Category: News

  • Domestic Drilling: Yes, We Still Believe

    (This guest post previously appeared at the author’s Facebook)

    We’ve all been shocked and saddened by the tragic events in the Gulf of Mexico. My heart breaks for coastal residents who are facing fears of the unknown impacts of the oil spill.

    As an Alaskan, I can speak from the heart about the tragedy of an oil spill. For as long as I live, I will never forget the day the Exxon-Valdez ran aground on Bligh Reef and millions of gallons of North Slope crude poured into the waters of our beautiful Prince William Sound. The spill was devastating to so many Alaskans who, like my own family, make their living on the water from our commercial fishing industry. “Heartbreaking” was the word my husband Todd, an Alaska Native and trained oil spill responder, used to describe the scene as we watched it unfold on land and water that we feel is sacred.

    Alaskans understand the tragedy of an oil spill, and we’ve taken steps to do all we can to prevent another Exxon tragedy, but we are still pro-development. We still believe in responsible development, which includes drilling to extract energy sources, because we know that there is an inherent link between energy and security, energy and prosperity, and energy and freedom. Production of our own resources means security for America and opportunities for American workers. We need oil, and if we don’t drill for it here, we have to purchase it from countries that not only do not like America and can use energy purchases as a weapon against us, but also do not have the oversight that America has.

    In the coming days, there will be hearings to discover the cause of the explosion and the subsequent leak. Actions will be taken to increase oversight to prevent future accidents. Government can and must play an appropriate role here. If a company was lax in its prevention practices, it must be held accountable. It is inexcusable for any oil company to not invest in preventative measures. They must be held accountable or the public will forever distrust the industry.

    This was the position I took as an oil and gas regulator and as Governor of Alaska when my administration ramped up oversight of the oil industry and created a petroleum-systems-integrity office to monitor our oil and gas infrastructure for potential environmental risks. I took a lot of heat for the stand I took “against the oil industry” (which is how political adversaries labeled my actions). But we took tough action because there was proof of some improper maintenance of oil infrastructure which I believed was unacceptable. We instituted new oversight and held British Petroleum (BP) financially accountable for poor maintenance practices. We also filed a Friend-of-the-Court brief against Exxon’s interests for its decades-old responsibility to compensate Alaskans affected by the Valdez spill, and I took other actions “against” the industry which ultimately helped hold it accountable.

    All responsible energy development must be accompanied by strict oversight, but even with the strictest oversight in the world, accidents still happen. No human endeavor is ever without risk – whether it’s sending a man to the moon or extracting the necessary resources to fuel our civilization. I repeat the slogan “drill here, drill now” not out of naiveté or disregard for the tragic consequences of oil spills – my family and my state and I know firsthand those consequences. How could I still believe in drilling America’s domestic supply of energy after having seen the devastation of the Exxon-Valdez spill? I continue to believe in it because increased domestic oil production will make us a more secure, prosperous, and peaceful nation.

    Our hearts go out to all Americans along the coast affected by this recent tragedy, especially those who lost family members in the rig explosion, and our prayers go up for a successful recovery. May spill responders be safe.

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Turn a Man Into Mush With a Nasal Spray of Pure Oxytocin | Discoblog

    Who ever thought that couples could bond over nasal spray? But new research shows that a nasal spray containing the “love hormone” oxytocin helped make regular guys more empathetic and less gruff. Oxytocin is the hormone that strengthens the bond between nursing moms and their babies, and it’s also involved in pair bonding, love, and sex. The spray was tested on a group of 48 healthy males–half received a spritz of the nose spray at the start of the experiment and the other half received a placebo. The researchers then showed their test subjects emotion-inducing photos like a bawling child, a girl hugging her cat, and a grieving man. Finally, they asked the guys to express how they felt. The placebo group men reacted normally to the soppy pictures; which is to say they were either mildly uncomfortable or stoic. Whereas the group that had used the nasal spray were markedly more empathetic. The Register reports:
    “The males under test achieved levels [of emotion] which would normally only be expected in women,” says a statement from Bonn University, indicating that they had cooed or even blubbed at the sight of the affecting images.
    The study’s findings, published in The Journal of Neuroscience, suggest one …


  • Enviromentalists say Gulf disaster shows U.S. must find new energy sources

    From Green Right Now Reports

    As the growing oil spill reached the coast of Louisiana Friday, environmental groups, aghast at the growing calamity, called on President Obama to do more than suspend new off-shore oil drilling.

    The president announced earlier in the day that no more oil exploration would take place until the BP oil spill had been thoroughly investigated. An estimated 210,000 gallons of oil a day continued to pour into the Gulf of Mexico from the deep sea wellhead, 11 days after an explosion sunk the rig and killed 11 crew members.

    “The administration is correct to suspend any new off-shore drilling until a full investigation is completed. But it can’t stop there – we need to do more if we are serious about avoiding disasters like this in the future. We must shift our energy policy away from oil, toward cleaner and renewable sources that can’t spill or run out,” said Frances Beinecke, president of the Natural Resources Defense Council.

