Category: News

  • Miss USA Rima Fakih Striptease Photos Emerge

    Another year, another potential snaps scandal brewing on the pageant circuit: It seems Miss USA 2010 knows her way around a pole.

    One day after taking the crown in the 2010 Miss USA pageant in Las Vegas, a Detroit radio station has released pictures it says are of Miss USA Rima Fakih dancing in a station-sponsored striptease contest. The 24-year-old daughter of Lebanese immigrants beat out 50 other women to win this year’s competition. Fakih is the first Arab-American to ever claim the Miss USA title, but one in a series of pageant queens to be the subject of a potential naughty photo scandal.

    Channel 99.5 FM’s “Mojo In The Morning” has published several images of the former Miss Michigan in shorts and tank top dancing seductively on a platform surrounded by other women. The dance was part of a contest put on by the station nearly three years ago.

    “Congratulations to Miss Michigan, Rima Fakih who was crowned Miss USA on Sunday night! Rima is a Dearborn resident and the first Arab American to wear the crown. Much like Miss Michigan Kristen Haglund who won Miss America in 2008, Rima is a Mojo In The Morning listener who has joined us in studio and at events. Check out Miss USA Rima Fakih when she won Mojo In The Morning’s “Stripper 101″ contest in 2007…” read a message posted to the show’s website on Monday.


  • Wildfire is HTC’s next Android mini

    HTC unveiled the new Android-powered Wildfire today which is their new entry-level device set to replace the Tattoo. The Wildfire will be available in Europe and Asia by Q3 2010, but there is always the chance for any HTC device to show up in the U.S.

    Highlights of the Wildfire include Android 2.1 with Sense UI, 3.2 inch QVGA display, 528 MHz processor, and 5 megapixel camera with flash. Customers will be able to choose from four colors including red, black, white, and gray.

    For a closer look at the HTC Wildfire, see Engadget’s hands on report.

    HTC Wildfire specs include:

    • Android 2.1 with HTC Sense
    • 512 MB flash
    • 384 RAM
    • 106.75 x 60.5 x 11.99mm
    • 3.2-inch QVGA TFT capacitive touch screen
    • WCDMA/HSPA: 900/2100 or AWS/1900 or 850/2100 MHz
    • GSM/GPRS/EDGE: 850/900/1800/1900
    • 802.11b/g Wi-Fi
    • Bluetooth 2.1 with EDR
    • GPS/AGPS
    • 3.5mm audio jack and microUSB
    • 5 Megapixel camera with auto focus and LED flash
    • 1300 mAh battery
    • 440 minutes of talk-time on WCDMA, 490 on GSM
    • 690 hours on standby for WCDMA, 480 for GSM
    • microSD memory card slot, SD 2.0 compatible
    • Proximity sensor, G-sensor, Compass, Light sensor, FM radio, Optical joystick
    • 528 MHz Qualcomm MSM7225 chipset





  • Android Central forum member has an EVO for a day, and shoots us all a video

    Pre vs EVO

    Android Central forum user doc31 was lucky enough to get some hands-on time with the HTC EVO 4G.  There’s answers to some of our questions, some pictures from the camera, oh, and did I mention a video showing it in action?  Check out the thread in the EVO forums here, and follow the break to see the video as well as some samples from the camera.

    read more

  • Boughton: Mike Fedele Is Underutilized As Rell’s Lt. Gov.; “We’ll Never Run The Lt. Governor’s Office Like That Again”

     

    fedele1.jpgDanbury Mayor Mark Boughton pledged Monday that he will be a full partner as lieutenant governor if he is elected on the ticket with Republican Michael Fedele.

    Fedele introduced Boughton as his running mate, saying that they intend to capture the nomination at Saturday’s Republican convention in Hartford.

    But Boughton said after the announcement that they are planning a whole new structure for the lieutenant governor’s office than Fedele has had under Gov. M. Jodi Rell.

    “I think he hasn’t been frankly utilized the way he should have been utilized in the previous administration,” Boughton said. “We’ve made a commitment that we’ll never run the lieutenant governor’s office like that again. You’ll be hearing from me. I’ll be vocal, and I’ll be Mike’s full partner in managing this state. … The bottom line is this will be much, much more than a ceremonial post. And I think the taxpayers deserve more, for $110,000 [per year in salary], than somebody that cuts ribbons and kisses babies.”

    While Rell and Fedele have appeared at numerous news conferences together over the past three years, Rell has repeatedly refused to publicly endorse Fedele for governor. That has caused some consternation among Fedele supporters and questions among Republican voters.

    “Certainly, that’s her decision,” Boughton said when asked about Rell’s non-endorsement of Fedele. “But you know what? Frankly, I’m not a big believer in endorsements. … It’s the endorsement of the voters that is the most important thing. The rest of it is just window-dressing.”

    When asked, after Boughton’s comments, if he has been underutilized in the Rell administration, Fedele said, “Well, we all have our different styles. When I wasn’t being used, I went out and did my own stuff, which is economic development and reaching out to veterans and things of that nature. As you know, constitutionally, this is a part-time job. I have not worked it as a part-time job. I have been a full-time lieutenant governor. … There was more in me than I probably was utilized for. But again, that’s a different style.”

