Category: News

  • MHS Nabs $7M Series B

    Erin Kutz wrote:

    Management Health Solutions, a Fairfield, CT-based provider of inventory management software for hospitals, has pulled in a $7 million Series B round of equity funding, which enabled it to acquire mobile supply chain software provider AtPar, the company announced yesterday. The financing was led by Enhanced Equity Fund, a private equity fund focused on growth investing in the healthcare industry, and will also go to hiring new employees and expanding products and services.

    UNDERWRITERS AND PARTNERS



























  • A Day Without Media

    What is is like to go without media? What if you had to give up your cell phone, iPod, television, car radio, magazines, newspapers and computer i.e. no texting, no Facebook or IM-ing?

    Could you do it? Is it even possible?

    Well, not really, if you are an American college student today.

    According to a new ICMPA study, most college students are not just unwilling, but functionally unable to be without their media links to the world.

    via A Day Without Media.

  • Vulcão islandês é desafiado pela Toyota Hilux

    Imagens do vulcão islandês

    Mais um fato curioso é registrado na história da pick-up Hilux, depois da ousada tentativa de atravessar o vulcão Eyjafjallajökull (sem, o nome é bizarro mesmo e não tive um ataque ao digitar), situado na Islândia, poucas horas antes do mesmo entrar em erupção.

    A Hilux já possui um histórico curioso de façanhas, como em 2007 ao ser o primeiro automóvel a percorrer as placas de gelo da Antártida e a atingir o Polo Norte Magnético. Dessa vez, a conquista ao atravessar o vulcão islandês foi importante por ter conduzido os especialistas islandeses para lugares inabitados da região, para instalarem o equipamento científico e monitorar o magma dentro do vulcão e preverem a duração da erupção.

    A Hilux foi modificada especialmente para essa situação, com pneus de 38 polegadas de baixa pressão, e mostra mais uma vez ser uma pick-up muito robusta e confiável para situações extremas. Ponto para a Toyota!

    Imagens do vulcão islandês
    Imagens do vulcão islandêsImagens do vulcão islandêsImagens do vulcão islandêsImagens do vulcão islandês

    Via | Auto Portal


  • Horror, by custom

    Pure naked crime.

    Those three words, in powerful tandem, are from Humaira Awais Shahid, a Radcliffe Fellow this year. She is a Pakistani human rights activist, journalist, and former member of Parliament.

    The phrase, she said, describes how women are often treated by customary practices in Pakistani Islam and in its tribal cultures.

    From 70 to 90 percent of women in Pakistan are subjected to some kind of domestic violence, said Shahid, a consequence of what she called the “male dominance and commodification” of females.

    “Gender-based violence is most of the time pure naked crime … justified through heinous customary practices or cultural norms,” said Shahid. Often, crimes are perpetrated against a woman to “usurp her inheritance” as well as simply to punish, she said.

    The associated crimes are horrible, and they rang strange in sedate Radcliffe Gymnasium during an April 14 lecture: gang rape, marital rape, acid attacks, dowry killings, stove-burn killings, honor killings, forced marriage, and using women as objects of barter.

    As a journalist, she got “very close exposure to such stories,” said Shahid, whose talk was punctuated by more than one picture hard to look at. “I held the hands of so many women who were victims of acid crimes and stove burnings … who took their last breaths in front of me.”

    Such abuses affect men and children as well as women, she said, since they extend to usury, forced beggary, and prostitution. All the victims, regardless of gender, share the reality that they are poor. And they share something else: feudal systems that dominate both agriculture and civil governance in Pakistan — systems that are wielded like weapons to “assert control and violence,” she said.

    The agricultural sector is controlled “by a few thousand feudal families,” said Shahid. When members of the same families take positions in civil service, business, industry, and politics, she added, “their influence is multiplied in all directions.”

    Such are the “facts and realities of Pakistan today,” she said. “I want to take you to the world inside.”

    That world includes government, state, tribal, and religious mechanisms that are arrayed against women, children, and the poor, said Shahid. “Poverty overrides all kinds of mortality.”

    Religion as presently interpreted is not the only bulwark blocking reform, she said. There is the government itself. “I entered a Parliament that was traditional, feudalistic, notoriously corrupt, and literalist with dogmatic religious leaders and tribal chiefs,” said Shahid.

    But there is hope for change, and it comes from Islam itself, she said. “The humanistic ethics of Islam and the true essence of its teaching will emerge.”

    Paradoxically, “the only way to improve the condition of women … is to enforce Islamic rights,” said Shahid.

    She talked of the “criminal silence” on the part of authorities who ignore the women’s rights provisions already contained in Islamic law. “Most of the violence revolves around those issues,” said Shahid.

