Category: News

  • Poll and Glass of Water Show it is the Chinese Who Live in the Land of the Free, Not Americans


    Yesterday when Senator John Kerry was begging the polluters who actually run this country not to be mean about the new energy bill he is attempting to thread through the tiny Senate needle of their opposition, he told a very illustrative story about the widening gap between the US and China. On a pre-climate-bill-release We Can Lead phone call, he described being extremely dismayed by a glass of water.

    Kerry was on a high speed train in China, and the glass of water on his table was perfectly stable at 300 miles an hour. By contrast, as he pointed out, our piddly little old underfunded Amtrack just veers about on its ancient old tracks, voted in decades before filibusters killed good governance. We are falling behind our main competitor technologically in a kind of massive infrastructure failure.

    A poll out today from Ernst & Young’s Global Automotive Center shows why.
    (more…)

  • Fast Food News: It Boosts Impatience, and What Trumps KFC’s Double Down? | Discoblog

    It’s a common nutritional fail–you pledge to make a nice, fresh home-cooked meal, but get impatient and opt for fast food instead. Now, new research suggests that ‘we are how we eat’ and that the mere thought of fast food can result in general impatience. Researchers from the University of Toronto conducted a series of experiments in which they showed volunteers logos from several fast-food chains or asked them to recall the last time they’d visited, writes Scientific American.
    And they found that folks who had thought about fast food would then read faster, even though no one told them to hurry. And they also expressed a preference for time-saving products, like shampoo plus conditioner. And they tended to opt for immediate rewards, like getting a small cash payment right away rather than waiting a week for a larger sum.
    Looking at the results, the researchers conclude that a fast-food lifestyle may not only impacts people’s waistlines, but may also have a far-reaching and often unconscious impact on their behavior. In other fast-food news, over the last couple of days the American people have been simultaneously horrified and fascinated by KFCs new Double Down sandwich–which is two pieces of fried chicken sandwiching a bunch …


  • Scientist says Arctic getting colder

    Article Tags: World Temperatures

    MOSCOW, April 23 (UPI) — A Russian scientist says the Arctic may be getting colder, not warmer, which would hamper the international race to discover new mineral fields.

    An Arctic cold snap that began in 1998 could last for years, freezing the northern marine passage and making it impassable without icebreaking ships, said Oleg Pokrovsky of the Voeikov Main Geophysical Observatory.

    “I think the development of the shelf will face large problems,” Pokrovsky said Thursday at a seminar on research in the Polar regions.

    Scientists who believe the climate is warming may have been misled by data from U.S. meteorological stations located in urban areas, where dense microclimates creates higher temperatures, RIA Novosti quoted Pokrovsky as saying.

    “Politicians who placed their bets on global warming may lose the pot,” Pokrovsky said.

    Source: upi.com

    Read in full with comments »   


  • King County executive: more layoffs in DDES

    Job shifting will change nothing

    Editor, The Times:

    “Layoffs to let county avoid fee increases” [NWWednesday, April 21] told the story of potential layoffs by King County Executive Dow Constantine in the Department of Development and Environmental Services (DDES) so that applicants needing DDES services could pay fixed fees rather than the presently exorbitant hourly rates for the use of DDES approval functions.

    About 15 employees in the department were to be eliminated to address the issue. Unfortunately, Frank Abe, director of communication, said Tuesday “that a few of those workers may avoid layoffs by moving to vacant positions,” an appalling comment since that would, in fact, result in no reduction in staff.

    There should be no recourse to people laid off by transfer into unfilled positions because the suggested staff reduction would not occur. “Special” people in the effected group would remain on the payroll.

    I applaud Constantine’s desire to cut county government expenses, but shifting people into unfilled positions does not accomplish that opportunity. In fact, all unfilled positions should be permanently eliminated to prevent this potential job-shifting arrangement.

    — John Marthens, Normandy Park

  • Greenpeace Will Not Support Senate Climate Bill

    Earlier this afternoon, I speculated on what the concessions to industry in the Senate climate bill would mean for environmental groups’ support. “Is this enough for some liberal groups to withhold their support?” I asked. “Probably — although the mainstream of the environmental movement is likely to bite the bullet and throw its weight behind the country’s best chance to curb greenhouse gas emissions.”