    “Offshore drilling is dangerous work and the cost of accidents is far too high, as this tragedy reminds us. We have an oil slick the size of West Virginia harming marine life in the Gulf of Mexico. It has just reached land and has begun to poison the fertile Mississippi Delta and its ecologically rich marshes. The spill also threatens the coastlines of the other Gulf coast states.

    “We have to do better.”

    The U.S. Coast Guard and a fleet of other agencies, along with BP workers, worked along the coast to try to capture as much oil as possible with booms designed to soak up oil as winds pushed into into the Mississippi Delta. The disaster is expected to have devastating ecological effects, killing sea and marsh birds and marine mammals such as the threatened sea turtles and dolphins as well as harming fish populations. The area is a major shrimping and oyster-producing region.

    “This should be a wake-up call for America. We’ve been addicted to oil for too long. There should be no more drilling off our coasts. No more investing in this dangerous form of energy,” said Sierra Club spokesperson Kristina Johnson.

    Obama’s temporary halt to new off-shore drilling “is a step in the right direction, but we need more than a temporary fix. This is an environmental catastophe. The answer is no more offshore drilling period.”

    This spill highlights the perils of offshore drilling in deep waters, which the oil companies assured regulators was safe and manageable.   “The oil industry promised us that oil drilling was safe; that they had state-of-the-art equipment that would prevent oil spills. This oil spill far exceeds the oil companies’ worst-case scenarios,” Johnson said.

    With clean energy, such as the Cape Wind farm approved this week for off the shore of Massachusetts, this type of environmental disaster can be avoided, Johnson said.

    Instead, “we’re looking at the biggest environmental disaster in at least the last 20 years,” she said, noting that this spill will likely exceed that of the Exxon Valdez 20 years ago in Alaska.

    Almost every leading environmental group has said the spill calls into question the wisdom of additional offshore oil drilling, which the White House endorsed on March 31, when Obama announced that he was opening previously closed areas of the Eastern Seaboard, the Gulf of Mexico and the Arctic to new exploration. The decision was controversial at the time, which many accusing the president of currying favor with Republicans to gain momentum for other legislation, including the stalled Senate energy and climate bill.

    “We once again call on the Obama Administration to withdraw permission for the petroleum industry to begin exploration in the Arctic, scheduled for July of this year, pending a full environmental impact review. We also urge the Obama Administration to cancel the leases in Beaufort and Chuckchi Seas that were issued by Bush Administration,” said World Wildlife Fund’s Vice President for Arctic and Marine Policy William M. Eichbaum.

    “While there is no good scenario for an oil spill, the temperate weather conditions and the Gulf of Mexico’s well-developed infrastructure and access to the most technologically advanced methods for responding to a spill offer the best possible set of circumstances for coping with such a disaster. Yet despite all these advantages, the crisis continues to worsen.

    “As terrible as this situation is, the impacts would be far worse should this spill have taken place in the harsh and remote environment of the Arctic, where violent storms and thick ice would make it nearly impossible to effectively respond to even a minor oil spill.

    The Arctic  Council, which issues guidelines for drilling in that area and counts the U.S. as a member, has said no oil drilling or exploration should be allowed without “the ability to adequately respond to potential risks,” Eichbaum said.

    “The events of this past week in the Gulf of Mexico and the lack of resources to respond should something similar occur in the Arctic region, make it clear that any further oil exploration in the near term would violate those principles.”

  • Senate To De-authorize $422 Million In Previous Bond Allocations; Freeing Up Money For Future Purposes

    The state Senate debated Friday over a plan to de-authorize a net $422 million in bond authoritizations that had been previously approved by the legislature.

    As such, the state will now have more leeway to approve other projects because there were 255 individual cancelations Friday – paving the way for new bonding capacity for other programs.

    Sen. Donald DeFronzo, a New Britain Democrat, handled most of the complex effort, which came after Republican Gov. M. Jodi Rell initially offered bond cancelations as part of her budget in February.

    “It’s a significant legislative achievement,” DeFronzo said, referring to a unanimous vote in the finance committee and the measure’s overall support. “This was a good example of bipartisanship. … No one in this building can remember the last time that we canceled this much in authorizations. … Almost everybody came forward this year and sacrificed something.”

    Sen. Andrew Roraback, a Goshen Republican, said he hopes the legislature will “not reverse the progress that is being made today” by simply approving other bond projects in the coming months.

    “Now that we’ve taken the step and tightened the belt,” lawmakers should not immediately approve other projects, said Sen. Leonard Fasano, a Senate GOP deputy leader. “This is a big step. We should look at this more often and continue to reduce our debt.”

    After a relatively brief debate on the Senate floor, lawmakers moved shortly before 5 p.m. to place the bill on the “consent calendar” for bills that have no opposition.