    They include a woman’s right to chose whom to marry, to divorce without evidence, to remarry without the consent of family, and to manage her own finances.

    The West cannot really help, nor will its wars help, she said, quoting an unnamed French thinker: “Nothing worthwhile can be done in Muslim countries except in the name of Islam.”

    Meanwhile, the deck remains stacked against Pakistan’s poor, and especially its women. Shahid pointed to history to find blame.

    In 1979, the Soviet Union invaded Afghanistan, an event that re-created the notion of jihad as a means to fight the war, transforming it from the concept of personal struggle into a weapon of political struggle.

    With Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda came damage to true Islam, she said, opening the doors wider to a “Wahabi fundamentalism” that had lain dormant for decades in the Middle East.

    To this day, said Shahid, most Pakistani Muslims regard “Islamism (as) a deviation from Islam” and not the true faith. At the same time, she said, most Pakistanis distrust the West too.

    But Wahabism — in part supported by petrodollars, she said — spread fast through religious schools (madrasas), religious political parties, and down into village councils, where patriarchal tribal cultures “became instrumental in exploiting and punishing women and the impoverished.

    In 1979, Zia ul-Haq, a fundamentalist Sunni dictator, imposed martial law in Pakistan and enforced Nizam-e-Mustafa, the “Islamic system” of law.

    That started “a significant turn” away from Pakistan’s predominantly Anglo-Saxon traditions of common law, Shahid said, which had been inherited from the British during the colonial era.

    One infamous artifact of this time was the Zia Ordinance, said Shahid. It required any woman claiming rape to produce four pious male witnesses, a threshold of evidence so high that women received the lash while the men went unpunished. The ordinance, which failed to distinguish between adultery and fornication, was finally repealed in 2006.

    Then there was the Qisas and Diyat Ordinance of 1990, another law that had the effect of increasing violence against women. It allowed the victim of a crime, or the victim’s heirs, to inflict a punishment on a perpetrator that was equal to the crime. It also allowed the perpetrator to pay the victims for a crime.

    The practical effect of this was to “privatize” crime, said Shahid, with women most often the pawns in cross-family disputes involving honor.

    Village councils, or jirgas, meanwhile, often used such disputes to settle personal scores, arriving at verdicts, she said, “which are against humanistic ethics.”

    Shahid mentioned one infamous case. A Pakistani villager was sentenced in 2003 to be gang raped in order to compensate for her brother’s alleged adultery. Afterward, she was paraded naked in front of hundreds. Her rape was a vani — “women barter” — case, said Shahid. (As a legislator, she introduced a resolution to abolish and punish vani. It was adopted into Pakistani federal law in 2005.)

    Women and the poor are still generally caught between two judicial systems that fail to work in their favor, said Shahid. Government systems, already weakened by gender bias, supported enforcement agencies that were slow to investigate crimes against women, or ignored them all together.

    Informal justice systems like jirgas are “speedy and inexpensive” and take pressure off formal justice systems, said Shahid. But at the same time they are also mechanisms that use “customary norms … for personal gains.”

    While in the United States, Shahid has not been silent or inactive. Since January, she has traveled to Washington, D.C., three times to argue for the passage of the International Violence Against Women Act. It would make combating violence against women a “strategic imperative” for the United States.

    Curb violence by pre-empting it, said Shahid, who will travel to the capital again in May. “You don’t need 30,000 women raped.”

  • RLI Shaker

    The RLI “Shaker” rotary paddle switch is used to detect high / low levels of bulk granular solids in bins, tanks and silos. It can also be used to detect plug conditions in spouts, where long life and failsafe detection is required.

    METHOD OF OPERATION:
    Utilizing a unique stepper motor drive, the RLI “Shaker” rotates clockwise, then counter-clockwise and then shakes to shed any excess material build up.  If the paddle rotation is impeded at any time by the bulk material then the electronic circuit provides a signal for level indication or control.
     
    The RLI “Shaker” uses fewer mechanical parts compared with standard rotary level indicators. No gearbox or clutch is required as the stepper motor drive is directly coupled to the output shaft and is practically indestructible and cannot be damaged by forced or backwards rotation. Also, an adjustable torque control allows one unit to cover many different densities of material, and provides easy on site calibration without having to change paddles.

  • Earth Day Reflections

    Published: April 28, 2010
    Author: Staff

    Below are the views that faculty shared with the HBS community on Earth Day.

    1. Robert G. Eccles

    Senior Lecturer of Business Administration and author of One Report: Integrated Reporting for a Sustainable Strategy

    (This article, titled, “The Annual Report as Sustainability’s Secret Weapon”, was originally published on Harvard Business Review‘s faculty blog on April 19, 2010.)