    Concerning Boughton’s future role if they win the election, Fedele said, “The lieutenant governor in the Fedele administration is going to be at the table, all the time, rolling up sleeves and basically not taking any time off, to get the work done.”

    (In photo, Lt.Gov. Michael Fedele, right, and Danbury Mayor Mark Boughton, left, answer questions from the media after Fedele announced Boughton as his running mate outside the Capitol in Hartford. AP Photo/Jessica Hill)

  • Electricity generation, New Source Review, and waste

    Lynne Kiesling

    On Friday at Environmental Economics, Tim Haab wrote about the implications of New Source Review for innovation in a regulated industry, and how to represent it in the standard Pigouvian model (do go read the whole post, it’s very useful). The basic question is this: does the stifling of innovation that results from New Source Review regulations change the fundamental analysis of the question of pollution?

    I have some quibbles with how Tim frames the “externality” question — in particular, I prefer the “markets don’t fail, they fail to exist” formulation of the fact that some uncompensated cost is present, rather than “market failure” — but his post makes a really important point with respect to New Source Review and the Pigouvian model:

    The technological improvements resulting from removal of New Source Review may shift the private supply curve to the right, and may reduce the emissions per unit of output, but that doesn’t solve the fundamental externality problem.   So even though the technological improvements may reduce per unit emissions, emissions may actually increase from the decreased costs of producing electricity (decrease per unit emissions, but increased units). Regardless, with or without the NSR regulation, there will still be emissions and those emissions will remain unpriced (inefficiently) by the market. ‘

    While I agree that existing regulations may have reduced the incentive for innovation, their existence doesn’t change the fundamental market failure–emissions are not rationed through prices.  For a market to work efficiently, ALL costs and benefits of production and consumption must be internalized.  In such cases, emissions will be efficiently rationed.

    I take issue with a couple of these points. First, if the Pigouvian model is the correct way to model the pollution question, it is incorrect that “ALL costs and benefits of production and consumption must be internalized”. For an illustration of why this claim is not correct, ask yourself this question: how much do you pay your neighbors for the lovely flowers they plant in their front gardens, and if you did pay them, would that induce them to plant more flowers? Of course you don’t pay your neighbors for the external benefit you derive from their lovely gardens, and I think it’s a safe generalization that your neighbor-gardeners have more intense preferences over their gardening decisions than you do over their decisions. What does that imply? It implies that even if you did pay them as compensation to internalize your benefit, if your marginal benefit is small relative to theirs, your payment is unlikely to change their decision at the margin of how much gardening to do. In other words, the only uncompensated costs and benefits that are important for achieving the optimal level of abatement (of a cost) or increase (of a benefit) are the costs and benefits that are Pareto relevant, that would at the margin change the behavior of the relevant party.

    This must be a pet issue for me because I’ve written about it before, with respect to inefficient energy efficiency consumer subsidies, with respect to externality accounting, and with respect to the fact that Alex Tabarrok got a flu shot because he wanted to get kissed.

    As a coda: I do not think that the Pigouvian model is the correct model, because it ignores the reciprocal nature of costs; in other words, it ignores the fact that the pollution problem is a problem of conflicting uses of a scarce common-pool resources, and the people with those different uses are imposing costs on each other. The polluter is not the only one creating a cost.

    Second, I think Tim’s right about his interpretation of NSR and the Pigouvian model, but I also think that the Pigou model of a per-unit tax on output from a polluting firm is not the best model to use to see the effects of NSR, unless the policy you are analyzing is a per-unit output tax. I think a fuller answer to his astute student also includes the following:

    If the policy is an emissions tax (e.g., a per-ton tax on sulfur dioxide or greenhouse gases), then NSR regulation artificially keeps abatement costs higher than they would be in the presence of the technological innovation. Thus at the margin, the NSR regulation does affect the firm’s choice, and the amount of abatement/emissions, because if the tax rate is higher than the abatement cost, then the firm will choose to abate. Thus NSR means that less abatement takes place under an emissions tax, by keeping abatement costs higher.

    If the policy is a tradeable permit system, then NSR regulation artificially keeps abatement costs higher than they would be in the presence of the technological innovation. A firm’s abatement costs determine its demand for permits in the permit market. Thus at the margin, the NSR regulation increases the firm’s willingness to pay for permits, and leads to higher costs of achieving the abatement/emissions target.

  • Precios para los primeros Nissan Leaf en Europa

    nissan-leaf.jpg

    Simon Thomas, Vicepresidente Senior de Marketing y Ventas de Nissan en Europa, ha dado a conocer los primeros precios de los cuatro primeros países que recibirán al Nissan Leaf, que será comercializado a partir de noviembre o diciembre de este año. El directivo de Nissan recalcó que el precio será de menos de 30.000 Euros en la mayoría de los países de Europa, el precio final tras restarle los incentivos que cada gobierno europeo está preparando.

