Category: News

  • 2010 Nissan Altima 3.5 SR Coupe

    The Works
    Alexandra Straub, Canadian Auto Press

    Nissan’s Altima, whether in sedan or coupe body style, has sold almost 3.2 million units worldwide. I guess it’s safe to say that Nissan is doing a pretty good job with their midsize four- and two-door. The pretty good job that they’re doing gets a little better with the introduction of the 2010 model. This fourth generation vehicle line receives a few tweaks here and there to make both sedan and coupe more attractive and appealing.

    2010 Nissan Altima 3.5 SR Coupe

    2010 Nissan Altima 3.5 SR Coupe

    Included in the upgrades is a restyled front fascia with a new grille giving it a more modern look, and with the 2010 Altima Coupe in 3.5 SR trim, a new 5-spoke aluminum alloy wheel design set on P235/45VR18 all-season tires. Along with standard safety features like 4-wheel disc brakes and ABS with EBD, a Traction Control System (TCS) and more, Vehicle Dynamic Control (VDC) is now standard on all Altima models. There was also a name change for trim types, so the SE designation is out and the SR is in.

    When it comes to the interior styling, I’m still sitting on the fence because I haven’t decided if I like it or not. I really do like its simplicity and easy-to-use 4.3-inch touchscreen display, but I’m not a huge fan of the all-black-with-minimal-accents dash and centre stack. It’s too much black for me and I’d like to see more of a contrast. But then again, the all-black does give it a sophisticated feel and appealed to a lot of my passengers. I will say that it’s not necessarily the strongest-looking interior in its class since I feel the Hyundai Genesis Coupe and Honda Accord Coupe put up a pretty good fight.

    Since this Altima is a coupe, I didn’t really expect it to have the comfiest rear seat when sitting back there for a short-haul road trip. And it didn’t. A couple of my girlfriends and I headed down to Seattle for the day and unfortunately, one of them had to sit in the back. Liz, who is about 5’8”, had a hard time getting in and out of the rear since the seats are a little fussy when trying to move them back and forth. Also, she had a hard time sitting still in her seat. She felt the seats were “too reclined” and not ideal for long trips so she had to sit forward in order to be more comfortable and to hear any kind of conversation that was going on. There also wasn’t enough head or legroom. That was compounded because she sat behind Sarah who was in the front passenger’s seat, and Sarah is 5’10”. That’s not to say we didn’t have a lot of fun, because we did, it just took some shifting to and fro to keep my passengers in good spirits.

    And speaking of good spirits, the Altima Coupe, when driven solo or with just one other passenger, did make a lot of people smile, including me. The main smile-making feature of this car is its 3.5-litre, DOHC, 24-valve, V6 engine which produces 270 horsepower and 258 lb-ft of torque. The engine, which in this case was linked to the optional Xtronic CVT (Continuously Variable Transmission) with manual mode ($1,300) performed flawlessly. While I haven’t been a fan of CVTs on 4-cylinder models, it’s a perfect fit with the V6. Acceleration is smooth and the engine is very responsive. I also enjoyed the low-pitched grunting noise that the exhaust created as this coupe accelerated.

    The Altima was also very comfortable taking charge in the handling department. Laced with an independent front subframe-mounted strut-type and a multi-link rear suspension, this bad boy wasn’t afraid to let it all out yet keep it all together when it came to taking tight turns. Furthermore, its highway speed stability was no issue at all. It felt sturdy and confident, especially when overtaking other cars in passing lanes.

    I also took a strong liking to the optional premium audio package ($3,150), a new feature for the 2010 Altima. It comes with a potent Bose AM/FM audio interface plus nine Bose speakers, the aforementioned 4.3-inch colour display, a USB port with iPod connectivity, Bluetooth, XM satellite radio, a rearview camera and more. The sound quality is fantastic and gets two thumbs up from me. And now that BC’s law prohibits the use of handheld phones while driving, Bluetooth is my new best friend. Pairing my phone with the Altima’s system was effortless, and I’m thankful for that especially since I would not consider myself an expert when it comes to tech gadgets.

    Fuel economy with the 3.5L V6 isn’t actually that bad, using an estimated 10.2L/100km in the city and 7.3L/100km on the highway. Perhaps it’s my lead foot that lead to less-than-favourable fuel results in the city, because my reality was nowhere near the aforementioned estimate, but I can’t really complain because I really liked listening to the exhaust when I got on the throttle! Because of my more conservative highway driving, mind you, I achieved more-than-favourable overall results.