    Spring brings April showers, May flowers—and a flurry of annual reports. Mine have been arriving in the mail, and I am always interested to see what the companies I own stock in have to say about themselves in this ritualistic document filled with financial information, different types of narratives, and lots of pretty pictures.

    The amount of detail and the level of complexity in the financial section have grown considerably in response to the increasing onslaught of accounting rules and regulations. What’s more, since going green is now red hot, a growing number of companies—especially in Europe and Japan—are also starting to issue Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) or Sustainability reports. Sometimes these are mailed with the annual report, but more often they have to be ordered separately or downloaded from the company’s Web site. Unfortunately, the two reports rarely add up to something greater than the sum of their parts.

    This is a huge problem. A sustainable society requires that all companies be committed to sustainable strategies. Increasing social expectations regarding a company’s commitment to sustainability mean that firms that ignore this do so at their own risk. BMW Group has been a leader in recognizing this. Several years ago, it issued a Sustainable Value Report detailing energy consumed, water consumed, waste removed, and volatile organic compounds per vehicle produced. Scoring high in all these categories, BMW believes that its reputation as the world’s “greenest” car company plays an important role in brand awareness and customer satisfaction, factors that contribute to revenue growth.

    So how can shareholders and other stakeholders know if a company’s commitment to a sustainable society is contributing to a sustainable strategy that will create value for shareholders over the long term? The answer lies in combining the annual and CSR/sustainability reports into something I call “One Report,” which provides the essential information on a company’s financial, environmental, social, and governance performance and shows the relationships between them. This kind of Integrated reporting also involves leveraging the Internet to provide more detailed information to all a company’s stakeholders while also providing them with the opportunity to engage in a virtual dialogue on these matters.

    Some major corporations are starting to take the lead in this effort, including United Technologies Corporation, Philips (the Dutch electronics and health care giant), the German chemical company BASF, and Danish pharmaceutical maker Novo Nordisk. At United Technologies, whose products include Carrier air conditioners, Otis elevators, and Pratt & Whitney aircraft engines, a recent integrated report focused on such nonfinancial metrics as lower fuel consumption and noise emissions in a new jet engine and a reduced carbon footprint and water consumption in the firm’s factories. The juxtaposition of information on both operations and CSR symbolizes the company’s commitment to more than just the bottom line and its belief that both sets of data have a significant impact on the long-term success and reputation of the company. In UT’s view, CSR is both a reality and necessity, not an addendum.

    Novo Nordisk presents stockholders and other stakeholders with a multidimensional Web site that enables visitors to create a customized version of their annual report, access in-depth information about sustainability practices, contact company officers, and even play interactive games showing the challenges and trade-offs the company faces in making difficult decisions.

    Thanks to these kinds of One Report practices, these companies actually document their commitment to sustainability, make better decisions based on a broader collection of data, engage more deeply and effectively with all their stakeholders, and lower reputational risk through a high level of transparency.

    Given the importance of sustainability, I think companies have an ethical obligation to practice integrated reporting, and investors have a similar obligation to demand it. In fact, I believe the SEC should make it a requirement. As we all try to come up with solutions to the problems of the planet, integrated reporting is one way to make sure that companies are part of the process.

    2. Rebecca Henderson

    Senator John Heinz Professor of Environmental Management and author of Accelerating Innovation in Energy: Lessons from Other Sectors.

    The environmental challenges we face are among the most important issues facing business.

    If, as current scientific research suggests, it would be prudent to remove 80 percent of the carbon from the economy by 2050, it is critical to find effective ways to support far-reaching change in both products and processes across our entire economy.

    My current research focuses on large organizations that are attempting to take advantage of sustainability in order to build new businesses or improve the efficiency of the work they are already doing. For, example I am helping a major U.S. utility look at the implications of possible carbon regulation and the way they structure their business. I’m working with a large consumer goods company to look at the implications of the environmental challenges we face in terms of innovation across their product lines. I also do a fair amount of work with a large IT company that sees enormous opportunities in energy monitoring, water monitoring, and waste monitoring.

    In general, I work with large companies to respond to the challenges we face in flexible and creative ways. I also examine the strategic and organizational barriers that corporations face in making more efficient use of natural resources or deciding to invest in sustainable technologies.

    There are four major barriers: The first is that companies are dubious about the technologies. The second is that they think their customers won’t support the change because they are satisfied with the current product. The third is that they think it will negatively impact their revenue. And the fourth is they don’t want to change the way the organization runs.

    Once you understand the barriers, you can tackle each of them in turn. At the most simplistic level, you focus on addressing strategic questions such as: Why will this new technology meet customer needs, even if those needs aren’t obvious right now? Why will it form the basis of new business models that will allow us to make money?