    Mientras en el resto de los países de Europa los precios se irán conociendo conforme se acerque la fecha de lanzamiento, los cuatro primeros países (Reino Unido, Holanda, República de Irlanda y Portugal) en vender al Leaf lo harían a los siguientes precios:

    • El precio en el Reino Unido será de 23.350 libras (27.471 euros), tras restarle los incentivos del gobierno.
    • El precio en Holanda será de 32.839 euros. Los compradores holandeses se beneficiarán de un ahorro en impuestos de entre 6.000 y 19.000 euros durante cinco años.
    • El precio del LEAF en Irlanda será de 29.995 euros, incluyendo incentivos gubernamentales.
    • En Portugal, el precio será de 29.955 euros, incluyendo ayudas del Gobierno.
    • Todos los precios incluyen la batería

    En el caso del Reino Unido, el gobierno ha anunciado recientemente que reembolsará el 25% del precio de compra de un vehículo totalmente eléctrico a cada comprador, hasta un límite de 5.000 libras. En el caso de Holanda, los impuestos de matriculación y de circulación serán gratuitos, así como en Irlanda y Portugal.

    A medida que se vayan difundiendo el resto de países, con sus correspondientes precios, los mantendremos informados principalmente con las opciones de compra del Leaf en España.

    Fuente | Prensa Nissan
    .



  • Here We Go: Market Makes Big Move Down, Dow Off 160, Oil Falls Below $70

    After see-saw action in the morning, the bulls are definitely making a serious move right now.

    The Dow is off another 160, or more than 1.5%. The NASDAQ is also oss 1.5%.

    Oil is below $70 now, a major level, and the euro is below $1.23.

    CNBC correctly observes that today is unusual in that the selloff seems to have happened just as Europe closed, the oppsotie of what’s been happening in recent weeks.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • A European Depressionary Relapse Looks Increasingly Likely

    In March I wrote an American version of this post which pointed to the bailout culture in America as a major reason I fear a depressionary relapse. American policy makers have shifted private losses onto the government’s books while propping up bankrupt companies in the private sector in order to forestall yet greater economic pain.

    The mindset is fixed on re-engineering some semblance of past economic growth. The result has been a return in the US to the status quo ante of low savings, excess consumption, indebted households, and leveraged financial institutions, but with policy options significantly diminished and greater levels of government debt to boot. Clearly, when stimulus is withdrawn, policy makers should expect more severe economic bloodletting.

    In Europe, the same bailout mentality is at work. However, the results are likely to be even more disastrous because of the fundamental misunderstanding of economics and financial sector balances amongst the policy elite in Euroland. The public and private sector cannot simultaneously net save unless the Europeans engineer a competitive currency devaluation. Therefore, the Europeans’ newfound fiscal austerity is at odds with the need of the private sector to reduce debt and will likely lead to a collapse in consumer demand and depression or a trade war. What Europe needs is to allow over-indebted nations to default, reducing the political and economic pressure of austerity.

    Intra-Eurozone Trade wars

    Let me review how I come to that conclusion. This is a trade issue, first and foremost. The reason the Eurozone exists from an economic standpoint has to do with European interdependence from business trade. The eurozone functions as an internal market much the way the United States does, with the majority of trade occurring inside the region as opposed to externally with non-Eurozone countries.

    When the Euro was formed, exchange rates were fixed and a common monetary policy came into being – much as we see for states in the US or provinces in Canada. Of course, monetary policy is not run for specific regions within the zone, but for the zone overall. And this invariably means that the European Central Bank’s monetary policy is geared more to the slow-growth core of Europe than the periphery.

    During any business cycle then, current account imbalances build up within any diverse economic group living under one monetary policy as some regions overheat and others languish. This is true in Canada, the UK, and the US as well as in Euroland.

    For example, slow growth in Germany has led to an export model which not only makes Germany a huge exporter world-wide but also within the Eurozone due to the common monetary policy (see The Soft Depression in Germany and the Rise of Euro Populism). Because there is no built-in adjustment mechanism to prevent large large trade imbalances from building up in the Eurozone, the result has been extreme and unsustainable current account imbalances within the Eurozone.

    When recession comes, the regions which overheated and suffered the largest capital inflows and largest current account deficits (like Florida in the US or Spain in the Eurozone) suffer the most. Unemployment skyrockets and budget gaps open up.

    However, there is no devaluation escape hatch in a currency union. In the US, Canada or the UK, severe regional economic downturns are attenuated by levels of fiscal transfers and labour mobility that the Eurozone simply does not have. Moreover, recrimination across regions for huge trade imbalances are more muted in Canada, the US or the UK because of an integrated national identity. This is not true in Europe.

    I certainly believe California is effectively bankrupt – and has been since 2008; an eventual  liquidity crisis will bring this issue to the fore. But, I do not anticipate Californians rioting in the streets because of the austerity imposed on them by Washington and budget zealots in Nebraska, Montana or South Dakota (see Chart of the Day: State Budget Gaps 2010). California is not going to secede from the United States and form its own currency even if does run out of money and default. However, this is what you hear people talking about in Europe. That’s the difference.