    Lets talk numbers. The base price of the 3.5 SR Coupe is $34,698. With the optional CVT transmission, premium audio system and metallic exterior finish, the MSRP (including freight and PDI, but not taxes) comes to $39,383. For all the bells and whistles you’re getting with the fully loaded, and I mean fully loaded Altima Coupe, that’s a very competitive price tag.

    Overall, I would give the 2010 Nissan Altima Coupe 3.5 SR five enthusiastic cylinders out of six. While the interior is relatively bland and doesn’t facilitate taller people into the rear seats comfortably, the Coupe’s driving dynamics really sold me. It was a blast in the corners and even more fun off the line, and I’d be more than happy to do it all again!















  • Knowledge of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Rules Is Everyone’s Responsibility

    Rule of the Road No. 12: EVERYONE in a trucking company must follow truck safety rules

    My fellow truck accident attorneys, this is the last blog in my “Rules of the Road” series. I posted this series because it is my sincere wish that by sharing these dozen rules of what I consider to be some of the most important Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations for lawyers handling truck accidents, and showing how they’re integral to handling such a case properly, we can work together with many in the industry to stop so many tragic and preventable truck fatalities and serious injury accidents.

    The last rule is brief, but it is incredibly important. Under 49 CFR § 392.1, every motor carrier, its officers, agents, representatives and employees responsible for the management, maintenance, operation, or driving of commercial motor vehicles; or the hiring, supervising, training, assigning, or dispatching of drivers, shall be instructed in and comply with the rules in this part.

    This means EVERYONE – not just the safety director – within the transportation company is charged with the responsibility of instructing in and complying with the federal truck rules.

    This rule addresses one of my personal pet peeves. Often, I’m taking a deposition of a truck driver and uncovering one safety violation after another, and the truck driver will say, “That’s not my job; that’s safety’s job,” or “dispatches’ job.”  I have presidents of large truck companies tell me, almost brag about, how they have no understanding of federal safety regulations. I have all sorts of people in maintenance who attempt to dismiss responsibility of their knowledge of the rules by saying, “It isn’t my job to follow the rules. That’s safety’s job or so-and-so’s job.”

    No, it isn’t. Safety is everyone’s job. Under § 392.1, it IS his or her job, no matter if this person is the truck driver, safety director, works in maintenance, or dispatch, or is president of the company.

    Under § 392.1, it IS his or her job to know and follow the safety rules that are meant to protect us all.

    The Importance of Regulation Knowledge for Truck Litigation Attorneys

    To conclude, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations are a source of minimum safety standards that every interstate motor carrier must follow. These regulations impose standards of care that many carriers fail to meet. When preparing your truck accident lawsuit, a brief overview in these 12 regulations will give you the decisive advantage in exposing the trucking company’s failure to properly train, supervise, or entrust large commercial trucks to unfit drivers. Without knowledge of these regulations, a lawyer cannot possibly recover top value for his clients after a serious truck accident case.

    My hope is that these posts can help provide a meaningful framework for lawyers conducting legal discovery in truck crash cases.

    With one in every three trucks on the road in so dangerous a condition that it would be placed immediately out-of-service if inspected (Read here about Michigan’s dangerous trucking companies), I truly believe it’s the lawyers specializing in truck accident cases who are doing the most to make trucking companies, and everyone who shares the roads with tractor-trailers in America today, safer.

    Unfortunately, the vast majority of personal injury attorneys don’t have a lot of experience with truck accident cases.  I hope I have helped some of these new or less experienced attorneys with this series of blog posts; and I hope it is in some small way, a step toward making our roads safer for our families  – and saving lives.

    –    Steven M. Gursten is a partner of Michigan Auto Law. He is past president of the American Association for Justice Truck Litigation Group, and has received the top reported trial verdict in Michigan for truck accidents. Last year, Steve was named a Michigan Lawyers Weekly Leader in the Law for his efforts in promoting truck safety in Michigan and throughout the country.

    – Photo courtesy of Creative Commons, by emdot

    Related information:

    Help for Attorneys Handling Truck Accidents

    8 Things to Know About Your Truck Accident Case

    Finding the Dirt on Unsafe Trucking Companies

    Previous blogs from “Rules of the Road Every Truck Accident Lawyer Needs to Know” series:

    Rules of the Road: Intro for Truck Lawyers

    Truck Driver Fatigue

    Truck Lawyers: Get Your Hands on Those Discovery Documents!

    Investigate the Trucker’s Background and History

    Truck Driver Qualification Files

    What Truck Accident Lawyers Must Know About Black Boxes

    How to Nab the Tired Trucker

    Why is the Pre-trip Inspection the Most Violated Safety Rule?