    There are a number of very large, important, and well-run organizations making significant commitments to sustainability. I would cite Wal-Mart, Cisco, IBM, Unilever, Duke Energy, and Marks & Spencer as organizations on the leading edge. For example, Wal-Mart is working to completely re-make its supply chain in order to be more sustainable. IBM has put an enormous amount of time and energy behind its “A Smarter Planet” initiative. And Unilever’s leadership team has announced publically that it plans to double the size of the company—a €40 billion multinational—without growing its environmental footprint.

    I realize that not every company can make a commitment like Unilever’s, but there are enormous opportunities for companies in tightening up processes. Many of the environmental challenges we face are a result of assuming that environmental goods and services like emissions, water, waste, or topsoil are free or cheap.

    A few years ago, a manager at a large IT company said something to me that I’ve never forgotten.”For many years we’ve optimized our business as if capital and labor are what is expensive and we’ve gotten very good at optimizing in those areas,” he observed.” What we need to learn to do now is optimize the use of energy and water. Since it’s not something we’ve been focusing on very much, I suspect we’ll see enormous progress.”

    That’s my sense as well.

    We need to transform the entire economy—the built environment, our agricultural systems, and how we deal with energy. It’s a massive undertaking. It’s going to touch nearly every aspect of our lives, and it’s going to be an incredible source of opportunity for entrepreneurial activity.

    3. Richard H.K. Vietor

    Paul Whiton Cherington Professor of Business Administration and author of Environmental Protection and the Social Responsibility of Firms.

    Forty years ago, before I went to graduate school, I was teaching high school history on Long Island. I considered myself an environmentalist even then, and so on that very first Earth Day in 1970, I rode to school on a bicycle. In case anyone missed the point, I also wore a gas mask.

    To put this in some historical perspective, not all that long ago, environmentalism could be described as an underground movement. However, all that began to change in 1969 when 3 million gallons of crude oil spilled into the Santa Barbara Channel in California. The federal government reacted with the passage of the National Environmental Policy Act, which requires all projects licensed by the government to file an environmental impact statement. The Clean Air Act, a powerful law against air pollution, was passed in 1970, followed by other legislation that focused on water, strip mining, and hazardous waste. Today, Earth Day gets the universal attention it deserves from millions of people around the globe.

    That said, the rallying cry that “green is good for business” is still not shouted in the halls of many corporations. Companies like Ben and Jerry’s, Patagonia, and 3M can make money by going green. GE, with its “ecomagination” campaign, has created cleaner and more efficient jet engines and locomotives as well as desalinization and water treatment plants. And firms are also publishing annual “green reports” and feeling pressure from green investors to take steps that can cost them billions of dollars. But if you go to a coal company or most utilities or big railroads that carry coal, they will do what the government requires and leave it at that.

    So, after today’s celebration, there is much work to be done. In Massachusetts, there has been considerable controversy regarding the building of wind turbines on Cape Cod—a situation I describe in a case study I’ve written. But no matter what happens there, only about 1.9 percent of all our electric energy now comes from wind and solar. Our capabilities are growing, but not fast enough.

    Nuclear power should be part of the answer, although these facilities are very expensive to build—$6-8 billion for a thousand megawatt plant—and the disposal of nuclear waste remains a huge stumbling block among voters. The United States has 101 nuclear plants already online but could use 50 to 70 more. All this underscores that fact that options come with complications. A gas tax increase would reduce U.S. fuel consumption. While Italians are paying the equivalent of $6.50 per gallon, we Bostonians are paying about $2.50. But try selling that argument to someone who has to drive over 70 miles to work each day. Meanwhile, the Copenhagen climate conference ended with no agreement, and the American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009, proposed by Representatives Henry Waxman (D-CA) and Ed Markey (D-MA) to “achieve energy independence and reduce global warming” was recently defeated in the Senate.

    At some point, however, more and more people and nations will have to conclude that improving the environment and protecting against climate change will require some sacrifices from all of us. If not, there are serious consequences ahead for future generations. For example, if the temperature goes up 2-½ degrees Celsius worldwide, the resulting heat wave will have devastating effects on people, animals, and crops as energy consumption skyrockets.

    The 40th anniversary of Earth Day is, therefore, a time for both celebration and reflection. This is no time for self-centered decisions or short-term planning. The future of the planet actually does hang in the balance.

    In addition, executive summaries and panelist presentation slides from the “Think Tank on Energy, the Environment, and Business: Leadership for Action in Time and at Scale” held at HBS from March 3-5, 2010 are now posted online.

  • Bulldog – alignment & rip detection switch

    The Bulldog alignment and rip detection switch is an electro-mechanical system designed to detect dangerous misalignment of the conveyor and also detection of belt tear damage.