    The sectoral financial balances identity

    So, there is panic in Europe and a need for fiscal austerity, much as you see in American states. There is a problem though – the sectoral financial balances identity. Now, I have come at the credit crisis largely from an Austrian economics perspective. (see my early 2008 post The US Economy 2008 as an example). The flaw in this approach is the deflationary bias and  lack of realism Austrian school solutions have regarding the political economy in depression. So I have looked elsewhere for other frameworks. One important contribution the Chartalists (MMT’ers) have made to my framing of the economic landscape during this crisis is their emphasis on the sectoral financial balances identity. The great Wynne Godley, who recently passed away was a pioneer in this research, which I now often see in the FT’s Martin Wolf’s writings as he dissects what is going on in Europe.

    I have written this approach up several times over the past few months. I did so most recently in my post MMT: Economics 101 on government budget deficits which gives one insight into the accounting identities between the private, trade and government sectors when the government runs budget deficits.  I suggest you read that post in its entirety. But, the long and short of it is that the sectors must balance. Government budget deficits, then, go hand in hand with a net surplus in the non-government sector. Therefore, the Eurozone must either open up a trade balance or it must decrease private sector savings equal to the net downward shift in government deficits. Paul Kedrosky gives us a sense of the magnitude of fiscal adjustments coming in the Eurozone and elsewhere.

    Scenario one: Competitive Currency Devaluation

    I outlined my thinking here in an April post and this seems to be exactly the course the Europeans are taking as of last week:

    The Euro is dropping as we speak.  But, I am talking about a more serious decline. As I recall, the Euro dipped to as low as 83 cents during Robert Rubin’s strong dollar policy days.  If the EU structures the bailout in the right way (fully backstops the period of increasing debt to to GDP) and floods each country with liquidity (aka prints money), you are sure to get this kind of outcome. Everyone gets a massive boost to competitiveness. Problem solved.

    However, the Germans would never go along with this ‘weak currency’ strategy.  Moreover, the Americans would cry bloody murder because this is a competitive currency devaluation of the entire Eurozone.

    To date, I have talked about the EU as a external-deficit neutral block.

    you can’t have Germany and Spain both running current account surpluses, unless the EU as a whole runs a current account surplus. So, if Germany (or the Netherlands) wants to be the export juggernaut and run a massive current account surplus, this has intra-EU ramifications. The most important is that Germany’s (or the Netherlands’) current account surplus (capital account deficit) is matched by current account deficits (capital account surpluses) in Spain (Portugal, Greece, Ireland and Italy).

    Spain’s debt woes and Germany’s intransigence lead to double dip

    But, if the Euro fell to parity with the US Dollar for example, the Eurozone would become a net exporter, pushing the US external balance even more into the red.

    Twenty-first century competitive currency devaluations

    The problems I saw with this scenario were German and foreign resistance to it.  In fact, the two German members of the ECB rejected the money printing aspect of this scenario (note the ECB says they are sterilizing sovereign bond purchases because of these kind of objections. But, I have my doubts). Nevertheless, this does seem to be the way forward in Euroland – and this has the Euro down near $1.23 as I write this.

    So, the Euro is falling precipitously as I said it would if Euroland adopted this strategy. Will the Chinese and the Americans go along with this beggar thy neighbour strategy? I say no. But, let’s see. Clearly, this allows Europe to recover at the expense of everyone else. Already the Chinese are voicing their displeasure:

    Pegged to a rising dollar, the yuan has appreciated against a trade-weighted basket of currencies in recent months, which many analysts believe could constrain the scope for a possible revaluation of the Chinese currency.

    Commerce Ministry spokesman Yao Jian did not say how dollar strength might affect a long-awaited move to resume yuan appreciation, but he highlighted the impact of the weaker euro.

    “The yuan has risen about 14.5 percent against the euro during the past four months, which will increase cost pressure for Chinese exporters and also have a negative impact on China’s exports to European countries,” he told a news conference.

    The yuan hit its strongest level against the euro since late 2002 on Monday as the euro tumbled against the dollar on global markets. The yuan was quoted at 8.3815 against the euro, versus Friday’s close of 8.5351.

    Reuters

    Of course, what is good for the goose is good for the gander.  Let’s see what the Swiss or the British do next. This is not a depressionary scenario for Europe, but game theory suggests there will be a response from trading partners.

    Scenario two: Private Sector Defaults

    The only other way that the Eurozone can bring down the government’s fiscal deficits is through a reduction in savings across Euroland.

    A friend Andrew sent a chart to a group of us which shows how indebted the household sectors are across the Eurozone – even in supposedly conservative Germany.

    eurodebt

    Austerity means lower aggregate personal income. So, reduced savings that emanate from budget cuts keep debt levels high and are driven by distress.  And that invariably means higher levels of defaults in the private sector.  This would be a particularly pernicious outcome in places like Spain and Ireland where the banking sector is carrying a lot of unrealized losses on its books.  Moreover, even the Germans and Dutch will feel this loss, particularly through reduced demand for exports. The result as I allude to in Spain’s debt woes and Germany’s intransigence lead to double dip is depression.

    Bailouts all around make it worse

    So, pain is coming to Europe, and, due to the Eurozone’s importance, to everyone else too. Policy makers in Europe who are completely blind to the accounting identities of government deficits and non-government surpluses. So, instead of realizing that Greece cannot fulfil its debt obligations and undergo fiscal austerity at the same time, they are trying to prop up their banking sector with bailouts.