    Well, that question’s already starting to be answered. Greenpeace delivers a resounding “yes”:

    Offering the first evidence of the complex Senate debate that lies ahead on an energy reform bill, the environmental group Greenpeace said Friday it intends to oppose the legislation that a bipartisan group of Senators intend to introduce next week.

    “Although we appreciate the Senate’s efforts to reduce global warming pollution, it’s clear that polluter lobbyists have succeeded in hijacking this climate policy initiative and undermined the ambitious action necessary,” Phil Radford, the group’s executive director, said in a statement.

    We’ll have more answers after the bill drops on Monday.

  • Sexual orientation and Elena Kegan for Supreme Court

    Laws protecting discrimination against gays needed

    The editorial on possible Supreme Court nominee Elena Kegan [“Sexual orientation nobody’s business,” Opinion, April 23] stated very eloquently that whether she is lesbian should not be an issue in consideration for her or any potential nominee.

    However, the editorial stated: “She is protected from discrimination based on sexual orientation. Thus, questions about her sexuality required no response.” The fact is that there is no federal employment nondiscrimination law to date that includes gays and lesbians. Kegan —or any future nominee —is not protected and neither are the vast majority of the gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender (GLBT) population.

    Hopefully, this will change very soon. But until it does, discrimination against gays and lesbians in housing and employment is legal in the United States unless you are lucky enough to live in one of the handful of states, cities or counties that offer protection, including Washington.

    Amazing, when you think about it, that passing such protections are even slightly controversial, but the religious right is making it a priority to block the Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA) once again with the usual distortions and lies that have nothing to do with simple fairness or the realities of what the bill is about.

    Discrimination is wrong, period. I appreciate The Times’ support in saying there should be no smear campaign against gays, but unfortunately, it has been going on for a very long time and in many circles, is an accepted way of thinking and behavior.

    — Timothy Frazer, Seattle

    ‘Smear gays’ leaves gays in bad light

    “At least there should be no campaign to smear gays.”

    The above statement communicates that gay behavior is an adverse propensity and inappropriate because it is smearable. Heterosexual behavior is not to be smeared because it is acceptable. It cannot be smeared unless it is wrong.

    — Burt Harwood, Longview

    Orientation discrimination only a privilege for executive branch

    While I agree with the thrust of the editorial regarding the sexual orientation of Supreme Court nominees, The Times was grossly incorrect when in reporting Elena Kagan “is protected from discrimination based on sexual orientation.”

    Only 17 states have laws that prohibit workplace discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. There is an executive order prohibiting orientation discrimination at the federal level, but that only applies to agencies of the executive branch and not to the judicial or legislative branches of the federal government. In most jurisdiction in the United States, it is perfectly legal to discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation, and those who are discriminated against have little, if any, legal recourse.

    This is why the Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA) is so important. Until sexual orientation is placed alongside race, religion and gender, workplace discrimination will remain a brutal reality for most gay Americans.

    — Gregory Gadow, Seattle

  • Credit Card Numbers Of Blippy Users Show Up on Google

    Blippy, is a social network for shoppers. Blippy users share with each other what they have just bought and socialize around their purchases. Apparently, some users got much more than they signed up for when there credit card numbers showed up on Google recently.

    When a power user entered search term site:blippy.com “from card” , Google showed him a number of recent purchases by Blippy users along with their credit card numbers. As reported by VentureBeat, most of them were Citibank issued master card numbers. Investigation is still underway to determine how this happened, but Google has meanwhile blocked all searches for the site Blippy.com

    What makes the event more interesting is the reply by Blippy Co-Founder Philip Kaplan, who says it is not as bad as it looks. According to him, we hand our credit card to waiters and cashiers all the time and the 4 users affected by this incident need not worry since they are not responsible for any purchases made without their permission. He further explains how the credit card numbers go back during Blippy’s beta days when the data was on HTML pages and somehow those pages were still in Google cache.

    Even though, the incident didn’t cause much damage, it is still shocking to see how vulnerable sensitive information has become due to it being accessed by every mom and pop social network. It is also interesting to know that Blippy had raised $11 Million of funding just a day before this credit card fiasco.