  • Oil disaster could destroy Gulf of Mexico fishery, natural areas, tourism

    From Green Right Now Reports

    As thousands rushed into action on the Louisiana coast on Friday to deal with the millions of gallons of oil heading for shore, the region’s largest environmental advocacy group issued a statement to illustrate the magnitude of the biological fallout.

    The BP oil spill quite simply could destroy the most productive fishery in the world, said Mobile Baykeeper, a member of the Waterkeeper Alliance.

    The coastal Gulf region, stretching from the Mobile Bay Estuary to Galveston Bay, produces 69% of all domestic shrimp and 70% of all domestic oysters, the group reported.

    Mobile Baykeeper called on the government to operate carefully in cleaning up the disaster and to avoid solutions that could worsen  the situation such as the controlled burns and chemical dispersants that the U.S. Coast Guard has been using.

    The group expressed anger toward BP, operator of the well, which continues to pour an estimated 210,000 gallons of oil a day into the Gulf and experts say could persist in polluting the area for months. Efforts to cap the wellhead have so far failed.

    Mobile Baykeeper focused on what it perceived as a lack of action to contain the spill over the last 11 days, since the offshore platform exploded.

    “BP should have been required to have a plan to contain a catastrophic spill like the one we’ve witnessed,” said Casi Callaway, Executive Director of Mobile Baykeeper. “This ongoing hemorrhage of oil could continue over the next several months. Clearly, whatever containment plan BP had in place, if they had one at all, has failed the Gulf of Mexico and all those who benefit from its pristine waters and wildlife.”

    The environmental disaster will not only wound the fishing industry, it will hurt agriculture and tourism, a $20 billion industry in the Gulf coast. It will devastate estuaries and marshlands and freshwater and marine life breeding grounds, Baykeeper said.

    The group issued these facts about the region:

    • Commercial fish and shellfish harvest from the five U.S. Gulf states was estimated to be 1.3 billion pounds valued at $661 million  in 2008
    • Seven of the top ten busiest ports in the United States were located along the Gulf Coast as well
    • It is the heart of the U.S. petrochemical industry, with nearly 4000 oil platforms, producing 52 percent of the nation’s crude oil and 54 percent of its gas.
    • The Gulf of Mexico is the sixth largest economy in the world.
  • Samsung Galaxy S Promo Commercial Arrives [VIDEO]


    Check out the short video clip below to get a sense for how the forthcoming Galaxy S can help you out in your day-to-day life.  The commercial, if you can call it that, feels like an abbreviated version of the video we saw at the CTIA unveiling.  It’s the same video used to show us how to get the most out of your handset starting from the second you wake up until the moment you go to bed.  The only difference is, it’s edited down to roughly 30 seconds.

    Might We Suggest…

    • Samsung Galaxy S to All Four Major Carriers?
      Is Samsung planning to forgo the route of carrier exclusivity with their Galaxy S handset?  According to Broadpoint.AmTech analyst Mark McKechnie, that might very well be the case.  The world’s #2 cel…


  • Chevrolet Camaro to get upgraded, reworked interior come 2012 model year

    Ed Welburn – General Motors' Vice President of Global Design

    While many people agree that the exterior of the 2010 Chevrolet Camaro is one of the best looking pieces of metal they’ve seen in a long time, the interior draws some mixed feelings. General Motors without a doubt has cheaped out on some aspects of the interior of the new Camaro and most buyers and potential buyers have started asking for more.

    Click here to get prices on the 2010 Chevrolet Camaro.

    A GM insider has confirmed with Inside Line that come the 2012 model year, the Camaro will receive a substantially reworked interior. While the source wouldn’t confirm the exact changes, they did mention that most of the upgrading work will go into the dash and the huge blackness area in front of the passenger.

    Until all that takes place you have the new Chevrolet Camaro Convertible to look forward to in 2011 followed by the Camaro Z28 in 2012.

    Click here to read our review on the 2010 Chevrolet Camaro.

    Click through for the press release for more details.

    Review: 2010 Chevrolet Camaro LT V6:

    Review: 2010 Chevrolet Camaro V6 LT Review: 2010 Chevrolet Camaro V6 LT Review: 2010 Chevrolet Camaro V6 LT Review: 2010 Chevrolet Camaro V6 LT

    – By: Omar Rana

    Source: Straightline


  • Nokia wants you to make an Ovi app out of your Twitter feed, launches Ovi App Wizard

    To anyone who’s ever written a line of code, pre-canned/auto-generated apps are the scourge of the App Store world. For anyone who just wants to be able to say “Me? There’s an app for that! LOL!” without having to dedicate their lives to waging war against semi-colons and pouring through documentation, however, they’re a god send.

    Love’em or hate’em, Nokia has just embraced’em. They’ve just launched a new tool, Ovi App Wizard, purposed with turning any feed (be it RSS, Twitter, Facebook, or what have you) into an Ovi Store App in around 10 minutes.