    METHOD OF OPERATION:
    The switch will detect horizontal misalignment of belts when contact is made with the roller, the roller arm will be forced to pivot by the belt activating a switch at 15º to trigger an alarm, and 30º to trigger a shut down procedure of the conveyor. The sensors are usually installed in pairs on opposite sides of the belt.
    A steel flexible wire is set below the running conveyor belt approx 20-30mm attached by a rare earth magnet at each end. If the belt is ripped or damaged the wire is pulled away releasing the magnet connection which in turn will activate a switch.

  • Environmental Federalism in the European Union and the United States

    Published: April 28, 2010
    Paper Released: March 2010
    Authors: David Vogel, Michael Toffel, Diahanna Post, and Nazli Z. Uludere Aragon

    Executive Summary:

    Under what circumstances will individual states take the lead in passing the most stringent environmental regulations, and when will the federal government take the lead? When a state takes a leadership role, will other states follow? HBS professor Michael Toffel and coauthors describe the development of environmental regulations in the U.S. and EU that address automobile emissions, packaging waste, and global climate change. They use these three topics to illustrate different patterns of environmental policymaking, describe the changing dynamics between state and centralized regulation in the United States and the EU. Key concepts include:

    • State governments have been an important source of policy innovation and diffusion for automobile emissions in the EU and the U.S., and packaging waste policies in the EU. In these cases, state authorities were the first to regulate, and their regulations resulted in the adoption of more stringent regulatory standards by the central government.
    • With climate change policies, the EU and its member states have developed regulations in tandem, reinforcing each other.
    • In the U.S., state governments developed more innovate regulations than the federal government for both climate change and packaging waste, but these policies have not substantially diffused to other states.

    Abstract

    The United States (US) and the European Union (EU) are federal systems in which the responsibility for environmental policy-making is divided or shared between the central government and the (member) states. The attribution of decision-making power has important policy implications. This chapter compares the role of central and local authorities in the US and the EU in formulating environmental regulations in three areas: automotive emissions for health related (criteria) pollutants, packaging waste, and global climate change. Automotive emissions are relatively centralised in both political systems. In the cases of packaging waste and global climate change, regulatory policy-making is shared in the EU, but is primarily the responsibility of local governments in the US. Thus, in some important areas, regulatory policy-making is more centralised in the EU. The most important role local governments play in the regulatory process is to help diffuse stringent local standards through more centralised regulations, a dynamic which has recently become more important in the EU than in the US.
    42 pages.

    Paper Information

  • Gabourey Sidibe “The View” Co-Host May 4

    Good-natured Hollywood newcomer Gabby Sidibe will make her first appearance as guest co-host of The View next Tuesday, May 4. Sidibe, as you’ll recall, was nominated for a Best Oscar for her breakout role in the 2009 drama Precious.


  • Aprilia brings welcome updates to 2010 Shiver 750, releases new images

    Filed under:

    2010 Aprilia Shiver 750 – Click above for high-res image gallery

    Aprilia’s Shiver 750 has yet to set the world on fire due to a number of reasons that include an abnormally high seat and pegs that scrap way too early when the bike is pushed anywhere near its limits. Be that as it may, the basic platform is a sound one, and Aprilia has seen fit to give the bike a series of updates that ought to make it more competitive with Ducati’s standard-bearing Monster line.

    Chief amongst the functional changes include rider footpegs that are placed further back and higher up than before. Coupled with a handlebar that’s lower and further forward, the 2010 Shiver should put its rider in a slightly sportier stance. Seat height has been lowered by .2 inches, which isn’t a lot, but since the seat is also significantly narrower, shorter riders should be able to get their feet more solidly on terra firma.

    Finally, the rear wheel’s width goes down half an inch to 5.5 inches, which should make the bike a wee bit snappier when making side-to-side transitions. Other than that, the only alterations are to the bike’s appearance, and fortunately, everything is looking classically Italian. Will those minor changes be enough to accelerate the Shiver’s sales closer to Aprilia’s expectations? We’ll see.

    [Source: Aprilia via Hell For Leather]

    Aprilia brings welcome updates to 2010 Shiver 750, releases new images originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 28 Apr 2010 08:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • What do brains, worms and computer chips have in common?

    'Brains are often compared to computers, but apart from the trivial fact that both process...

    An international team of scientists has discovered that the human brain, the nervous system of a worm and a computer chip are strikingly similar. The research may help to explain the relationship between the processing elements (or gray matter) and the wiring (the white matter) in the brains of a wide range of mammals. Moreover, it appears that in the case of the brain and a computer chip – evolution and technological innovation have developed the same solutions to optimal mapping patterns. ..
    Continue Reading What do brains, worms and computer chips have in common?

