored wildlife habitats. Speakers also explored cutting-edge thinking on “ecological infrastructure” and ”human-nature interaction design,” ideas that can guide the future development of both designed landscapes and conservation systems.

    Wildlife Habitat Design

    Jane Carruthers, Professor, Deparment of History, University of South Africa, outlined the case of Pilanesberg, South Africa, a “ground-breaking” game reserve started in the 1970′s that created a wildlife conservation and eco-tourism model in marginal farmland. The designers guiding the creation of Pilanesberg believed that “wildlife must make money. The landscape must be productive and also used sustainably.” In addition, they rejected urban-based romantic ideas about nature in favor of prioritizing local culture and incorporating the community into the park’s functioning.

    The park designers removed buildings and invasive species while, at the time, introducing native animal species. While species translocation was largely successful, there were problems with moving elephants into the park because delicate herd structures were disrupted by the addition of more young males. Cheetahs were also problematic because they “ate all the expensive species.” Carruthers said the park largely ended up reconstituting what was there, but the park managers still needed to “maintain the ecosystem by watching who’s eating how much.” The park’s overall longevity (and ultimate sustainability) is linked with the number of tourists who visit and number of people who are employed through the park.

    Thomas Woltz, ASLA, Principal, Nelson Byrd Woltz Landscape Architecture, explored how landscape architecture can encourage plant and wildlife biodiversity within “productive agricultural lands.” Woltz said agriculture can be “lethal” to plants and animals, given it often involves “pollution, chemicals, steroids, soil erosion, and large-scale machinery.” Agricultural landscapes often look “bleached and ironed,” with the tiny rippley places where biodiversity actually exists ripped out.

    To illustrate his firm’s innovative restoration work, Woltz highlighted the Young Nick’s Head sheep farm project in New Zealand. “This is a devastated landscape that should be temperate rainforest. It should not look like Scotland.” Woltz and his team tried to combine the restoration of wildlife structures with sustainable agriculture and livestock. “We wanted to build value for the wildlife of the region.” The project involved retiring 20 percent of the farmland. With the improvement in habitat health, the sheep’s health also improved. Some 50-acres of wetland, including 20-acres of salt marsh wetlands, were re-created.

    The team also included the local Maori community in the project. Maori first arrived in the area in 1,100 AD. A local Maori horticulturalist was involved in the reforestation, and the project financed a small Maori-run tree nurseries. So far, more than 500,000 of the Maori-grown trees have been replanted, recreating a forest in the process. To restore the original mix of wildlife, excluder fences were added, which prevent rats and weasels from eating rare seabird eggs. “We called the massive fence our eco-Christo.” To encourage birds to nest on the restored habitat, the team brought in nesting boxes, decoy birds, and played looped tapes of birds’ calls.

    Woltz argued that manipulating the landscape was key to its preservation. “We tried to get all the ecosystem services we could out of it.” Instead of bleaching or ironing landscapes, it must be about “stitching, sowing, or weaving.” Learn more about the ASLA award-winning project, and check out an article by Elizabeth Meyer on the site in Harvard Design Magazine.

    Stuart Green, Green & Dale Associates, is a landscape architect who used Alice Springs Desert Park, Central Australia to discuss how to best incorporate educational resources into wildlife habitats. Really, Green said, wildlife habitat is the educational resource. If indigenous communities are brought into the design process early, true collaboration can occur between conservation park designers and the local communities who value biodiversity (and can, in turn, teach it to visitors).

    In Alice Springs, a 1,000 hectare park was created, which recreates the “biotic diversity” of the area. Working with the local Aborigines helped avoid disturbing sacred sites. “However, this was hard because they often wouldn’t tell us where they were.” Many Aborigines ended up employed in the park as tour guides because of their deep reverence for the local biodiversity. “The caterpillar is a creation figure.”

    For one part of the park, more than 8-acres of red sand was trucked in. On top of the rehabilitated lands, more than 400 types of native plants were used to restore the ecosystem. Existing waterways were widened and new riverine systems were added. For some, salt was added to recreate natural salt bodies. Termite mounds and aviaries were integrated into ecosystem walk-throughs. “We also brought in parrots and kangaroos.” The idea is to give visitors a habitat immersion experience and education in conservation. David Attenborough visited and said “no museum or wildlife park can match it.” 

    Creating Infrastructure for Biodiversity

    Joshua Ginsberg, Senior Vice President, Global Conservation Program, Wildlife Conservation Society, explored the impact of scale on the design of conservation strategies. Ginsberg said at the small-scale people relate to landscapes. In the conservation world, this means zoos. Small-scale interventions are relatively easy to replicate. But at the larger scale, there are issues. At that scale, “we are dealing with exploded zoos or fragmented landscapes.” Exploded zoo challenges relate to restoring diversity, intensive management, and the “amplification of nature.” Fragmented landscape issues can only be resolved through land-use changes and regional plans for returning the biodiversity functions to landscapes.