    Why Weather is Never an Excuse

    How Trucking Companies Dodge Federal Safety Laws

    That Truck Driver Should Never Have Been on the Road

    Truck Accident Lawyer Discusses Log Book Forgeries

    Michigan Auto Law exclusively handles car accident, truck accident and motorcycle accident cases throughout the entire state of Michigan. We have offices in Southfield, Sterling Heights, Ann Arbor, Grand Rapids and Detroit to better serve you. Call (800) 777-0028 for a free consultation from one of our expert attorneys.

  • Computer models running the EU? Eruptions, models, and clueless reporting

    The EU airspace shutdown provides yet another example of ignorance of the role of models in policy:

    Computer Models Ruining EU?

    Flawed computer models may have exaggerated the effects of an Icelandic volcano eruption that has grounded tens of thousands of flights, stranded hundreds of thousands of passengers and cost businesses hundreds of millions of euros. The computer models that guided decisions to impose a no-fly zone across most of Europe in recent days are based on incomplete science and limited data, according to European officials. As a result, they may have over-stated the risks to the public, needlessly grounding flights and damaging businesses. “It is a black box in certain areas,” Matthias Ruete, the EU’s director-general for mobility and transport, said on Monday, noting that many of the assumptions in the computer models were not backed by scientific evidence. European authorities were not sure about scientific questions, such as what concentration of ash was hazardous for jet engines, or at what rate ash fell from the sky, Mr. Ruete said. “It’s one of the elements where, as far as I know, we’re not quite clear about it,” he admitted. He also noted that early results of the 40-odd test flights conducted over the weekend by European airlines, such as KLM and Air France, suggested that the risk was less than the computer models had indicated. – Financial Times

    Other venues picked up similar stories:

    Also under scrutiny last night was the role played by an eight-man team at the Volcanic Ash Advisory Centre at Britain’s Meteorological Office. The European Commission said the unit started the chain of events that led to the unprecedented airspace shutdown based on a computer model rather than actual scientific data. – National Post

    These reports miss a number of crucial points:

    • The decision to shut down the airspace was political, not scientific. Surely the Met Office team had input, but not the final word, and model results were only one input to the decision.
    • The distinction between computer models and “actual scientific data” is false. All measurements involve some kind of implicit model, required to interpret the result. The 40 test flights are meaningless without some statistical interpretation of sample size and so forth.
    • It’s not uncommon for models to demonstrate that data are wrong or misinterpreted.
    • The fact that every relationship or parameter in a model can’t be backed up with a particular measurement does not mean that the model is unscientific.
      • Numerical measurements are not the only valid source of data; there are also laws of physics, and a subject matter expert’s guess is likely to be better than a politician’s.
      • Calibration of the aggregate result of a model provides indirect measurement of uncertain components.
      • Feedback structure may render some parameters insensitive and therefore unimportant.
    • Good decisions sometimes lead to bad outcomes.

    The reporters, and maybe also the director-general (covering his you-know-what), have neatly shifted blame, turning a problem in decision making under uncertainty into an anti-science witch hunt. What alternative to models do they suggest? Intuition? Prayer? Models are just a way of integrating knowledge in a formal, testable, shareable way. Sure, there are bad models, but unlike other bad ideas, it’s at least easy to identify their problems.

    Thanks to Jack Dirman, Green Technology for the tip.

  • Blogging on the iPad

    Prior to the launch of the iPad bloggers started thinking about how convenient the slate might be for sharing information. Some even believed the iPad would make such an impact on the process that it would change blogging for the better. While it’s certainly true the iPad makes interacting with the web easy, and something that can be done almost anytime, it’s still not clear how useful it can be for the actual process of blogging. The fog is clearing, however, and some bloggers are using the iPad to handle most of the blogging process. I would never want to use the iPad as my only blogging tool, but I admit I am finding it far more useful for the task than I thought it would be. With some careful thought and best practices, blogging can indeed be done on the iPad.

    I would never recommend bloggers to dump whatever computer they are using for blogging — that would be silly. Where I do see advantage to using the iPad for blogging is on short trips, or during outings when a computer is normally not carried for the day. The iPad is easy to travel with, and the tool that is with the blogger is better than any tool that is not. The muse can strike at the most unexpected times, and if the iPad is at hand it’s the right tool for the job.

    The first obstacle that must be crossed to do serious blogging on the iPad is the lack of blog editors in the App Store. At last check the WordPress app is the only one that has been released for the iPad. Since we use WordPress on the GigaOM Network, this works to my advantage. Those with blogs on other platforms will have to do some experimenting to determine how best to create posts on the iPad without a specific editor.