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  • Bacardi will harness wind power at Puerto Rico distillery

    From Green Right Now Reports

    If the impending arrival of summer has you thinking about drinks featuring paper umbrellas and a splash or two of rum, you may be able to support environmental responsibility as you kick back and relax: Rum manufacturer Bacardi is installing the largest wind turbine operation in Puerto Rico to help power the company’s top global distillery near San Juan.

    Image: Bacardi

    Image: Bacardi

    The two wind turbine units are industrial scale at 250kW each and are owned by Cataño-based Aspenall Energies, which will sell the electricity  to Bacardi. With their blades, the turbines are 137 feet high and have a rotor diameter of 75 feet.

    The turbines are expected to generate approximately 1,000,000 kWh of electricity per year, accounting for three to seven percent of the power used by Bacardi. That’s roughly the consumption of tourism-related activities at its Casa Bacardi Visitor Center (and equivalent to the consumption of about 100 average households) with an expected carbon offset of more than 900 tons of CO2 per year. All of the power generated by the turbines will be consumed by the Bacardi facility.

    “Puerto Rico relies on fossil fuels for virtually all its energy, so we hope other companies will follow this great leadership by Bacardi to use wind energy and other renewable energy sources,” said Puerto Rico Governor Luis G. Fortuño.

    “This sort of forward-thinking is exactly what we must encourage in Puerto Rico. This is precisely why we are introducing energy reform measures that will establish a better policy and regulatory framework that will enable more investment in renewable energy projects. The government will serve as a partner through incentives and other support that will result in all individuals and businesses having more opportunities to become part of the energy solution.”

    Other environmental initiatives at the Bacardi plant:

    • Carbon dioxide, produced as an intermediate product during the fermentation process, is recovered and sold to third parties, mostly for carbonated beverages. From June 2008 through February 2009, Bacardi recovered and sold 10,378,251 lbs (5,189 tons) of CO2.
    • Bacardi treats wastewater that is then used in cooling towers during the production process, saving 22,000 gallons of water every day.
    • The company recycles old aging barrels by dismantling and chopping them and giving the chips to employees as mulch.
    • Bacardi cuts used promotional banners and sews them into reusable shopping bags for employees.
  • Despite June launch for EVO 4G, Sprint to get Nexus One in May?

    Sprint Nexus One

    We all know there was a little concern yesterday, on the part of Sprint Android fans, when it became apparent that the CDMA version of the Nexus One was replaced by the HTC Incredible on Verizon.  The logical question being: ‘If VZW is giving N1 the can, what about Sprint?’ or ‘Does this mean that the HTC EVO 4G will be replacing the N1 on Sprint?  No matter how you put it, the fear was arguably valid.

    The fellows at AndroidGuys decided to take matters into their own hands, and while they haven’t received anything particularly definitive from either Google or Sprint, they did have a brief conversation with Sprint customer service that – if nothing more – leaves us hopeful.  Here’s a snapshot of how it went:

    “Benjamin Rubenstein: I was wondering if Sprint will still be getting the Nexus One, and if so when?
    Jenny K: I have checked the information for you. Unfortunately, we do not have the information about the launching date of this phone. This is correct that we are going to launch the nexus. It will be most probably launched in May.
    Benjamin Rubenstein: So just cuz the CDMA Verizon version is not happening, doesn’t mean that Sprint’s gonna bail also?
    Benjamin Rubenstein: Isn’t it dangerous to launch the Nexus around the same time as EVO 4G? Or is Sprint not concerned about that?
    Jenny K: Yes, Nexus is different phone and EVO is different phone. The launch time of both the phone is different.
    Benjamin Rubenstein: but isn’t EVO launching in June?
    Jenny K: Yes, you are correct. We are going to launch the EVO in June.
    Benjamin Rubenstein: But Nexus One is coming in May? Perhaps being launched around Google I/O?
    Jenny K: Yes, you are correct.”

    As you can see, at least one Sprint CSR seems to think that the Nexus One (a “different phone” from the HTC EVO 4G) will still be headed to Sprint, and in May no less.  Additionally, in re-reading the press release Sprint issued back in March about the N1, some of the language makes it pretty clear that N1 they are referring to is the one that comes only from the Google online store – though as we’ve seen with Vodafone, plans certainly can change.  In any case, here is the snippet from the release that I was speaking of:

    “Google’s online consumer channel was created to provide an efficient way to connect online users with selected Android phones. Nexus One will not be available in any Sprint retail channels. It will be available directly from Google at google.com/phone. The online experience of Google’s web store is designed with a focus on simplicity allowing consumers to match a phone with the service plan that best meets their needs.”

    So what’s it going to be, Nexus One or EVO 4G?  And if the N1 does come out before the EVO 4G, who’s going to be patient enough to wait?  Feel free to leave your thoughts in the comments!