    The process seems pretty simple: Name it, pick a few RSS feeds, choose the colors, and then set up the distribution options. If you’re looking to cash in, you’ve got two choices: toss in a pre-fabbed ad system and take a cut of the revenue, or — if you’re feeling ambitious about your work — you can pick a price. Hit the publish button, and about 24 hours later, blammo – you’re famous. Well, not famous. But you have an Ovi Store App. That’s almost the same thing, right?

    It’s always a good thing when an App Store operator makes their outlet more accessible — but this really just seems like a ploy to boost their number of apps through quantity-over-quality. If 10,000 people make an application out of their Twitter feed, that’s 10,000 new apps Nokia can boast about – but how many of those will actually see more than a handful of downloads? Is an app really an app if the only person who downloads it is your Mom?

    There’s a reason Apple is banning these sorts of apps.

    Check out Ovi App Wizard here.


  • I Want to Get My Kids to the Egg Child Care Center [Architecture]

    This is Discovery, a children nursery designed by German studio GPAC. Thirteen eggs scattered under a central glass canopy. I want to get my child there. It will match my Star Trek suit. Or my full body latex chicken outfit. More »







  • The Gulf of Mexico oil spill by the numbers

    oil spill satellite view

    (Photo: NASA)

    As officials continue to carry out clean-up efforts from the deadly April 20, 2010, BP oil spill, one thing is clear: Last week’s Gulf Coast spill is one of the worst in history.

    It’s tough to say just how much oil might leak out before the three major underwater leaks are stopped. Right now around 210,000 gallons of oil are pouring into the Gulf each day. That’s nowhere near the 11 million gallons of oil leaked into Alaska’s Prince William Sound by the Exxon Valdez tanker. Yet.

    But if the leaks aren’t repaired soon, the BP spill may overtake the iconic Valdez tragedy in volume. If oil continues to leak at its current rate, the BP spill will be larger than the Exxon spill by the third week in June.

    This isn’t the first time British Petroleum has run into trouble. In 2005, a massive explosion occurred at the company’s Texas City, Texas, refinery, killing 15 workers and injuring 170 others. The company was fined $87 million for negligence. A year later, the company ran into problems again when it was cited for leaking around 4,800 barrels of oil into Alaska’s Prudhoe Bay, due to a corroded stretch of pipeline. The company was warned about the corroded pipe four years earlier but did nothing to fix it — and was fined $20 million for ignoring opportunities to prevent the spill.

    In order to give you a better sense of just how big the unfolding tragedy in the Gulf is, we dug out some surprising statistics:

    11: Number of workers missing and presumed dead following the BP rig explosion. (Source: Huffington Post)

    5,000 barrels a day: Rate at which oil is leaking from the Deepwater Horizon rig — five times faster than was originally estimated. (Source: New York Times)

    $300 million: Estimated cost to BP to plug up the leaking oil spill, not including environmental clean-up costs. (Source: New York Times)

    $25 billion: Loss of market value to BP stock since last week’s rig explosion. (Source: Huffington Post).

    16: Miles off the coast of Louisiana the oil slick has crept. (Source: New York Times)

    At least 30: Species of birds the Audubon Society says are potentially threatened by the oil spill. These include marsh birds, ocean-dwelling birds, and migratory songbirds. All reside in “Important Bird Areas,” according to Audubon, designated because of their “essential habitat value.”

    Among the most vulnerable species is the brown pelican — the state bird of Louisiana — which was only recently removed from the endangered species list. The spill is especially devastating for bird populations because it coincides with the beginning of breeding season. (Source: Audubon Society)

    25 million: Number of birds that traverse the Gulf Coast per day and which are potentially at risk from the oil spill. According to the LA Times Greenspace blog, “Late spring is the peak time for neo-tropical songbirds moving from the Yucatan Peninsula to make their first landfall in Louisiana,” and “more than 70% of the country’s waterfowl frequent the gulf’s waters.”(Source: LA Times Greenspace blog)

    11 million: Number of gallons of oil leaked into Alaska’s Prince William Sound in 1989 by the Exxon Valdez oil leak. It is widely considered the worst oil spill in U.S. history, although a number of larger spills have happened around the world, including the 2002 Prestige spill off Spain. (Source: CBS News)

    400: Number of wildlife species threatened by the spill. Threatened species include sea life such as whales, tuna, and shrimp; dozens of species of birds; land animals such as the gray fox and white-tailed deer; and amphibians such as the alligator and the snapping turtle. (Source: New Orleans Times-Picayune)

    600 square miles: Latest reported size of the oil slick. In response to reports of the blooming size of the spill, Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal declared a state of emergency, anticipating that it would reach Louisiana’s shores soon. (Source: CNN)

    $1.5 billion: Amount in insurance claims experts believe the BP spill will cost insurers. (Source: Business Week)

    More from The Daily Green

    Reprinted with permission of Hearst Communications, Inc.

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  • Lawmakers Eye Race To The Top Funding; Senate passes School Reform Bill And Sends It To The House

    Education reporter Grace Merritt is following a school reform bill, which was debated by the state Senate today. Her story is below.