    Most blog platforms have web-based editors, and it’s worth trying in the Safari browser on the iPad to see if yours will work. We have many special widgets at GigaOM that makes our WordPress online editor a very useful tool, and some of these widgets will not work in the iPad browser. If a given editor doesn’t work in the browser, then post creation becomes a two-part process — writing and posting.

    Of course, writing can be done in any text editor, and there are a few for the iPad. The Pages app from Apple works fine for writing blog posts; writing blog posts can even be done in the Notes app. The trick is writing the post and then pasting the content into the final destination. I can’t address every possible situation that one might face, so I’ll concentrate on how I blog using the iPad.

    The WordPress app for the iPad is pretty good, and I usually write the entire blog post in this editor. It’s important to note that there is no fancy visual editor (WYSIWYG) like in the web-based version. It’s a simple text editor that works well for text entry. It’s also a HTML editor, so those familiar with HTML can use it to make posts with sophisticated formatting. I’m too far removed from the old HTML blogging days, so I avoid it. I simply use the WordPress app for writing the text content of the blog post. The photo handling capability of this app is not very sophisticated, so I avoid using it for that purpose.

    TIP: The WordPress app is great for following comments left on the blog, so don’t overlook that ability. Even if you don’t write blog posts using the app you might find it useful for working with blog comments.

    Writing blog posts in the WordPress editor using the iPad’s on-screen keyboard is more efficient than I dreamed possible. I expected this keyboard to be good for knocking off a very short email, but not for writing blog posts consisting of hundreds of words. What I’ve discovered is with a little practice it’s easier to type on the screen than you might think; it’s certainly a viable method in a pinch. For much longer posts I use an external Bluetooth keyboard. It folds up and fits in my pocket, yet opens into a full-sized keyboard. I don’t absolutely need it for writing on the iPad, but I’m no glutton for punishment. I have the tool so I use it when it makes more sense.

    Having written a blog post in the WordPress app, when done I publish it as a draft to the blog. This brings it into the WordPress online system for the final editing — adding links, images and implementing the special widget controls we use on the site. The next time I log into the web-based editor the post will be waiting in draft mode for this work.

    It may seem that my iPad work with the blog post is over at this point; if that were true, then full blogging couldn’t be done on the iPad in my case. This is where it gets really fun — I fire up LogMeIn Ignition on the iPad, and log into either a Mac or Windows PC in my home office. I leave at least one of them running for this purpose, with the LogMeIn server running in the background.

    Using this method, I am in effect working with my Mac (for example) on the iPad, using the slate display as the Mac’s monitor. More importantly, since LogMeIn is optimized for interaction via touch on the iPad, I am able to do anything I normally do on the Mac (or Windows PC) by touching the screen. I use this method to start the Firefox browser, and enter the web-based WordPress editor on the home machine.

    I have the “full” browsing experience this way, and the final post editing process is just as it would be in the office, but using touch on the iPad. I add any links I need; upload, grab and edit any images for the post; and enable any of the special GigaOM widgets needed for the particular post. There is hardly any lag and it’s amazing how well this method works. It turns the iPad into a full Mac or Windows system, with no limits. This is why my method is working so well for me.

    Clever readers will ask why I don’t just log into the home machine and write the post in the browser, rather than create the draft using the iPad local app. That’s a fair question and the proper answer is I could easily do that. But as well as the LogMeIn method works, when I am concentrating on the post writing process itself, I prefer the distraction-free environment of the local editor. It’s strictly personal preference, but there’s no reason doing it all through the remote connection wouldn’t work. I have done it that way, as a matter of fact, and still prefer to do it in two steps.

    I must make it clear that this method works for me as I already have everything in place to make it work. I have multiple computers in the home office, so it’s no burden (financial or otherwise) to have one available for remote access. I already owned LogMeIn on the iPad ($29.99), so I didn’t have to spend the money just for blogging. This may not be the case for you, and I am not recommending you spend a lot of money to do this.

    This method is working so well for me that I could easily employ it for short trips without impacting my ability to work. I don’t intend to do that, but I could if I needed to. That’s a liberating thought.

    Disclosure: Automattic, maker of WordPress.com, is backed by True Ventures, a venture capital firm that is an investor in the parent company of this blog, Giga Omni Media. Om Malik, founder of Giga Omni Media, is also a venture partner at True.

    Related content on GigaOM Pro (subscription required):

    Hot Topic: Apple’s iPad

  • IMF: There’s No China Bubble, And Growth Will Continue

    china chinese mask(This is a guest post from the author’s blog.)

    Olivier Blanchard, chief economist at the International Monetary Fund (IMF), talks with Bloomberg this morning about the prospects for an asset bubble in China.  Blanchard, speaking from Washington, also discusses the impact of sovereign debt on global economic growth.