    Update: Naturally we were curious about what the future holds for the Nexus One on Sprint, so we reached out to see if they had anything to say on the issue.  This is what we were told: “We have not made any updates on Nexus One since the March press release – we have not announced pricing or availability.”  What does this mean?  Let’s be honest, who knows?  On the one hand you could say that if there is no change that everything remains the same and the N1 will indeed come to Sprint via Google’s online store.  On the other hand they did say “we have not announced pricing or availability” which could also suggest that the N1 may not become available at all, at least not in its originally intended form.  Looks like father time wins again, folks – only the future holds the truth.

    Via AndroidGuys


  • Kenyan Writer Mukoma wa Ngugi Enters New Terrain with His First Novel, Nairobi Heat

    Mukoma wa Ngugi

    Until recently, Kenyan writer Mukoma wa Ngugi was best known as a poet and as a commentator on African politics. But with the publication of his first novel, Nairobi Heat (Penguin Books), Mukoma, a SAGES fellow at Case Western Reserve University, has entered very different literary terrain.

    Nairobi Heat is a detective story by an author hoping to bridge the gap between “serious” literature and popular fiction. Mukoma wanted to write a novel that was “fun to read,” a book that made readers feel they were “on an exciting journey.” But he also wanted to explore themes of race and identity, conscience and justice.

    The novel begins in Madison, Wisconsin, when a young white woman is found murdered on the porch of an African professor — a man honored for his rescue efforts during the 1994 Rwandan genocide. The investigation leads an African American detective to Kenya, where he finds reasons to question the professor’s heroic image.

    The novel was inspired by an incident from Mukoma’s life. While attending the University of Wisconsin-Madison as a graduate student in English, he came home early one morning to find a young woman passed out on the stairs to his upper-level apartment.

    He called the police. An African American officer responded. The young woman, dressed in a cheerleader’s uniform, was taken away by ambulance.

    Afterwards, Mukoma wondered what would have happened if the woman had died. What would have been the outcome if an African American had investigated an African?

    Mukoma’s work is part of a literary resurgence taking place after years of government repression in Kenya. His first book, a collection of poems titled Hurling Words at Consciousness, appeared in 2006. Last year, one of his stories was shortlisted for the Caine Prize in African Writing, the continent’s major literary award.

    In addition, Mukoma is a columnist for the BBC’s Focus on Africa magazine. His political writings have appeared in the Guardian, the International Herald Tribune, Chimurenga, the Los Angeles Times, the South African Labour Bulletin and the Business Daily African.

    Among his major influences, Mukoma points to his father, the world-renowned novelist and postcolonial theorist Ngugi wa Thiong’o.

    Ngugi was among the writers who suffered under the dictatorships of Jomo Kenyatta and then of Daniel arap Moi. In 1977, he was detained without trial for one year and eventually forced into exile in 1982. He left for Great Britain and later settled in the United States.

    Mukoma was 11 years old when his father was driven from Kenya. “Any time my father did something political abroad, the government put pressure on the family at home,” he recalled. “We were for all practical purposes hostages.” The police sometimes raided their home in the small rural town of Limuru, and people who dared to associate with them lost their jobs and were threatened by the government.

    When the political situation overwhelmed the family, his older siblings entertained Mukoma and his younger sister by telling stories about a cowboy named Mwangi.

    “They would start whistling, and we knew they would begin to tell us a cowboy story,” he recalls. “They always stopped at a suspenseful point.”

    Later, he realized they were making up the plot as they went along and only stopped because they’d run out of ideas. Still, the stories were enough to raise his spirits.

    Although he spent nearly all of his early life in Kenya, Mukoma was born in the United States. At the time, his father was a visiting professor at Northwestern University. At age 19, Mukoma returned to the U.S. to attend Albright College in Pennsylvania and has lived in this country ever since.

    His most recent impressions of Africa derive from visits he has made with his father. When the two of them go to Kenya, undercover security forces escort them through the street. This experience, Mukoma says, helped shape Nairobi Heat. In portraying some of his characters, he drew on stories the security officers had told him.

    He also brings the continent to life in his SAGES seminar on African literature. Examining issues that have affected Africa over the past half century, his students read some of his father’s works along with Helon Habila’s Waiting for an Angel, Nawaal Saadawi’s Woman at Point Zero and Tayeb Saleh’s Season of Migration to the North.

    Story written by Arthur Evenchik.

    For more information contact Susan Griffith, 216.368.1004.

  • 12 Charts On The Amazing History Of Human Economic Development

    china peasants

    A Swedish doctoral thesis on the “acceleration of human enterprise” written by Dana Cordell offers an awesome glimpse into the history of human economic development and its effects on the world.