    [Image Credit VentureBeat]

    Credit Card Numbers Of Blippy Users Show Up on Google originally appeared on Techie Buzz written by Tehseen Baweja on Friday 23rd April 2010 05:27:18 PM. Please read the Terms of Use for fair usage guidance.

    Don’t miss these Related Posts:

    Join Techie Buzz on Your Favorite Social Networking Sites


  • Internet retailing all grown up, no need for no-tax booster seat

    Small business losing sales

    This is a response to “Tar heel state right to challenge Amazon,” [Opinion, April 22].

    I especially like the fact that this editorial described all forms of out-of-state sales, not just the Internet. Most media outlets simply focus on the Internet tax, but it is far more than just the Web.

    For decades, my small business has lost sales to 1-800-number, mail-order and catalog-sales organizations. When a Washington state business has a nearly 10 percent disadvantage from the get-go, it is too easy for any purchaser of a small, shippable item to skirt the sales tax.

    Please, do what you can to convince our elected officials to stop the nonsense. The UPS could tell you in seconds how much it costs to ship to any ZIP code in the country. It would be simple to have all sellers calculate, collect and remit sales taxes to the ship-to state.

    — Bob Lackman, Seattle

  • What Will Health Care Reform Look Like in 2019?

    Health care costs will raise
    projected spending by about 1 percent over 10 years and Medicare cuts could put 15 percent of hospitals into the red, according to a new report from the Center for Medicaid and Medicare Services. The full estimates are here (warning: PDF).

    The report is generating quite a bit of heat from bloggers, but it’s not exactly new news. The effect of the law is that American health care will cover more (35 million more) and cost more ($311 billion more) over the decade. We knew that.

    If we squeeze Medicare payments, they will grow more slowly than the cost of providers’ services, which could make make some Medicare Part A providers unprofitable. That austerity pressures hospitals’ to either find new efficiencies to absorb the cuts or effectively lobby to limit Medicare cuts. Liberals have long hoped for the former. Conservatives have long expected the latter. Again, we knew that before this report.

    This projection of 2019 doesn’t blow up our expectations, but it’s not the main story, anyway. The key issue for health care reform optimists is what happens after 2019. The excise tax creeps. The exchanges swell. We fire a slew of arrows at the medical inflation monster, from the independent Medicare counsel, to comparative effectiveness research, to the innovation center. Will the arrows hit and stick? We don’t know. We only know that two months ago, we had an empty quiver and 40 million uninsured Americans. And now we have a law.

    PS: Here’s the key graph from the report:

    Effect of Health Care Reform.png





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  • Capitol Report for April 23, 2010

    Time to engage!

    With less than a month left for the scheduled legislative session, it is clear that the focus of the General Assembly has been public education. And I don’t mean in a loving and supportive way.

    From the onset, we saw a determination to pass pension reform that would jeopardize the ability of the state to recruit and retain teachers.  Next up was the imposition of medical assistance in schools that essentially mandates that trained teachers administer medication to children in schools.

    The assault continued with an initial resistance to changes with the FOIA bill and protections for our higher ed and ESP members’ performance evaluations.

    The most recent attack has come in the form of a voucher program for Illinois. The effect of the proposal could mean a diversion of nearly $100 million from public education and have a detrimental impact on suburban and downstate school districts.

    We have just come off of a very successful Rally Day, but now is not the time to rest. Now is the time to engage. Legislators will need to continue to hear from their local constituents about the impact of their decisions and how they in so many ways have undermined public education with their votes.

    Now is the time to remind them that they are going to have to wear the jacket for increased classroom sizes in the fall if they don’t pass a proposal for new revenue. They are the ones who will be held accountable for teacher reductions that could top 20,000.

    Now is the time to remind them that the accountability they so often call for will be coming from the folks back home.

    Vouchers

    On Thursday, the House Executive Committee heard testimony on SB 2494, (Meeks/Joyce) the Chicago voucher bill. The bill creates the Illinois School Choice Program, which provides that any student enrolled in a Chicago Public School that is performing in the lowest 10 percent shall be eligible to receive a voucher equal to the foundation level per pupil, which is $6119.