    No China Bubble Concern

    While Blanchard declined to comment on the situation at Greece due to ongoing discussion between the IMF, the European Union (EU) and the Greece government, he did offer some insight as to the “China bubble” suggestion made by the likes of Mr. Jim Chanos (link below).

    Here is Blanchard’s response when asked if the IMF sees an asset bubble about to burst in China,

    “We do not think so. For the most part, the growth in China, which has been very high, and is expected to continue, has been a healthy one.”

    He indicated that there could be pockets of bubbles; however, since the Chinese government is watching closely and ready to intervene when necessary, the IMF is “not “terribly concerned about any major asset bubble in China”.

    On Yuan Revaluation

    Blanchard noted the strategy of China is to increase domestic demand levels and decrease savings rate, which he believes is too high. As Beijing implements this process in order to re-allocate resources to the domestic sector, the Chinese currency–yuan or renminbi– will then be allowed to appreciate. He believes this is what we are going to see in the next few years.

    ‘Fiscal Consolidation’ A Priority

    Blanchard said fiscal consolidation must become a priority for heavily-indebted advanced economies but that is likely to further weigh on demand, and thus on economic growth. This has manifested more intensely at Greece, but eventually all countries will go through a similar process.

    My Thoughts

    In its newly released its World Economic Outlook today, the IMF forecasts for global growth was nudged up to 4.2% this year. China will grow the fastest –by 10% this year– and 9.9% in 2011.

    However, over the past week, Beijing announced measures aimed at cracking down on property speculators amid an 11.7% rise in urban home prices last month from a year earlier, its fastest gain in five years.

    China cynics such as Mr. Jim Chanos have argued that China’s lending spree during the financial crisis has pumped too much liquidity into real estate, and compares China’s economy as “Dubai times 1,000”.

    Among the counter-arguments, of which I subscribe, China’s growing wealth feeds a long-term demand as the country goes through the urbanization process.  Furthermore, regulators are implementing measures limiting the downside of any bubble. These views are basically supported by the IMF and Blanchard as seen in this interview.

    The IMF has for years urged a rebalance where advanced countries, such as the United States, may need to weaken their currencies to boost exports, while emerging economies like China need to allow their currencies to rise, curbing exports.

    There is a growing consensus among economists that such a shift will not have significant impact on the trade imbalance. That is the main reason why J.P. Morgan economists estimate that a 10% trade-weighted appreciation in the yuan would reduce China’s overall exports by only 2%.

    However, in a global race to increase countries’ export advantage to help recovery, most of the attention has focused on the need for China to appreciate the yuan to help drive Chinese domestic demand.  

    From all indications, the most likely scenario is that Beijing will allow the yuan to gradually appreciate, albeit very modestly. The adjustment is unlikely to meet expectations as critics in the U.S. argue that the yuan is as much as 40% undervalued against the dollar. This no doubt will escalate global tensions and a possible trade war between China and the U.S.

    The global economic recovery has drawn support from a swift rebound in China. It would be advisable for U.S. policy makers to weigh the long-term effect against the short-term benefit, since currency exchange rates aren’t the only factor to consider when it comes to China’s trade surplus.

    In light of the coming “fiscal consolidation” among the advanced economies as warned by Blanchard, China’s growth prospect–among the best in the world–with its relatively low debt ratios, could certainly be one region with greater stability.

    There will be some pockets of corrections in the medium term as Beijing tries to balance growth and inflation, while curbing potential bubbles–as expected in any growing economy.  Nonetheless, these pullbacks should prove to be good entry points for long term investors.

    Note: The Bloomberg Blanchard inteview is available here

    Join the conversation about this story »

  • Japan’s DoCoMo announces new mobile projector for cell phones

    It’s not that there’s a shortage of mobile projectors, but when DoCoMo (Japan’s biggest cell phone carrier) announces [JP] a model for its 55 million customers, it deserves a mention. DoCoMo specifically suggests using the F01 with Fujitsu’s uber-cool “Separate Keitai”, a cell phone that breaks into two parts (and that’s currently available on the Japanese market only).


  • Naomi Campbell Explodes At ABC News Over Blood Diamond Questions

    Hide your electronic devices, the cattiest maven to ever hit the catwalk is off her meds again — and this time she’s attacking cameras. Tempermental beauty Naomi Campbell has refused to testify at the war crimes trial of former Liberian dictator Charles Taylor, saying that she would not speak about the huge, uncut “blood diamond” he allegedly gave her during a trip to South Africa in 1997 — and she nearly flipped her wig (literally) when quizzed about the controversy by ABC News.