    Apparently, Germany is now planning to make loans for Greece not just for 2010, but for 2011 and 2012 as well. This is a sea change in German thinking and is having a positive effect on all markets, with spreads on Greek debt and Greek sovereign CDS both coming in.  I believe this indicates Angela Merkel understands the gravity of the situation and the impact a Greek default would have on Germany.

    Yesterday, I noted that the Germans are now talking publicly about German bank exposure to Greek sovereign debt. And earlier today Yves Q. Smith noted that a Greek default would be a catastrophic loss for the lenders. She quotes from the S&P’s press release on their downgrade of Greek debt to junk:

    The outlook is negative. At the same time, we assigned a recovery rating of ‘4′ to Greece’s debt issues, indicating our expectation of “average” (30%-50%) recovery for debtholders in the event of a debt restructuring or payment default”

    Now, we know that the German Landesbanks probably have a shed load of Greek debt on their books.  Moreover, the state of their capital base is very precarious indeed.  Think back to early last year when we were not discussing the potential impairment of Greek debt, but of losses related to US subprime and commercial real estate more generally. The Telegraph wrote a sensationalist story based on some leaked documents about the fragility of European banks. The details may be suspect but directionally, this is the real problem.

    Germany may fund Greece for three years; the question is why

    But, not only are the Europeans propping up these German and French banks, they are refusing to take a haircut. I agree with what Claus wrote last week:

    [T]here are some things that still bug me.

    Firstly, it should not escape us here that what our dear policy makers effectively are doing is fighting fire with fire. Debt will thus be substituted with even more debt and it is not clear just what the end game is supposed to be. However, one thing which is now crystal clear to me is that if there is any way that the EU and the Eurozone are to get out of this in one piece it will mean a much tighter coordination of fiscal policy. This will require a monumental rethink of the EU setup, and, while I believe that the joint effort of EU policy makers could indeed be pooled to make this happen, the chance of it actually materialising is slim. In this sense it will be interesting to see what exactly fiscal coordination (if any) will mean now that Eurozone economies are jointly asking the market for funds to pool in that loan guarantee entity.

    Secondly, the introduction or implementation of all these so-called austerity measures are not linear and we can’t feed them into linear models and expect these models to come up with usable results. In this sense, and abstracting a minute from the general risk of doing too little too late, the road ahead is very difficult. On the good side it now appears that Spain and Portugal have awoken to the fact that they too need to turn the screw, and that what ultimately distinguishes them from Greece is merely market timing. This is universally good news, but it this is only the statement of intent. In fact, before we close the book on 2010 this is all we are going to see since the 2010 budgets (already passed) are thoroughly in the red. The biggest problem here is simply that, for all the good intentions in various EU commission and IMF proposals, the actual process of implementation on the ground may prove near impossible. And here I am not talking about some innate laziness or non-voluntarism on the part of the Greek, Portuguese and Spanish people; I am simply talking about the near impossibility of letting the entire burden fall on internal price and competitiveness adjustment from within a fixed currency union; but this, of course, has been the main issue all along. As I noted in another context, any state can only take so much of having to fight its own citizens with water and teargas week in and out even if they are trying to do good.

    The considerations above have slowly, but surely convinced me that, while I support the efforts by EU policy makers (both in spirit and in terms of the technical measures), I have increasingly converged on the idea that some form of debt restructuring in Greece (and possibly elsewhere in EMU) has to be included in what we could call the main scenario going forward.

    The Eurozone Bailout – Are We Still Standing?

    Expect a sea change in government

    Eventually, the Europeans will understand this. However, by then, things will have spun entirely out of control and the situation will be much worse. The likely outcome for Europe, therefore, is depression and the attendant social unrest that goes with it. In essence, the Europeans are imposing an Austrian school-style solution on Euroland.

    We cannot sit by and watch this crisis liquidate assets, taking down good companies with bad, throwing people out of work, wreaking havoc on their lives, and leading to a brutal and painful downward spiral of asset and debt deflation and depression.  This is not a prescription for success, either economically or politically.  This is the prescription for chaos, turmoil, civil unrest and perhaps worse.

    However, this is what the Austrians would have us do in the present downturn.  It is the same wrong-headed prescription given to the Asians in 1998 and to Argentina in 2001.  We squandered an opportunity for fiscal prudence when the economy was on more solid footing.  With depression on our doorstep, is now the right time to start cutting back?

    This would mean liquidating General Motors, bankrupting Royal Bank of Scotland and Citigroup or allowing Iceland, Hungary and Pakistan to fend for themselves.  In theory, each of these measures seem prudent.  But, in practice, these measures would result in huge job loses, would induce further deleveraging and asset price declines, would deplete capital from an already fragile global banking system, and would lead to a probable depression of unimaginable severity.  It is in such a bleak environment that dangerous despots and dictators like Hitler and Mussolini rose to power, taking advantage of the natural human need for ’strong’ leader in a time of chaos and uncertainty.  Could we expect any different today?