    The vast majority of wealth, tourism, fertilizer use, etc. all took place in the past fifty years — and human enterprise is still increasing.

    That’s why we’re facing a water crisis, oil crisis, and a debt crisis.

    Now check out…

    Now check out...

    Image: MCA/Universal Pictures

    15 Depressing Facts About The Coming Water Crisis

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Garmin-Asus Announce Pedestrian-Friendly A10

    Garmin Ltd. and ASUSTeK Computer Inc. (Garmin-Asus) have officially announced their next Android-based handset, the A10. This time around, the company is turning their focus to pedestrians and personal navigation. The A10 comes with a 3.2-inch HVGA touch display, a 5-megapixel camera with auto-focus, and a 1500mAh battery.

    Garmin gas preloaded the phone with detailed maps to help eliminate the need for servers to update locations. This also ensures that users don’t drop their turn-by-turn directions in the event they lose cellular coverage. And what would a Garmin device be without automobile-ready navigation? The A10 comes with a powered audio mount that magnifies the volume for the times users decide to get back into a car.

    The device comes with a host of Google applications installed, including YouTube, Google Maps, and Gmail and is compatible with Microsoft Exchange server. There’s an optional cityXplorer Maps, application available which helps users plan routes using public transit (bus, rail, tram).

    Look for the Garmin-Asus A10 around the middle of the year in Europe and Asia-Pacific.

    Might We Suggest…


  • Poll: ‘Taint of Incumbency’ Is a Continuing Trend

    Republicans hoping that voter unrest is targeted largely at the majority Democrats won’t like what they see in the latest Washington Post-ABC poll. That survey found that fewer than a third of voters are inclined to vote for their current representative, regardless of the lawmakers’ party affiliation. The Post reports:

    Dissatisfaction is widespread, crossing party lines, ideologies and virtually all groups of voters. Less than a quarter of independents and just three in 10 Republicans say they’re leaning toward backing an incumbent this fall. Even among Democrats, who control the House, the Senate and the White House, opinion is evenly divided on the question.

    This isn’t a new trend. Indeed, elections experts were warning months ago that Americans’ distrust in Congress crosses party lines to target all incumbents. Because the Democrats control more seats, of course, they stand ready to suffer the backlash more severely. But today’s poll results are a warning to Republican leaders that, in November, they’re in for a fight as well.

  • IPCC’s River Of Lies: Investors.com

    Article Tags: Editorial, FloodGate

    Global Warming: Another shoe has dropped from the IPCC centipede as scientists in Bangladesh say their country will not disappear below the waves. As usual, the U.N.’s climate charlatans forgot one tiny detail.

    It keeps getting worse for the much-discredited Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which seems to have built its collapsing house of climate cards on sand or, more specifically, river sediment.

    After fraudulent claims about Himalayan glaciers, African crop harvests and Amazon rain forests, plus a 2007 assessment report based on anecdotal evidence, student term papers and nonpeer-reviewed magazine articles, the panel’s doomsday forecast for Bangladesh has been exposed as its latest hoax.

    According to the 2007 report, melting glaciers and polar ice would lead to rising sea levels and just a three-foot rise would flood 17% of the low-lying country of Bangladesh by 2050 and create 20 million refugees.

    Source: investors.com

    Read in full with comments »   


  • Sagem’s Solar-powered Puma Phone Says Hello to the FTC

    You’re an outdoorsy type, aren’t you? You only read mobile-phone blogs on your down-time between hiking and BASE jumping. I can tell.

    Being that you are that wonderful blend of outdoorsman (or outdoorswoman) and phone aficionado, I bet you’re often peeved about the whole lack of power outlets in the wild (I know I am). Well, well, looky here, someone out there has heard your cries.

    Sagem are soon to release their solar-powered, puma-branded feature-phone to the masses. How do we know that? Well, it’s just gone and had it’s first photo shoot with the FCC, that’s how.

    It’s not all candy and rainbows (or mountains and douglas firs, if you’d prefer), though, as it seems that the supported bands are GSM 850, 900, 1800 and 1900, as well as WCDMA I and VIII… which means no 3G in the US. Sorry, peeps.

    It is, however, slated for release in Europe in April, so at least you know you can make phone calls while traversing the Swiss Alps, Bond style. International markets will follow “later”.

    [via Wireless Goodness]


  • Sprint Hosting EVO Event May 12

    The Sprint EVO is looking like the Android phone to beat, at least it will be when it launches. The carrier has always stated availability in “summer 2010″ and as that is rapidly approaching it is no surprise to see Sprint hosting a launch event on May 12. The event is by invitation only, and unfortunately since I’m not in New York City I won’t be able to attend. I do believe the EVO, the first phone with 4G in the U.S., may be my next phone so it’s good to see it getting closer to launch.