    The issues are increasingly critical given only 15 percent of the world’s land is now untouched by humans. In the vast majority of the world in which humans and wildlife interact, species are threatened most by (in descending order of importance) climate change, roads and infrastructure, deforestation, fire, invasive species, exurban development, and hunting. “Climate change and road connectivity swamp all other issues, including human population growth.”

    Designing for different species involves thinking through the scales they need. “Wild dogs, grizzly bears require the broadest scales; black bears can survive at the smallest.” Ginsberg pointed to the Krueger National Park in South Africa, which reintroduced a wild dog meta-population, and must keep reintroducing the species for it to survive at a large-scale in the wild. Ginsberg said wild dogs are special because they require enormous ranges (or scales) to survive.  Wild dogs went extinct in this area more than 100 years ago. At the cost of some $200,000, 100 wild dogs were translocated into the park. However, repeated reintroductions were needed given all the challenges the dogs faced. Even at the broadest scales, Ginsberg said, small-scale interventions are needed to keep individual species alive. Population-level management, land purchases, resettlment, anti-poaching measures, and translocation are all strategies to be considered.

    In Thailand, 90 percent of the original forest cover has been cut down. To connect isolated natural preserves, natural corridors have also been created, enabling some species the scale they need. In the Russian Far East, tigers, another species requiring large-scale habitats, are moving north, demonstrating that “climate change is real.” To deal with tiger migration, Russia has implemented a plan to establish protected areas, manage the “matrix of species,” and create connectivity. Tigers are also now moving into China. “I’ve tried to convince the Chinese that they are just getting their tigers back instead of harbouring Russian tigers.” (Ginsberg also expressed cautious optimism in the World Bank’s Global Tiger Initiative, which has resulted in an end to World Bank financing of infrastructure projects that cut through tiger ranges. In September, 14 heads of state from nations with tiger ranges will meet in an attempt to “put wildlife at the center of planning.”)

    Ginsberg concluded that a “landscape species” approach was needed. “Wildlife generate landscape patterns and use landscapes differently from people.” It’s important to pick 4-5 landscape species and track the causal chains. “You can’t just design for one species.” Titling the lands of indigenous peoples may actually aid in this type of landscape species conservation because it gives local communities more direct control over conservation. In addition, the scale of ownership is also important — small lots need to be aggregated to create scale.

    To sum up, (1) scale is important, (2) animals have different scale needs, (3) humans operate at all scales, but their impacts change with scale. In the design process, it’s crucial to (1) design at scale, (2) determine what you are trying to conserve, (3) collaborate, (4) recognize that species interact with human influence differently.

    Yu Kongjian, International ASLA, Professor of Urban and Regional Planning, Peking University, and president of Turenscape: Yu explored the idea of integration across scales, and using “ecological infrastructure” to protect biodiversity. Yu said the earth is now an endangered species. China is almost completely a brownfield. Some 75 percent of China’s water is heavily polluted, and 50 percent of wetland habitat has been lost. Over 25,000 dams have been created in China, and the channelization of rivers has led to the destruction of most natural riverine systems. Over the past 30 years, Beijing has expanded almost 700 percent. “Virtually, the whole natural system in China has been destroyed.” Yu asked: How can we minimize the impact of development and urbanization? One answer may be ecological infrastructure. 

    In contrast with Ginsberg’, Yu said ecological infrastructure, which is characterized as a “systems approach” to restoring the entire environment, is needed instead of a landscape species approach. Ecological infrastructure uses biological conservation patches, networks, and corridors to marry ecosystem services with infrastructure. An ecosystem services design approach involves planning for all types of services, including “provisioning,” and “regulating” natural services. Patches, networks, and corridors can then be used to save essential natural processes. This involves evaluating the sources, surface areas, and security patterns needed to protect various species.  For instance, “we can build ecological bridges to stop roadkill.”

    On an aesthetic level, it means moving to “messy, complex landscapes” that embrace biodiversity. “We don’t need any more domesticated, pretty gardens.” In fact, Yu believes people should “embrace the messy.”

    Professor Yu made a few key arguments:

    • “Make Friends with Floods:” We need to stop the channelization of rivers, analyze the flood process, and allow the landscape to be flooded. “Flooding generates lots of ecosystem services.”
    • Mimimize landscape intervention and maximize ecological returns.
    • Help nature to recover and let nature work. Yu cited his most recent work of “ecological surgery” at the Qinghuangdao Beach Restoration, an ASLA honor award winner (learn more about the project).
    • Go productive. As an example, Yu pointed to his firm’s work integrating actual agricultural systems into the Shenyang Agricultural University (learn more about the project).
    • Think of the landscape as a living system. Planning and landscape strategies can help maximize ecosystem services, but will also create habitat in the process.