    IFT and IEA provided joint testimony that focused on the failed efforts of other vouchers programs across the country and the financial impact upon school districts across the state.

    IEA testified that in 2004, the District of Columbia created a new scholarship program to provide low-income residents, with a focus on those attending schools in need of improvement or corrective action under ESEA. The program provided a scholarship worth up to $7500 that could be used to cover the cost of tuition, school fees and transportation to a private school.

    Here were the findings of the Institute of Education Sciences:

    1. After 2 years, there was no statistically significant difference in test scores between students who were offered the scholarship and students who were not.
    2. The program had a positive impact on overall parent satisfaction but not to student satisfaction and safety.
    3. Twenty-six percent of those offered the scholarship never used it. Reasons ranged from lack of available space in the private school they wanted to attend, the participating school did not offer services for their child’s learning or physical disability or special need, or accepted into a charter school.

    As a result of these findings and others, on March 16 the U.S. Senate rejected a bill to reauthorize the D.C. voucher program.

    SB 2494 passed out of committee and is on the House floor. However, due to many questions about the funding, it faces an uncertain future. IEA, IFT and CTU along with a number of other education partners are vigorously working the bill.  See our Voucher fact sheet here.

    Student assistance health Needs

    HB 6065 (Steans, D–Chicago) creates the Care of Students with Diabetes Act and asks teachers and school personnel to volunteer to administer medication to students.

    The IEA is opposed to this legislation. The bill passed out of the Senate public health committee unanimously and will be heard by the full Senate. Please contact your state Senator and express your concerns about this bill and ask them to vote “NO”.  See our fact sheet – HB 6065.

    Background:

    • Creates the Care of Students with Diabetes Act.
    • Defines a “delegated care aide” as a school employee who has volunteered to receive training in diabetes care and to assist students in implementing their diabetes care plan.
    • Requires a parent or guardian to submit a diabetes care plan for a student with diabetes who seeks assistance with diabetes care in the school setting.
    • Provides that a delegated care aide (teacher or school personnel) shall perform the activities and tasks necessary to assist a student with diabetes in accordance with his or her diabetes care plan.
    • Delegated care aides are authorized to provide assistance by a student’s parent or guardian and serve under the supervision of the principal.  The intent is to have the parent or guardian choose the teacher to be the designated care aide.
    • Allows self-administration of medication by a pupil with diabetes.

    IEA supports:

    • IEA believes that only certificated school nurses or licensed health care professionals working under the direct guidance of a certificated school nurse should administer medication and provide medical treatment and health care to students. All education employees should be protected from civil liability regarding administration of medicine.
    • IEA recognizes that emergency situations may require non-medical personnel to step in and believe all education employees must be trained to recognize the signs and symptoms of such imminent life-threatening conditions and how to properly administer first aid in such situations.
    • IEA can support some sort of training, within the confines of institute days, that covers how a school district wants to respond to children with medical emergencies. Such training is most appropriately conducted by a certified school nurse.
    • IEA supports a task force (HJR 46 and SJR 112) to look at all school health issues (asthma, diabetes, epilepsy, food allergies, etc.).  Such a task force would allow us to discuss in detail the needs of students and how to best approach them. This would also allow input from experts in the field.

    Mandates

    HB 4711 (Maloney, D–Chicago) provides that no school district is obligated to comply with any statutory or regulatory mandate or requirement unless it is funded with a separate appropriation for the school year during which the mandate is required.  IEA is opposed to this bill that passed out of the Senate education committee unanimously.

    While IEA opposes any future mandates that do not have a clear and specific source of revenue, we encourage the legislature to find the revenue before they pass the mandate.  Several legislators in committee stated that this bill would allow them to continue to pass statewide education policy, and if funded was not provided, the local districts could decide if they want to comply with the laws or not creating a patchwork of laws implemented across the state.

    IEA supports two task forces that have been proposed to look at past and future mandates and we are currently attending meetings regarding this issue.  Please see our Unfunded Mandate position statement and an IEA fact sheet on HB 4711.