    The supermodel and the warlord were overnight guests of Nelson Mandela, along with humanitarian Mia Farrow. In her testimony, Farrow has revealed that she learned of the diamond at breakfast the next moring.

    “Naomi Campbell came down . . . she said during the night some men had knocked on her door and she, half-asleep, had opened the door and it was representatives of President Charles Taylor and that they had given her a huge diamond. And we were like, ‘Oh, my gosh….”

    “Prosecutors say Taylor was in South Africa . . . to buy weapons for the Sierra Leone rebels with blood diamonds and that Mia Farrow’s information about Campbell helps tie him to the purchase,” says ABC correspondent correspondent Brian Ross. Naomi vowed to keep mum on the issue at a recent Fashion Week appearance to raise money for Haiti.

    “I didn’t receive a diamond and I’m not going to speak about that,” she fumed.

    Naomi then abruptly ended the interview by slamming the camera to the floor.


  • Hipster habits that annoy the Earth [SLIDESHOW]

    by Grist

    Photo courtesy davefishernc via FlickrWe don’t mean to jump on the hipster (NSFW) hating bandwagon. We
    know the young and the hip eat healthier and ride bikes more often than their
    peers and yadda yadda yadda.

    But there’s nothing like getting even with the cool kids and catching them in un-green moments. (How cool do you think a bunch of future environmental journalists were in high school?) And there are certain trends even the trendy should avoid.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Photo courtesy istolethetv via FlickrParty habits

    Ah, the
    21st century American
    lumberjack—not to be confused with his
    predecessor. Although they look quite similar (flannels, beards, unwashed hair),
    the lumberjack of olden days could chop down
    maybe one pine with hours of hairy manpower. The modern version can level four square meters of rainforest with just the snort
    of his nose
    .

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Urban habits

    To cop this look, see your grandfather’s closet.Photo courtesy Raychel Mendez via Flickr

    A true hipster scours Goodwill racks for something quirky
    and ironic that vaguely fits them. For the lazy hipster, there’s always Urban
    Outfitters. UO has some obvious, ridiculous problems—what with its throwing out bags of destroyed, unused clothing, Republican-lovin’ president, and stealing of artist’s ideas. Then there are long-term sustainability issues that arise from mass-made, fake kitsch and shoddy vintage knockoffs. 

     

    Photo courtesy ret0dd via FlickrClothing habits

    Speaking of clothing, we have to point out the unsustainability of trends. Lensless glasses, peace scarves that don’t keep you warm, headbands, strange little hats. All of these things serve no purpose and just end up in a landfill. Do you suppose there’s an entire ocean garbage patch made entirely of shutter shades?










     

    Eating habits

    But coke will stunt your growth, little dude!Photo courtesy kofoed via Flickr

    We know you’ve been a vegetarian since age 15 and a vegan
    off and on. How could we forget? You’ve mentioned it every time we’ve gone out to eat and whenever
    we introduced you to one of our friends. Which makes it even more likely that
    we’ll slap those Doritos right out of your hands. A meatless diet doesn’t
    automatically mean an ethical diet. So lose the
    holier-than-thou ‘tude, dude.

     

    Cig habits

    Rebel without a cause.Photo courtesy Kid Paprazzi via Flickr

    At least 4.5 trillion non-biodegradable cigarettes are thrown away every year. Best-case scenario, they end up in a landfill. If they end up stomped below a pair of Converse, those icky chemicals (and some radioactive material!) can harm the water supply and soil we all hold so dear. So quit smoking or at least dispose of your Parliaments properly.

     

    Fixed habits

    Photo courtesy astroSaluki via Flickr

    We don’t mean to knock a good habit. Bikes will always be a better option than cars. It’s still a shame to see so many great Schwinns and Peugeots go to waste. We know, we know—you hate the sound of coasting and find single speeds boring. But instead of buying a new frame, just modify and reuse old bikes.

    Related Links:

    Save Bette Midler, er, Mother Nature! [VIDEO]

    EPA intern offends sensitive meat-industry souls

    Amonix has real solar news instead of Earth Day idiocy






  • C.K. Prahalad’s testimony to the need for foresight in management

    The strategy world has mourned the sudden passing of C.K. Prahalad, Professor of Business Administration at the Ross School, University of Michigan, this week.

    competing for the future 800x650 C.K. Prahalads testimony to the need for foresight in management

    Front page 'Competing for the Future' Hamel & Prahalad, HBR 1994

    .
    As many have commented, Prahalad made great strides in getting business to see the potential in emerging markets and ‘poor’ consumers, in The Fortune at the Bottom of the Pyramid and allied work.