    HARTFORD — The state Senate approved a wide-ranging school reform bill Friday that would require high school students to take more math and science courses and, for the first time, foreign language classes to graduate.

    The bill, which would also link teacher evaluations to student performance and lift enrollment limits on charter schools, is designed to better position the state to compete for millions in federal Race to the Top school reform funding.

    Legislators and state education leaders have been working for weeks with teacher groups, charter school advocates, superintendents and others in “grueling” sessions to negotiate the bill, said state Sen. Tom Gaffey, D-Meriden, co-chairman of the education committee.

    While the bill was approved in the Senate, it’s expected to face a bumpy ride in the House. The Republican caucus is now reviewing the bill, said state Rep. Andrew Fleischmann, D-West Hartford, who co-sponsored the bill with Gaffey.

    The bill establishes a more rigorous high school curriculum designed to better prepare students for college and compete in a global economy.

    The new standards means students would have to earn a minimum of 25 credits to graduate, up from 20 now, including two language credits and one more credit each in math and science.

    Students would also have to take end-of-year exams for core courses to ensure that they’ve learned the material. Seniors will be required to complete a multidisciplinary “capstone project” — spelling the end of planned coasting for the second semester of senior year.

    The new requirements wouldn’t take effect until the class of 2018, a concession made to make the bill more palatable to opponents who characterize it as another unfunded mandate in a poor economy.

    “We certainly are not going to be in this economic condition in for too much longer,” Gaffey said.

    Besides, he said, the bill is designed to help the state win millions in federal stimulus money from the Race to the Top competition, which officials hope might bring as much as $192 million to Connecticut.

    Having failed to win funds in the first round of the Race to the Top competition, the state is revising its application to try again June 1. This time around, the state is hoping that the bill’s passage will strengthen the application by demonstrating the state’s commitment to school reform.

    The bill would also establish a new framework for teacher evaluations that would use indicators of student academic growth in assessing teacher performance. Under the plan, the state Board of Education would work with an advisory board consisting of representatives from teacher unions, school boards, and state and local education leaders to develop the evaluations.

    “I believe that this is a very reasonable approach to teacher evaluation at the present time,” said John Yrchik, executive director of the Connecticut Education Association, the largest statewide teachers union.

    In addition, the bill would also:

    – Life caps on student enrollment at high-performing charter schools.

    – Create an alternate route to certification for school administrators.

    – Allow struggling school districts to convert an existing school or build a new one as an “innovation school” to improve school performance.

  • CHART OF THE DAY: Now The Oil Slick Is A $33 Billion Disaster (BP, RIG, HAL, DRQ, TTI)

    The Deepwater Horizon explosion has been a nightmare for regulators, energy companies, and cleanup crews this week. As the situation continues to decline, oil service companies are taking a beating.

    Our chart below shows companies involved or affected by the Deep Water incident and the amount of market cap that they’ve lost since April 22nd, when the incident was first reported in the media. Altogether the combined amount of market cap lost totals a whopping $33.2 billion.

    Bonus: Everything you need to know about the Deepwater oil spill >

    chart of the day, deepwater spill affecting the market

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • When America was post-colonial | Gene Expression

    Below I stated:

    …until the late 20th century the majority of the ancestry of the white population of the republic descended from those who were counted in the 1790 census.

    A commenter questioned the assertion. The commenter was right to question it. My source was a 1992 paper that estimated that only in 1990 did the proportion of American ancestry which derived from those who arrived after the 1790 census exceeding 50%. In other words, if you ran the ancestors of all Americans back to 1790, a majority of that set would have been counted in the 1790 census (so people of mixed ancestry would contribute to the two components are weighted by their ancestry).

    The major issue here is that there is a difference between whites, and non-whites, especially before mass Asian and Latin American immigration post-1965, when white vs. non-white ~ white vs. black. Almost all the ancestors of black Americans who were black were already resident in the United States in 1790. A few years ago I read up on the history of American slavery and was surprised how genuinely indigenous the black American, slave and free, population was by the late 18th century (English speaking and Christian). There was an obvious reason why Southern slave-holders went along with the ban on importation of slaves which was due to kick in in the early decades of the republic: American blacks, unlike slave populations elsewhere in the New World, had endogenous natural increase. This explains part of the relative paucity of African aspects in their culture in relation to the blacks of Haiti or Brazil, where African-born individuals were still very substantial numerically at emancipation because of high attrition rates (it is sometimes asserted that the majority of blacks liberated during the Haitian Revolution were born in Africa. Likely a hyperbole, but it gets across the strength of connection).