    Confessions of an Austrian economist

    And my thesis about the connection political extremism and depression has been confirmed by recent research. I will end this post with the conclusions from that research in The OECD’s growth prospects and political extremism.

    Our main finding is that higher per capita GDP growth is significantly negatively linked to the support for extreme political positions. While estimates vary between specifications, we find that roughly a one percentage point decline in growth translates into a one percentage point higher vote share of right-wing or nationalist parties. Moreover, we find that the amount of income inequality in a country affects the role that growth plays. Highly unequal countries display a lower growth effect than more equal countries. For countries with a more equal distribution of income, a one percentage point drop in the growth rate may increase the vote share of far right parties by up to two percentage points.

    Our results therefore make clear that countries should not expect right-wing parties to get majorities unless growth declines quite as much as in the 1920s. Nevertheless, even with a less significant fall in economic growth rates, a rise in support for extreme parties is likely to change political outcomes – for example through their impact on incumbent parties’ political platforms.

    Our more recent research on the vote shares of other groups of political parties points out that smaller growth rates mostly benefit right wing and nationalist parties – and not so much the communist parties. One explanation for this asymmetry may be that voters perceive right wing parties as generating more individual income uncertainty.

    Conclusion

    Our results lend support to Benjamin Friedman’s view that economic growth determines the direction in which a democracy develops. This also implies that solving Europe’s growth problem may have important consequences that lie outside the purely economic sphere.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • CR: Toyota brand loyalty continues to fall, Honda and Ford rise

    Filed under: , , ,

    Consumer Reports‘ latest survey results are another ding for Toyota. While Honda and Ford have made gains in brand loyalty, Toyota’s brand loyalty among consumers has dipped 13 percent, causing it to fall from the top position it held at the end of 2009. Honda is in first place now, with 68 percent of Honda owners described as “likely to purchase another Honda for their next new car,” followed by Ford with 61 percent loyalty and Toyota with 57 percent.

    While Toyota’s fall may be the result of negative perception in the marketplace as a result of the brand’s recall fiasco, it still made $1.2 billion in the first quarter of this year. North American sales were down but didn’t bottom out thanks to higher incentive spending, sales rose elsewhere around the world, and the company is reaping the benefit of cost savings enacted last year. A drop from a close first to a close third after more than eight million cars have been recalled isn’t so bad, and with $20 billion in cash, the company has the money, and apparently the time and mindset, to keep the ship moving.

    The other two makes that CR mentions, Chevrolet and Dodge, both lost ground: Chevy dipped five percent in brand loyalty from February to April (from 57 to 52 percent), Dodge dropped four percent in the same period (from 28 to 24 percent).

    [Source: Consumer Reports | Image: Mark Ralston/AFP/Getty]

    Continue reading CR: Toyota brand loyalty continues to fall, Honda and Ford rise

    CR: Toyota brand loyalty continues to fall, Honda and Ford rise originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 17 May 2010 11:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • The Easy Way to Run iPhone Apps On Your iPad—Without Pixel Doubling [IPad Apps]

    A few weeks ago, some jailbreakers devised an effective, if slightly daunting, way to force iPhone apps to fill the iPad’s screen. Now, there’s a jailbreak app that does the same, and the results are incredible. More »










    IPadIPhoneHandheldsSmartphonesJailbreak

  • Got DROID Eris Update or Manually Installed Samsung Moment Update? What’s Your Opinion?

    Many HTC DROID Eris owners are receiving the Android 2.1 update from Verizon while Samsung Moment owners have to manually download and install it from Sprint. Have you you been upgraded yet? We want to hear your feedback on the new software, whether your phone is snappier, has it been a pain, or even questions you may have (NerdGirl can answer them).

    Post your feedback in the Comments Below!

    Algadon Free Online RPG. Fully Mobile Friendly.

  • And now your car can be hacked, so what are you gonna do?

    Looks like your car is one dumb “hacker” kid away from careening into a pole, or, more comically, into a big bale of hay. Researchers have demonstrated how to take control of a car’s engine, brakes, and fiddle with the instruments. Is there anything you can do about this?

    Yeah, actually. The attacks require physical access to the car, so the only people who would be able to cause you grief would be, I don’t know, your family, your friends, and your mechanic.

    Cars aren’t connected to the Internet, so you don’t have to worry about some Russian hacker holding your car’s ignition system hostage after a success phishing attack.

    The team of researchers come from the University of California San Diego and the University of Washington. By inserting fake data packets into cars’ electronic control unit using a piece of software called CarShark, they were able to cause all sorts of chaos.

    In one attack, the team transformed the instrument panel into a clock that counted down to zero from 60 seconds. In the final seconds the horn honks and as zero is reached the car engine shuts off and the doors are locked.

    That’s simultaneously hilarious and terribly dangerous, especially considering that most (all?) new cars have enough on-board electronics to something something. I’ve sat here for a good ten minutes trying finish that thought, but here we are, unfinished.

    But again, unless the attacker has physical access to your car and knows how to write code, you probably don’t have anything to worry about.

    via BBC News


  • Diamonds in – chemicals out

    Nilfisk-Advance introduces new pads eliminating the need for chemicals in floor cleaning and maintenance.