    In our rush for the new and latest, early work often gets buried. So I would like, as my take on the passing of Prahalad, to go back to his fundamental testimony to the role of and need for foresight in management, which is to be found in his co-authored piece (with Gary Hamel) ‘Competing for the Future,’ Harvard Business Review, 1994, which became a very famous book of the same name. Sixteen years on and now in the wake of the credit crunch, this piece remains as relevant as it ever was:

    Ask yourself: Do senior managers in my company have a clear and shared understanding of how the industry may be different ten years from now? Is my company’ point of view about the future unique among competitors?

    “On average managers devote less than 3% of their time building a corporate perspective on the future.

    “The painful upheavals in so many companies in recent years reflect the failure of one-time industry leaders to keep up with the accelerating pace of industry change… Those companies were run by managers, not leaders, by maintenance engineers, not architects.

    “If the future is not occupying senior managers, what is? Restructuring and reegineering. While both are legitimate and important tasks, they have more to do with shoring up today’s business than with building tomorrow’s industries. Any company that is a bystander on the road to the future will watch its structure, values, and skills become progressively less attuned to industry realities.

    (therefore) “Most layoffs at large US companies have been the fault of managers who fell asleep at the wheel and missed the turnoff for the future.

    “If senior executives don’t have reasonably detailed answers to the ‘future’ questions, and if the answers they have are not significantly different of the ‘today’ answers, there is little chance that their companies will remain market leaders.

    “The Quest for Foresight: Why do we talk of foresight rather than vision? Vision connotes a dream or an apparition, and there is more to industry foresight than a blinding flash of insight. Industry foresight is based on deep insights into trends in technology, demographics, regulations, and lifestyles, which can be harnessed to rewrite industry rules and create new competitive space.”

    Footnote: this from the FT: The last time CK spoke to the FT he was buzzing with intellectual energy. “Really, in all my career I have been interested in ‘next practices’, and not merely ‘best practices’,” he said.

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  • Energy and Environmental News for April 22: Charging electric cars in a low-carbon way; Solar power to the people; New energy powers up lobbying

    Charging Up Electric Car Batteries in Environmentally-Friendly Way

    Electromobility makes sense only if car batteries are charged using electricity from renewable energy sources. But the supply of green electricity is not always adequate. An intelligent charging station can help, by adapting the recharging times to suit energy supply and network capacity. Germany aims to have one million electric vehicles — powered by energy from renewable sources -on the road by 2020. And, within ten years, the German environment ministry expects “green electricity” to make up 30 percent of all power consumed.

    Arithmetically speaking, it would be possible to achieve CO2-neutral electromobility. But, in reality, it is a difficult goal to attain. As more and more solar and wind energy is incorporated in the power grid, the proportion of electricity that cannot be controlled by simply pressing a button is on the increase. In addition, there is a growing risk that the rising number of electric vehicles will trigger extreme surges in demand during rush hour.

    “What we need is a smart grid that carries information in addition to power,” says Dominik Noeren of the Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems ISE. The structure of the grid has to change from a push system based on energy demand to a pull system based on production output. In Noeren’s opinion, “electric cars are best equipped to meet this challenge.” Introduced in large numbers, they have the capacity to store a lot of energy. On average, a car is parked for at least 20 hours out of 24. That is more than enough time to recharge them when the wind picks up or the demand for electricity is low.

    Developed by Fraunhofer researchers, the “smart” charging station is a device that enables electric vehicles to recharge when the system load is low and the share of energy from renewable resources is high. In this way, load peaks can be avoided and the contribution of solar and wind power fully exploited. “For us, it is important that end consumers are completely free to decide when they want to recharge. We do not want them to suffer any disadvantages from the controlled recharging of their vehicles’ batteries,” Noeren emphasizes. That’s why he favors electricity rates that adapt to the prevailing situation in the power grid — ones that are more expensive in periods of peak demand and particularly cheap when there is a surfeit of renewable energy.

    Solar Power to the People, With a Lot of Public Help

    IT’S Earth Day, and among the many activities planned for students at the Lagunitas school campus, about 30 miles north of San Francisco, is a field trip to visit a solar power installation, where they will learn how photovoltaic technology converts the sun’s energy to electricity.

    But they won’t need permission slips from their parents to leave the school grounds, as the system sits on a sunny spot next to the school’s soccer field.

    In operation since 2008, the system provides about 70 percent of the school’s annual electric needs and will save more than $100,000 on its energy bills over the next 15 years.