    In any case, to estimate the white proportion attributable to 1790, I have to correct for the black proportion within the total. As an approximation I think it’s acceptable to simply attribute blacks as a whole to the proportion which had ancestors here in 1790 in full. I suspect a greater proportion of the black ancestry which post-dates 1790 would come from the white component of their heritage which simply isn’t of notice in American society for various reasons in any case (Henry Louis Gates Jr. is more white than he is black in terms of ancestry, but he’s the doyen of Africana Studies). So, assuming that blacks contribute to the 1790 and before component in full, I estimate that between 1910 and 1920 the majority of the ancestry of the white population shifted from 1790 and before, to after. Specifically, in 1910 51% of the ancestry could be traced to 1790 and before among whites, and in 1920 49%. In 1950 it was 47% 1790 and before. So I should have said early 20th century, not late. I wouldn’t be surprised though if the balance has started to shift in recent years, as many “white ethnic” groups (Jews, Italians, Irish, etc.) are more heavily concentrated in urban areas, while the most fertile white community in the United States, the Mormons of Utah, are also the most Old Stock Yankee in ancestry (I am aware that many Mormons are descended from European immigrants who converted in Europe and made the journey after conversion, but Mormons are still far more Old Stock Yankee than any group outside of interior New England).

  • New predictions for sea level rise

    Science Daily: Fossil coral data and temperature records derived from ice-core measurements have been used to place better constraints on future sea level rise, and to test sea level projections.

    The results are published in Nature Geoscience and predict that the amount of sea level rise by the end of this century will be between 7- 82 cm – depending on the amount of warming that occurs – a figure similar to that projected by the IPCC report of 2007.

    Placing limits on the amount of sea level rise over the next century is one of the most pressing challenges for climate scientists. The uncertainties around different methods to achieve accurate predictions are highly contentious because the response of the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets to warming is not well understood.

    Dr Mark Siddall from the University of Bristol, together with colleagues from Switzerland and the US, used fossil coral data and temperature records derived from ice-core measurements to reconstruct sea level fluctuations in response to changing climate for the past 22,000 years, a period that covers the transition from glacial maximum to the warm Holocene interglacial period.

    By considering how sea level has responded to temperature since the end of the last glacial period, Siddall and colleagues predict that the amount of sea level rise by the end of this century will be similar to that projected by the Fourth Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

    Dr Siddall said: “Given that the two approaches are entirely independent of each other, this result strengthens the confidence with which one may interpret the IPCC results. It is of vital importance that this semi-empirical result, based on a wealth of data from fossil corals, converges so closely with the IPCC estimates.

    “Furthermore, as the time constant of the sea level response is 2,900 years, our model indicates that the impact of twentieth-century warming on sea level will continue for many centuries into the future. It will therefore constitute an important component of climate change in the future.”

    The IPCC used sophisticated climate models to carry out their analysis, whereas Siddall and colleagues used a simple, conceptual model which is trained to match the sea level changes that have occurred since the end of the last ice age.

    Read more>>

  • Bahn burner turned track rat: MTM Audi RS6 Clubsport

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    Audi RS6 Clubsport by MTM – Click above for image gallery

    Of all the products in the Audi arsenal, we’re not sure if the RS6 would be our track rat of choice. It’s twin-turbocharged V10, massive meats and grippy all-wheel drive system is surely the stuff of track-day dreams, but we’ve always been more enamored by the RS6’s brutal, road-going civility – it’s simply better suited to high-speed cross-country runs rather than full-on tarmac attacks. MTM appears to disagree.

    The German tuner of all things Audi has put the sedan variant under the knife to create the RS6 Clubsport, and as with everything from MTM, it’s a compellingly comprehensive package.

    The mods start with a new front lip, carbon fiber rear diffuser, an adjustable suspension and black 21-inch wheels shod in Michelin Pilot Sport PS2 tires. Inside, the factory thrones have been nixed in favor of a duo of carbon fiber Recaro buckets with six-point harness attached to a rear-mounted roll cage that’s sure to have displaced the rear seats.

    Engine upgrades are limited to a high-flow air filter and stainless steel exhaust, but with the help of MTM’s crack ECU tuners, they’ve been able to boost output of the turbo’d 5.0-liter V10 to 720 horsepower (at 6,360 rpm) and and 579 pound-feet of torque (between 2,750 and 6,280 rpm) – a sizable increase over the stock engine’s 571 hp and 479 lb-ft of twist. And if you option up the tires to one of the four available compounds (and why wouldn’t you?), a derestricted top speed of 211 mph can be yours. We think we’ll take ours in five-door form, sans the cage. Maybe in brown…

    [Source: MTM via LeBlogAuto]

    Bahn burner turned track rat: MTM Audi RS6 Clubsport originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 30 Apr 2010 15:31:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • What’s More Accurate Than GPS? Photographs

    Locations identified within the 10 or 20 meters possible by GPS today are far too inaccurate — we need to know where we are we are right down to the millimeter! That was the gauntlet thrown down by Michael Liebhold, distinguished fellow at the Institute for the Future, speaking at a GigaOM Pro Bunker Session on location at the GigaOM office this week. With millimeter accuracy, augmented reality — digital information overlaid on a real-time view of the world — will actually become possible. “Right now we have all this toy AR,” said Liebhold. “This is useless.”