    In cooperation with HTC, Nilfisk-Advance is launching a new and innovative floor cleaning solution based on HTC’s Twister™ pads.

    Mounted on Nilfisk-Advance equipment, the Twister™ pads with their billions of microscopic
    diamonds are able to clean and polish a variety of floors without the use of chemicals.
    All that is needed is water.

    Nilfisk-Advance is equipping its cleaning machines with Twister pads providing its customers worldwide with an environmentally friendly floor cleaning solution that reduces the cleaning
    costs, minimize environmental impact, and yet deliver a superb cleaning result.

    With this mechanical cleaning method the Nilfisk-ALTO machines clean and polish floors by means of diamond padded Twister™ pads and water only.
    • The diamonds are so effective that no cleaning chemicals are necessary.
    • Independent tests show that this environmentally friendly method delivers shiny floors that are easier to clean. All together lowering the costs for the customer and improving the conditions for the personnel.

    The Twister™ solution can be applied to a variety of floor surfaces such as vinyl composition tile (VCT), vinyl, linoleum, marble, terrazzo, concrete, ceramic tiles, and epoxy.

    Nilfisk-Advance is distributing the Twister™ system globally in accordance with its strategy to provide its customers with flexible, excellent cleaning performance at lower costs in user
    friendly and environmentally sound solutions.

    For further information, please visit www.nilfisk-alto.com.

  • Extending Laser Welding Solutions with the Acquisition of Cosytronic

    System Tools in Welding and Automation Technology Allow IPG to Target Applications in Automotive, Sheet Metal Production and other Material Processing Applications

    Oxford, MA, April 20, 2010 — IPG Photonics Corporation (NASDAQ: IPGP), the world leader in highpower fiber lasers and amplifiers, announced today the acquisition of privately-held, Germany-based Cosytronic KG (COSY), a specialist in the joining technology with an emphasis on engineering know-how
    in automated welding turnkey solutions. The acquisition allows IPG to extend its product offerings to include a welding tool that integrates seamlessly with IPG’s fiber laser.

    COSY’s core capabilities include the development, engineering and application of new, modern joining techniques and innovative welding tools for many material processing end-markets. The acquisition is expected to have no material effect on IPG’s financial results in 2010. Financial terms were not disclosed.

    “With the acquisition of Cosytronic, we plan to enhance IPG’s product portfolio of laser welding tools with fiber lasers – a promising complementary market for us,” said Dr. Valentin Gapontsev, IPG Photonics Chairman and CEO. “Combining our state-of-the-art fiber laser technology with COSY’s proven and
    innovative laser welding technology opens exciting opportunities to build robust integrated robotic solutions for various automotive, sheet metal production and other material applications. Both companies have complementary expertise, strong market reputations and a passion for technological innovations.
    We look forward to integrating our similar entrepreneurial cultures and further strengthening our leadership position in fiber lasers and solutions.”

    “We are excited to join IPG Photonics,” commented Mr. Heribert Heinz, founder and Managing Director of Cosytronic KG. “The combined company now has significantly more resources to target larger customers and new applications, and the ability to have stronger technical integration of the tool and the laser. IPG is
    a natural strategic fit for COSY and we believe this will benefit both companies’ customers.”

    The latest commercial product from COSY is the fiber-based Laser-Seam-Stepper for laser welding applications. Laser welding can be applied in car body plants and in the production of sheet metal components with the following advantages over traditional resistance spot welding process:

    – Higher processing speed and shorter production cycle times
    – Increased component strength with longer seams that create higher torsion stiffness
    – Total cost of ownership comparable to today’s modern resistance welding systems
    – Flexible welding head and greater ability to handle the processing materials and
    – Continued focus on laser safety requirements without the need for an enclosed cell.

    IPG was advised by the accounting firm Schäfer Zimmer Hardt and by the law firm Von Boetticher Hasse Lohmann. Cosytronic was advised by the management consulting company, MPower GmbH in Stuttgart, and their partners, the financial firm Marx & Jansen GmbH and by the law firm Hüttemann, Nickel & Hoepner.

    About IPG Photonics Corporation
    IPG Photonics Corporation is the world leader in high-power fiber lasers and amplifiers. Founded in 1990, IPG pioneered the development and commercialization of optical fiber-based lasers for use in a wide range of applications such as materials processing, advanced, telecommunications and medical. Fiber
    lasers have revolutionized the industry by delivering superior performance, reliability and usability at a lower total cost of ownership compared with conventional lasers, allowing end users to increase productivity and decrease operating costs. IPG has its headquarters in Oxford, MA with additional plants and offices throughout the world. For more information, please visit www.ipgphotonics.com.

    About Cosytronic KG
    Cosytronic KG was established in Wissen, Westerwald region, Germany in 1988. The vision of production engineering “Made in Wissen” describes a range of expertise from consulting services to engineering and construction of highly-productive turnkey solutions. Traditional processes like arc and resistance welding
    techniques are combined with the latest laser technology. All automation designs are flexible and continuously adaptable to new system productions. For more information, please visit
    www.cosytronic.com.