    Read an interview to learn more about Yu Kongjian’s work.

    Professor Jianguo (Jack) Liu, Rachel Carson Chair in Sustainability & University Distinguished Professor, Center for Systems Integration and Sustainability, Michigan State University: Professor Liu, one of the leading researchers on human-nature interactions, argued that many researchers are either exploring human impacts on nature, or nature’s impact on humans, but few are looking at the “feedback loop,” the reciprocal interactions. To examine these interactions, Liu and his colleagues devised the Coupled Human and Natural System (CHANS) approach.

    Liu zoomed in one case he’s been focused on for some time: the Wolong Nature Reserve for Giant Pandas. Wolong is in southwest China, and is a natural panda habitat. It’s a protected site and includes a core habitat area, buffer zone, and transition zone where there are human settlements. Interestingly though, since the area was declared a natural reserve, more panda habitat has been destroyed. Liu went about trying to discover what was causing habitat destruction, and identified the growth of the number of households as a primary factor.

    Since 1975, the number of people in the area has grown by 80 percent. However, the number of households has grown by 180 percent, meaning the average number of people per household has declined rapidly. Each household in the area has been collecting firewood and and producing agriculture, negatively impacting the panda habitat. “Homes, instead of people, impact environments.” Liu said “living alone is particularly bad for the environment,” because multi-person households create important environmental efficiencies. To go one step further, living with your parents is good for the environment, and divorce is really bad for the environment. CHAN analysis helped pinpoint the feedback loops between habitat, pandas, and people in the area.

    To preserve panda habitat, they must also be connected. Liu called for expanded corridors between the 63 isolated panda preserves, which pandas can then use to find mates. To build up local support for Panda habitat preservation, people should be “payed for ecosystem services.” Payments are needed to get people to move out of panda habitat. Human populations should be concentrated.

    Liu concluded that landscape architects should adopt a CHANS approach so the focus is not just on landscape, but “human-nature interaction.” The long-term ecological and socio-economic benefits must go beyond landscape.

    This is part two in a three-part series on the “Designing Wildlife Habitats” symposium held at Dumbarton Oaks in Washington, D.C. Read part one, “Designing for the Full Range of Biodiversity.”

    Image credit: ASLA 2010 Honor Award, Orongo Station Conservation Master Plan, Poverty Bay, North Island, New Zealand. Nelson Byrd Woltz Landscape Architects

  • Android ‘Gingerbread’ coming Q4 2010

    Android

    We may all be waiting for Google to give us details about Android 2.2, a.k.a. Froyo, today, but Google is already looking forward to the next major update to the Android OS, which we now know will be called Gingerbread.  The update is referred to in the FAQ for the new WebM format that was announced yesterday, and it says that we can expect Gingerbread sometime in Q4 of this year.  We still don’t know the version number of the update, but at least we all have something to look forward to after Froyo’s release.

    Via Engadget


  • Pakistan Bans Facebook & YouTube in “Draw Mohammad Day” Crackdown | 80beats

    facebook-webAs of this writing, the “Everybody Draw Mohammed Day” Facebook page has nearly 83,000 likes and is rising steadily. Presumably, none of those fans are in the government of Pakistan, as the page prompted the conservative Muslim country to block first Facebook, but then also YouTube, parts of Wikipedia, and other Web sites—more than 450 in all.

    The Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) keeps itself busy scanning the Internet for material that it says would offend its population, the second-largest Muslim population of any country. Two years ago it temporarily banned YouTube until the site removed cartoons of Mohammed. Typically the PTA bans particular links, but this week it complained that the amount of objectionable material on Web was increasing and decided to cut off it citizens from some of the biggest sites on the Web. The ban is said to run through the end of May, giving Web sites the chance to remove offending materials if they choose.

    Social networking sites are extremely popular in Pakistan, a country of 170 million, where more than 60 percent of the population is under the age of 25. Pakistan has about 25 million Internet users, almost all of them young, according to Adnan Rehmat, a media analyst in Islamabad [The New York Times].

    The Facebook page in question, which itself was prompted by the South Park controversy in which Comedy Central censored an episode that would have depicted the Muslim prophet, encourages people to draw Mohammed today in a show of free speech.

    Islam strictly prohibits the depiction of any prophet as blasphemous and Muslims all over the world staged angry protests over the publication of satirical cartoons of Mohammed in European newspapers in 2006 [AFP].

    Also, extremists threatened South Park creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone over the episode. From the description on the “Everybody Draw Mohammad” Facebook page:

    We simply want to show the extremists that threaten to harm people because of their Mohammed depictions, that we’re not afraid of them. That they can’t take away our right to freedom of speech by trying to scare us to silence.

    If you’re over at Facebook today, check out Discover Magazine’s page.

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    Image: flickr / benstein