    So how do we get to millimeter accuracy? To find out, we followed up with Liebhold for a video interview. He said the most promising technique is to build model of the world using photographs, some of them geo-coded automatically, and the rest of them mapped using an understanding of where they are by comparing them to other images. So a photograph of vacationers in front of the Golden Gate bridge could be pinpointed in position using the precise angle of the orange arches in the background. Google Goggles is embarking on this very project, building a point cloud reference database using publicly available images like the ones from Flickr, said Liebhold, referencing remarks made by a member of the Goggles team at the recent Where 2.0 conference. (As is Microsoft, with its Photosynth product.)

    The Google project is scary, said Liebhold. Scary because of the privacy implications, I asked? No, he said, because if Google wants to do this, it will, and it will be hard to compete. Everyone wanting to use the most accurate location data will have to depend on Google.

    Liebhold did mention one promising startup effort in the space: Earthmine out of Berkeley, Calif., is building a set of street-view images captured in 3-D with every pixel geo-coded. (See our interview with them from a couple years back.)

    Intrigued as to how soon millimeter accuracy might happen and what it could enable? Here’s the video:

    Related content from GigaOM Pro (sub req’d):

    Report: Mobile Augmented Reality Today and Tomorrow

    Image courtesy of Flickr user jmlawlor

  • Cliq XT maintenance update being rolled out now

    Looks like the maintenance update that was being tested on the Cliq XT is now being rolled out to everybody. It’s in two parts, so you’ll need to do both of them. The update brings you fixes to:

    • Improves Overall Phone Performance
    • Visual Voice Mail Enhancements
    • Bluetooth Audio
    • Camera Correction
    • Screen/Display Performance
    • Text Messaging Improvements
    • Touch Screen Enhancement

    And we’re reminded that, no, it’s not Android 2.1. Gonna have to wait a little longer for that. [T-Mobile]

  • Climate debate gets ugly as world moves to curb CO2

    ABC News: Skeptics also accused the U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change of supporting flawed science after several errors in a major 2007 report surfaced.

    The errors, including a reference to a non-peer reviewed study that Himalayan glaciers would melt by 2035, represent a fraction of the conclusions in the report, the main climate policy guide for governments, which is based on the work of thousands of scientists.

    The IPCC has defended its work and has ordered a review. Many governments, including the United States, Britain and Australia have also reiterated their faith in the IPCC.

    For climate scientists, truth and trust are at stake.

    “In general, the battle for public opinion is being lost,” said Kevin Trenberth, head of climate analysis at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in Boulder, Colorado. His emails were also hacked in the CRU incident.

    “There is so much mis-information and so many polarized attitudes that one can not even hold a rational discussion or debate. The facts are certainly lost or glossed over in many cases. The media have been a bust.”

    Schneider said the mainstream media had failed to do “its job of sorting out credible from non-credible and not giving all claimants of truth equal status at the bargaining table.”

    Across the Internet, the climate science debate is being played out in a myriad of climate skeptic sites and blogs as well as sites defending the science of human-induced climate change.

    One high-profile site is climatedepot.com, run by Marc Morano, a former aide to Republican Senator James Inhofe, who is an outspoken critic of climate change policies.

    Morano, who told Reuters he had also been the target of abusive emails, has been quoted as saying that climate scientists should be publicly flogged.

    “The global warming scientists need to feel and hear the public’s outrage at their shenanigans like “climategate” … There is no advocacy of violence or hint that people should threaten them,” Morano said, adding: “Public outrage is healthy.”

    Read more>>

  • Building Green and Healthy Places to Learn


    Almost one in five Americans are housed in schools for the better part of each day, but many of these schools offer toxic environments with poor daylight and are sited in far-off places, which means they are both unhealthy learning environments and contribute to sprawl (or unhealthy communities). Creating green and healthy schools which are in walkable, bikeable neighborhoods is key to increasing test scores and graduating children who can be future stewards of the environment. But how do we build green schools? This question and others were asked during the National Building Museum’s latest “For the Greener Good” discussion on sustainable schools.

    Joanne Silberner, Health Correspondent, National Public Radio, moderated a panel featuring Dr. Howard Frumkin, Director, National Center for Environmental Health / Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; Steve Turckes, Director of K-12 Educational Facilities Group, Perkins+Will, and Glenn Cummings, Deputy Assistant Secretary, U.S. Department of Education.  

    Defining green schools

    According to Steve Turckes, Perkins + Will, sustainability was best defined by the Brundtland Report: it means meeting the need of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their needs. While sustainable design isn’t unique to schools, green schools must have lower energy and water usage, daylighting, and up-to-date mechanical systems. To be sustainable, these schools must also be sited in walkable environments.

    Green schools should also teach sustainability and incorporate their green building features into the curriculum. “The school should be used as a tool to teach students about sustainability. A well-designed school can be an encyclopedia.”