    HB 4209 SA#1 (Garrett, D-Lake Forest) – Creates the Instructional Mandates Task Force charged to explore and examine all instructional mandates governing public schools and to make recommendations concerning the propriety of all existing mandates, the imposition of future mandates, and waivers of instructional mandates. It also establishes a moratorium on the passage of legislation that imposes instructional mandates on the public schools in this state through Jan. 2, 2012. The 15-member task force includes a representative from the IEA. The IEA-supported bill passed the Senate education committee unanimously.

    Four-day school week

    HB 4886 (Black, R-Danville) would allow a school district, by resolution of its board, to operate on a four-day school week plan approved by the Illinois State Board of Education. The IEA-opposed bill did not receive enough votes to get out of the Senate education committee this week.

    Freedom of Information Act

    HB 5154 (Lightford, D-Maywood) would prohibit the disclosure of performance evaluations under the Freedom of Information Act.  The scope of this proposal had been agreed to during the negotiations on Race to the Top but was amended in the House.  The Attorney General’s office is opposed to the bill.  This IEA-supported bill passed out of the Senate labor committee on a partisan roll call vote 7-3, and now goes to the full Senate for consideration.

    SURS credit for furlough time

    HB 4644 (Bomke, R-Springfield) would allow for university employees that took either a mandatory or involuntary furlough day between the July 1, 2009 and June 30, 2011 to establish credit for that time off in SURS.  The employee would be required to pay the employee and employer contribution, plus interest.  The bill as amended passed the Senate pensions and investments committee unanimously and now proceeds to the Senate floor.  The IEA supported this legislation.

    School waivers

    SJR 114 (Smith, D-Canton) is a resolution concerning driver education waivers.  The Senate passed this resolution unanimously.  It will be considered next Thursday by the House education committee.

    The following school districts were granted behind-the-wheel driver education waivers for one year only:

    • Reavis THSD 220 (Cook County)
    • Maine THSD 207 (Cook County)
    • Wheaton CUSD 200 (DuPage County)
    • Moline USD 40 (Rock Island County)
    • Lyons THSD 204 (Cook County)
    • Triad CUSD 2 (Madison County)
    • Thornton Fractional THSD 215 (Cook County)

    Additionally, Elgin School District U-46 was approved to substitute four hours of behind-the-wheel instruction with 16 hours of simulator use for one year only.

    All physical education waivers which would waive students from receiving the daily activity required by law were approved, as were all driver education fee requests exceeding $250.

    Race to the Top

    ISBE is moving ahead in the application process for the Phase II “Race to the Top” application. There were only 42 percent of the school districts that returned the memorandum of understanding and the reviewers noted this in the Phase I application. The deadline for the Phase II application is June 1. ISBE has set a May 24 deadline for signed MOU’s and recommitment forms.

    IEA will be holding the following one-hour webinars on the RTTT Phase 2 process:

    • Tues., April 27, at 1 p.m. for staff
    • Tues., April 27, at 8 p.m. for IEA governance (board of directors and local presidents)

    Please check your e-mail for the call in number and web connection.

    What’s next

    We only have two weeks before the scheduled adjournment deadline of May 7.  Beginning Tuesday, both the House and Senate are scheduled to be in session until the bitter end.

  • Measuring happiness, not gross national product

    As public policy, Take Back Our Time will only keep clock ticking

    I read the column “The New Pursuit of Happiness” [NWThursday, April 22] and was astounded by how much progressives do not like this country.

    Many progressive want to put down the United State’s success and then implement public policy to slowdown our successes. If they and groups such as Take Back Our Time want to work less and pursue other passions, then by all means do it —just do not request it to become a public policy.

    Our great nation was built with an adventurer’s dreams, pioneering spirit, innovative entrepreneurship and the greatest work ethics in the world. We do not need public policies to make us happy. Do not worry about how I live my life.

    The United States uses its wealth to allow our citizens to spend more time doing volunteer work and contributing more to world charity efforts than any other country. If we were not a rich in finances and caring people, this world could not count on as much assistance as it gets.

    I am not saying the Take Back Our Time is not a good idea, but it is a private choice and not for public policy.