    CONTACT:
    Martin Laguerre
    Vice President, Corporate Development
    IPG Photonics Corporation
    (508) 373-1100

  • INDOOR AIR QUALITY

    Delta Ohm’s latest novelty, HD37AB1347 IAQ Monitor, is a portable instrument for the analysis
    of air quality (Indoor Air Quality, IAQ).
    The instrument simultaneously measures various parameters: CO2 Carbon Dioxide,
    CO Carbon Monoxide, Temperature, Relative Humidity, it calculates Dew Point,
    Wet Bulb Temperature, Absolute Humidity, Mixing Ratio, Enthalpy and Atmospheric
    Pressure. This is performed by the P37AB147 SICRAM probe. The P37B147
    SICRAM probe does not measure CO Carbon Monoxide. You can also connect Temperature
    and Humidity SICRAM combined probes, Hot-Wire Sensor Air Speed SICRAM
    probes, Vane Air Speed SICRAM probes, and Temperature SICRAM probes,
    to the instrument.
    The instrument, using a proper procedure, calculates the percentage of external air
    input (% Outside Air) according to CO2 Carbon Dioxide, Temperature and Ventilation
    Rate.
    The HD37AB1347 is a data logger with a memory capacity of 67600 recordings per
    each of the two inputs, divided in 64 blocks.

  • Universal Ultra-Compact Camera with 8 Megapixel Resolution and Digital Zoom

    IDS Imaging Development Systems GmbH is pleased to announce the release of a free software update for its USB uEye XS industrial camera. The update adds significant extra functionality to the tiny auto focus camera, including a trigger mode for image capture in different resolutions of up to eight megapixels, digital zoom, backlight compensation, and much more. Even USB uEye XS cameras in the field can take advantage of the new functionality through IDS’s easy on-the-fly software upload approach.

    The ultra compact USB camera previously supported live image acquisition only in HD ready 720p format at 1280 x 720 pixels and 15 frames per second, or
    30 frames per second for images at lower resolutions. In single frame mode, however, the CMOS sensor from Sony achieves up to eight megapixels which can now also be captured using software triggering. The software update also provides a large choice of additional image formats, which are created by the sensor’s built-in scaling functions.

    The USB uEye XS is one of the smallest auto focus cameras with USB port and has been designed for use in a wide range of industrial applications. With 22 x 24 x 24 mm it is less than a cubic inch in size and packed with a full set of smart features, such as face detection and image stabilization. The automatic image controls for exposure, backlight compensation, ISO and white balance are controlled directly by the camera, which ensures high-speed performance.

    The new software update with the extra functionality for the USB uEye XS can be downloaded for free from IDS’s web site at www.ids-imaging.com/go/xs

  • Mahr Federal introduces the MMQ 200 Cylindricity Measuring Machine

    Extending the capability of its innovative MMQ Formtester line, Mahr Federal has introduced a new model, the MMQ 200 Formtester, optimized for measuring cylindricity and other deviations of form and position. Equipped with Mahr’s newest EasyForm Version 3 Software, the MMQ 200 is compact, fast, very easy to learn and operate, and is equally at home in the metrology lab or on the shop floor.

  • Lodar Radio Remote Controls

    A full range of IP67 Transmitters for Lodar, 2 – 32 functions. These new Transmitters have been added to the Lodar range, giving the user an inexpensive option of a high quality commercial product. Lodar will not be beaten on price and has a 5 year Warranty programme. Lodar gives flexibility, covering the Leisure market with the smallest Mini Series Transmitters and the Light Commercial market with a range of Standard Transmitters. There are also two sizes of Receiver with easy plug and play fittings.

  • Earth Day – STREAMTEK leads the pack!

    Do you every wonder what exactly is happening behind the scenes at many of the businesses and manufactures you purchase and/or have purchased from in the past. Do they care about the environment? Do they recycle? Do they waste unnecessary wood, plastics, metals, etc.

    Below is just a few things STREAMTEK has done to be more environmentally friendly!

    – 100% of invoices are electronically sent

    – Incentive awards are given to employees that do not bring their car to work

    – All monitors & TV’s are Energy Star Rated

    – The thermostat at our corporate office can be remotely throttled by Power Stream (Hydro Company) when summer demands reach critical levels.

    – All scrap metal that is produced is taken to the local recycling plant in an environmentally friendly truck

    STREAMTEK cares about the environment and you should too! So please, next time you print a piece of paper or throw your can of soda in the environment; please remember we ALL need to pitch in.

    ** To learn more about Earth Day visit Earth Day – Wikipedia.

    Gin Griffin
    Customers Relations Manager
    [email protected]

  • TechUniversity: DigitalColor Meter

    If you’re a designer, especially for the web, a color picker or color sampling tool is almost certainly part of your arsenal. But did you know that OS X actually already includes one?

    DigitalColor Meter is a tool that lets you sample colors on your screen to get their color values that you can then copy and paste for use elsewhere.

    In this TechUniversity DigitalColor Meter screencast (subscription required), I’ll show you the in’s and out’s of the app and how you can use it in your design workflow.

    View full DigitalColor Meter screencast on TechUniversity (subscription required)

    Screencast Sample