    Glenn Cummings, Deputy Assistant Secretary, U.S. Department of Education, concurred that the physical elements of a building are important, but, more importantly, green schools can help students “make the connections between the impact of their personal choices and the environment.” Green schools can create environments conducive to learning while also serving as an instructional tool. “For instance, through maximizing solar orientation, you can teach ecology, meteorology, climatology – students can learn about science.”

    “Green + healthy is the real sweet spot,” said Dr. Howard Frumkin, U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. While many buildings are green, some may not be healthy — you want to have both. People need physical activity to be healthy. 

    Data on green schools

    Frumkin said you can look at the rates of teacher and student absenteeism, asthma or other sicknesses, as well as test performance metrics and disciplinary problems at green and non-green schools. There’s positive “outcome data” out there, which can also be reviewed along with cost data. “Hopefully, once schools see this data, going green will just seem like good business sense.”

    On cost, Turckes referred to Greg Katz’s data (see earlier post), which shows the cost premium of any green building at around 2 percent. “However, that data is now four years old. Right now, we think there is no extra cost to building green. With the extra energy savings and health benefits, the question is why wouldn’t you do it?”

    Obstacles preventing the growth of green schools

    It seems amazing, but according to Cummings, 14 million children go to school each day in “outright dangerous” schools. As you see in Washington, D.C. before the school term starts, schools scramble to “remedy buildings so they will be legal to occupy.” The U.S. has hundreds of thousands of school buildings, many of which were created up to 50 years ago. “The real challenge is retrofitting older buildings so they can be turned into green buildings.”

    Turckes added that the vast majority of those older buildings haven’t benefitted from newer technologies. “There have been huge advances in building technologies.” But still, many older buildings are mold-infested and feature outmoded air ventilation systems. On the positive side, he said it’s not impossible to revamp an older school. “We just figured out how to integrate an energy-efficient system into a vintage 1960′s school.” 

    The perception of the higher cost of green schools may present an obstacle. “There is no extra cost to sustainable design — it’s embedded, a form-driver. We use integrated interdisciplinary teams to do design up front, thereby removing inefficiences and saving costs.” However, with tight budgets, some schools still see commissioning agent costs and U.S. Green Building Council (USGBC) accreditation costs as a burden. To fight this: Turckes says some schools use the sustainable design process, but go green without getting the certificate.

    On top of these challenges, local governments sometimes make it difficult for themselves. “Budget structures can create obstacles to green buildings — maintenance and operations are often in two separate pots.”

    Addressing health problem in schools now

    If a school can’t afford to retrofit, Frumkin said, they can replace toxic cleaning supplies, ensure they are keeping HVAC maintenance up-to-date, and continually discarding art / science labs. “With budget cuts, sloppiness can set in.” To prevent this sloppiness, Frumkin recommended the E.P.A.’s school audit tools. “Greeing a school doesn’t have to cost a fortune. Safer cleaning materials and doormats so students can wipe their feet at the entrances of school buildings can help keep toxins out.”

    Frumkin also said educational workers — teachers, administrators, janitors — face enormous occupational hazards working in these older schools. On the positive side though, he said, there were some good studies looking at these workers and showing the positive effects of moving to green schools.”They are an easy population to study because they stay in buildings for a long time.” Another benefit: “Green schools also retain staff better.”

    Designing a healthy environment around schools

    In terms of student health, siting schools in walkable neighborhoods is key to fighting obesity, diabetes, heart disease. Sedentary lifestyles set a bad example. Frumkin added, “unfortunately, now a small minority of children walk or bike to school. This didn’t used to be the case.”

    To remedy this, schools basically need Smart Growth neighborhoods, with high levels of connectivity, inter-connected grid-like networks of streets, careful intersection engineering, roads with traffic calming measures, and dedicated lanes for children to walk to school. “Sidewalks and paths need to be safe for children.”

    Frumkin added changes are needed to both the built environment, policy, and behavior. He cited Safe Routes to Schools, and No Child Left Inside, two major movements, as very positive.  He also called for high fructose-drinks and vending machines to be removed from schools.

    The future of sustainability

    Turckes said all buildings need to be carbon neutral or net-zero in the near future. “This is where we need to get.” He cited the Architecture 2030 campaign. The U.S. in particular needs to get its act together. “We have 5 percent of the world’s population, but use 25 percent of its resources. This needs to be dramatically improved.”

    Cummings said sustainability curriculum needs to be further incorporated into schools so the U.S. can scale up for the green jobs of the future. (see earlier post). One audience member noted, however, that even if sustainability is on teachers’ radars, it’s often not included in “No Child Left Inside”-mandated tests, so it gets bumped.

    “The recently passed health reform package will lead to a new focus on the prevention of illness,” Frumkin said. “Green buildings, sustainable neighborhoods, healthy lifestyles — my dream is to marry all these together.” In the future, he said, perhaps health specialists will also be involved in green building design from the onset.

    Image credit: 2010 Professional Honor Award, General Design. Nueva School, Hillsborough, CA U.S.A. Andrea Cochran Landscape Architecture, San Francisco, U.S.A.