    — Todd Welch, Everett

  • Immigration, near and far

    Deported mother? Not our problem

    This is a response to “Mom deported 3 years ago wins chance to come back” [page one, April 20].

    Give me a break, the key word here is “wins.” Our immigration laws are not a game. You do not “win” a chance to come here. You apply legally through our system and you are granted the right to become a citizen of our country.

    Ana Reyes made some bad choices. She came here illegally, had children, got deported and now “wins “ a chance to come back?

    We have become so beyond politically correct that we have lost sight of that fact that this is not a game. Wasting our tax dollars, court time and energy on an illegal immigrant who got mixed up with another illegal immigrant is not our problem.

    — Lynn Durfy, Seattle

    Media coverage of immigration one-sided

    Why must editorials that deal with immigration be so one-sided? “Don’t fence immigration reform” [Opinion April 21].

    Many who identify themselves as progressives follow the conservative tactic of seeing things in black and white instead of looking at the various sides of an issue.

    How many of the world’s 7 billion people could this country accommodate? How many of the world’s unemployed do we want to hire given our own high unemployment level? Do we have such an overabundance of resources that we do not need to worry about ever running out? Can one even advocate some reasoned ideas on immigration or must one worry about being branded racist and xenophobic by our elected official, Jim McDermott?

    Unfortunately, when the media, which are supposed to be objective, place so much emphasis on one side of an issue, of course that is the side that seems right, even if that side is based mostly on emotion and is short on reasoned information.

    — Jack Pedigo, Seattle

  • CBC having Chavez blood drive challenge

    Published April 22, 2010
    By Tri-City Herald staff

    Columbia Basin College in Pasco is participating in the national Cesar E. Chavez Registry Blood Drive Challenge.

    The College Assistance Migrant Program Alumni Association is organizing the challenge to promote the engagement of Latino college students as community organizers in a national campaign.  Last year, hundreds of first time blood donors were recruited.

    This year, students enrolled in the CAMPAA service learning and leadership program will expand their efforts to educate their campus community about the critical need for organ and tissue donors.

    CBC’s registry drive will be from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Friday.  Registration can be completed online by going to www.DonateLifeToday.com/schools.

    Students are competing with several colleges to see which campus can show the most school pride through registered donors.

    Register no later than April 30 for your donation to count in the competition.  Awards will be presented to the winner in May.

    Additional news stories can be accessed online at the Tri-City Herald.

  • CBC event to celebrate Astronomy Day

    Published April 22, 2010
    By the Tri-City Herald staff

    View the sun, stars and moon during a free viewing of the heavens Saturday at the Moore Observatory at Columbia Basin College in Pasco.

    Day and night activities are planned at the observatory in celebration of National Astronomy Day. Viewing begins at 6 p.m. with an observation of the sun and sunspots using a variety of solar telescopes provided by CBC and the Tri-City Astronomy Club.

    Stargazing begins around 8 p.m. using the Moore Observatory’s 16-inch Schmidt-Cassegrain telescope.

    In addition to the viewing, inside the observatory, videos will be shown of various galactic phenomenon.

    The Moore Observatory is in the northwest corner of the CBC Pasco campus.

    For more information, call Frank Murray at 542-4835.

    Additional news stories can be accessed online at the Tri-City Herald.

  • Everett cyclists can’t ride bikes on sidewalks

    Streets dangerous, high risk for collision and injury in business district

    I recently had an encounter with an Everett Police Officer. According to the law, no person shall ride a bicycle upon a sidewalk in a business district in downtown Everett, on Colby Avenue. This occurred at 8 a.m. on Sunday morning, when there were hardly any people downtown — only many parked cars.

    The road conditions are very dangerous to bicyclists in the business core due to the character of the angle in car parking and the bike lanes behind these vehicles. As a motorist backs out of one of these stalls, the bicyclist and motorist are not able to see each other until the car has already backed into the bike lane and a collisions could easily occur. That has happened before.

    Not all cities in the state have adopted or enforced this state law. Seattle, for instance, has much more pedestrian and bicycle traffic in its city core, yet bicyclists are not prohibited from using sidewalks, as long as pedestrians are given the right away and the bicyclist is riding in a careful and prudent manner.

    This law discourages people from using their bicycles and going downtown in general. With our growing obesity rates, we all need to encourage people to park their cars and get out and exercise more. Allowing bicycles on city sidewalks brings more business downtown and as a former restaurant owner, I appreciate that we should do all that we can to help business owners succeed.

    In addition, the less motor vehicle traffic we have, the less money we have to spend on car-related issues such as the effects of pollution, traffic management and providing more car parking stalls.

    This state law is being arbitrarily applied and enforced by cities throughout the state. I believe that the intent is to protect pedestrians during business hours. It is overreaching to prohibit all bicycles from city sidewalks at all times. The very least I would like to see is to amend this law or enforced in a way so that the road conditions and character of the foot traffic on the sidewalk are considered. This is good and needed for our environment; bicycle safety is needed to bring more people and business to downtown Everett.

    — Steve Corotas, Everett

  • Ford recalling 33,000 vehicles to replace… seat recliner?

    Filed under: , ,

    Ford has announced a recall of some 33,000 vehicles due to faulty front seat manual reclining mechanisms. The recall affects certain 2010 Ford Fusion, Explorer and Explorer SportTrac models, as well as 2010 Mercury Mountaineer and Milan vehicles. Both the Blue Oval and NHTSA are concerned that during an accident the mechanisms could fail and cause the back of the seat to move toward the rear of the vehicle, resulting in a possible injury.

    While no injuries have been reported as a result of the defect, NHTSA found that the seats don’t meet federal standards for head restraints and must be replaced. Ford will replace the hardware free of charge. For more information, visit NHTSA’s website.

    [Source: Associated Press]

    Ford recalling 33,000 vehicles to replace… seat recliner? originally appeared on Autoblog on Fri, 23 Apr 2010 16:21:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Crafty Tongs Hide Built-In Thermometer [Kitchen]

    When you’re grilling, nothing’s more handy than a digital thermometer…except maybe these: Tongs that incorporate a very fine temperature probe so you don’t need to fiddle with multiple tools. More »







  • Palm may find you, randomly give you accessories

     

    As Annie notes over at sister-site TreoCentral, Palm has let loose that they’re going to be roving the country, handing out Pre and Pixi accessories, Palm stickers, and who knows what to people they see using webOS devices out in public spaces. In other words – be a little flamboyant when you use your phone, it just might get you noticed and get you swag.

    Palm says that these roving bands of accessory-gifters could appear in any country. We suppose these ‘random acts of wow’ could be pretty sparse, given the wide net.  If only Palm had a way of tracking down webOS users in the wild to help improve those odds (We KID! We joke!).

    Thanks to everybody who sent this in!

  • What to Demand from FinReg

    Mike Konczal of the Roosevelt Institute and the blog Rortybomb has a useful chart and paper outlining what to demand from Sen. Chris Dodd’s (D-Conn.) financial regulatory reform bill — the provisions that will ensure financial security — along with the chances of each provision making it into the final legislation.

    The effort that seems most secure? Derivatives reform. The effort that seems least secure? A provision ensuring banks put all relevant liabilities clearly onto their balance sheets, as well as too big to fail and hard leverage cap requirements.

  • Citroën C5 3.0 HDi V6 240 CV aut., prueba (Parte II)

    Citroën_c5

    Continuamos con la prueba del Citroën C5 equipado con el motor 3.0 HDi V6 de 240 CV y cambio automático de seis relaciones. En principio del diseño y del espacio interior, temas que tratamos en la segunda parte de la prueba no tenía pensado hablar, puesto que ya hemos hablado de la habitabilidad y del diseño del Citroën C5 en la prueba que realizamos hace unos meses.

    Pero si tenemos que matizar cambios tanto en los acabados como en el diseño exterior, puesto que nuestra unidad no es un C5 convencional, destacando las llantas de 19 ” o el acabado interior con cuero integral. Por tanto de una manera algo más breve que habitualmente nos vamos a centrar en el diseño de este C5 y para aquellos que quieran ver en detalle el interior de esta berlina siempre pueden leer la prueba del anterior C5.

    Diseño exterior

    Citroën_c5

    Una de las cosas que más llaman la atención exteriormente de este C5 de 240 CV, son las llantas, que para este modelo calza unas de 19 pulgadas, una medida en mi opinión desmesurada (con unas de 18″ sería suficiente) pero que llaman la atención por el diseño, nada convencional y con tintes deportivos.

    Otro de los elementos que es propio de esta versión de 240 CV son las dos salidas del tubo de escape con formas rectangulares y que le aportan mucho carácter a la imagen exterior del C5. Por otra parte también tendremos los cromados propios del acabado Exclusive, del marco de las ventanillas parte inferior de la puerta y los tiradores.

    En definitiva, el diseño musculoso y con personalidad que tiene el C5 se ve acentuado por los pequeños retoques que le dan un toque más deportivo o incluso diferente, distinguiendose de otros C5 que podamos ver por la calle.

    Diseño interior

    Citroën_C5

    Si exteriormente tiene pequeños detalles que lo diferencian, por dentro en la práctica no tiene muchos detalles que lo diferencien del C5 que ya hemos probado. Pero se da la casualidad que nuestra unidad tenía como extra el pack de cuero integral, que incluye un nutrido grupo de elementos de equipamiento y de acabados.

    Los asientos son de cuero microperforado (nada que ver con los de cuero normal), eléctricos con regulación para cualquier postura, (ver detalle) porque creo que es uno de los coches que tiene más reglajes para el asiento: podemos desplazarlo a lo largo, en altura, el respaldo, e incluso la parte superior del respaldo sólo (cuenta con dos zonas en el respaldo con ajuste eléctrico) y por último tenemos el ajuste lumbar que es eléctrico y desplazable, en conclusión es imposible no encontrar tu postura en un C5 con asientos eléctricos.

    Citroën_c5

    Pero además de los asientos de cuero, de un tono más bien marrón y una calidad a la altura de cualquier marca premium, también cuenta con el salpicadero completamente forrado en cuero, junto con las puertas que tienen también zonas forradas en cuero. Eso se traduce en que es prácticamente imposible dar con alguna zona que tenga un plástico duro y de mal tacto, puesto que el cuero de gran calidad inunda todo el habitáculo y pese a que los asientos no son ventilables (pero si calefactables) al ser microperforado no se hace pesado con el calor.

    Pero además, por si nuestro viaje a bordo de esta berlina se empieza a hacer molesto para nuestra espalda, este C5 incorporaba un sistema que se anunció cuando se lanzó esta generación, pero que no me había coincido probar, y es el masaje en el asiento del conductor (ver detalle). Pero bueno, tampoco podemos tomar al pie de la letra lo de masaje, puesto que en la practica usa el apoyo lumbar para desplazarlo por la espalda y ajustándolo con mayor o menor profundidad. Muchos preguntareis que utilidad tiene, es un extra que está bien cuando viajas mucho, porque llevas ya un rato con la espalda pegada al asiento y lo accionas un tiempo y te descansa algo más la espalda, pero tampoco es un sistema que me guste llevarlo demasiado tiempo conectado porque llega a cansar.

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    Independientemente a estas curiosidades que tenía nuestra unidad de pruebas, el espacio interior del C5 sigue destacando por el espacio sobretodo en las plazas delanteras con asientos que son más bien butacas y con una postura de conducción muy cómoda. Mientras que en las plazas traseras el espacio ya está algo más comprometido sobretodo en altura, (aun así sigue siendo una auténtica gozada el viajar en las plazas traseras si no eres muy alto) y la visibilidad también se ve algo comprometida por causa del diseño, volvemos a emplazaros a leer la prueba del C5 2.0 HDI de 138 CV Aut. que publicamos hace unos meses donde hablamos más pormenorizado del interior de esta berlina y de su habitabilidad con un maletero de 439 litros.

    Para finalizar con el analisis del diseño tanto exterior como interior del C5, comentar que el equipamiento que trae a mayores este pack de cuero integral y del que daremos buena cuenta en la tercera parte, cambia bastante el interior del C5 convirtiéndolo en una auténtica berlina premium con 240 CV bajo el capó y unos materiales de primera calidad.

    Fotos | David Taboada