    Installing it cost the school nothing. In a business arrangement becoming common for solar projects like this, the project developer, Solar Power Partners, installed, owns and operates the system. It then sells power back to the school through a long-term power purchase agreement.

    Retaining ownership lets the developer and its investors take advantage of federal tax incentives and California state subsidies, which in turn allow them to compete on price with the local utility.

    Government incentives to private industries are nothing new. In 1917, the federal government offered a tax credit to a young oil industry to encourage exploration and drilling, opening up an industry that transformed our economy, while creating thousands of new companies and many more jobs. Today’s solar power proponents hope generous federal and state incentives, along with creative business models like power purchase agreements, will provide the same result.

    Photovoltaic technology has been around since the 1950s. It was originally used to power sites far off the utility grid. The market for building solar electric systems on homes and commercial properties, however, really took off when the federal Energy Policy Act of 2005 raised the investment tax credit for solar projects to 30 percent. Almost all of these systems remain connected to the utility grid, so the customer, like the Lagunitas school, can still buy power from the utility when its solar energy system does not meet its demands. And when they generate a surplus, they can put power back on the grid and receive a credit on their utility bill.

    New energy powers up lobbying

    Alternative energy used to be just a speed bump on K Street.

    In 1998, the entire sector spent only $2.4 million lobbying the federal government, compared with $142 million spent by the oil and gas, electrical utilities and mining industries, according to the Center for Responsive Politics, a nonpartisan group that tracks political spending.

    A little more than a decade later, the advocacy class for wind, solar, ethanol and a host of other alternative and renewable energy sources is growing exponentially — much as the sector hopes its market share will in the coming decades. In 2009, alternative energy spent $30 million on lobbying, 12 times its 1998 amount.

    The prospects of action on a major energy bill — with billions set aside for research and development of new, cleaner fuels — is a major reason for that. “The industry realizes it needs to have a larger political presence and has responded with increased lobbying expenditures,” said Dave Levinthal, a center spokesman.

    But the speed of expansion is eye-popping.

    Until 2008, the American Wind Energy Association spent less than $1 million a year on lobbyists — and most years less than $500,000. In 2009, it spent nearly $5 million on lobbying, almost triple its 2008 outlay.

    Similarly, the Solar Energy Industries Association increased its 2007 expenditures of $630,000 to more than $1.6 million in 2009.

    Monique Hanis, director of communications for SEIA, said there are several reasons for SEIA’s increased presence in Washington. Among them is getting help in delivering solar-powered electricity to customers and, ultimately, breaking up old energy’s market dominance. “We need a level playing field to compete, and that comes back to policy,” Hanis said.

    With the growth of the solar energy industry, SEIA’s membership has expanded, giving the organization a larger budget and the freedom to hire more lobbyists to work on a wider range of policy issues. The group exercised that new muscle in 2008 when it won extension of the Solar Investment Tax Credit for another eight years.

    White House to provide $452M for retrofits

    Twenty-five states, local governments and nonprofits will split $452 million to retrofit energy-inefficient homes and office buildings, Vice President Joe Biden will announce this afternoon.

    The money comes as part of the $787 billion American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, which President Obama signed into law 16 months ago. The stimulus package earmarked roughly $80 billion for clean-energy and energy-efficiency projects.

    The so-called “Retrofit Ramp-Up” funding commitments to be announced today at the White House will help the 25 states, local governments and nonprofits swap out building insulation, windows and lights, among other things. Grantees will offer building owners low- or no-interest loans for retrofits that may be repaid through property tax or utility bills.

    The Energy Department will use the program’s financing and retrofit models to develop best-practice guides that other cities could adopt. Replicating such efforts nationally could save homes and businesses about $100 million in utility bills annually, as well as leverage about $2.8 billion in from the private sector and create about 30,000 jobs during the next three years, administration officials claim.

    “This investment in some of the most innovative energy-efficiency projects across the country will not only help homeowners and businesses make cost-cutting retrofit improvements but create jobs right here in America,” Biden notes in prepared remarks.

    The 25 grantees and their grant amounts: Austin, Texas ($10 million); Boulder County, Colo. ($25 million); Camden, N.J. ($5 million); Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning ($25 million); Greater Cincinnati Energy Alliance ($17 million); Greensboro, N.C. ($5 million); Indianapolis ($10 million); Kansas City, Mo. ($20 million); Los Angeles County, Calif. ($30 million); Lowell, Mass. ($5 million); state of Maine ($30 million); state of Maryland ($20 million); state of Michigan ($30 million); state of Missouri ($5 million); Omaha, Neb. ($10 million); state of New Hampshire ($10 million); New York State Research and Development Authority ($40 million); Philadelphia ($25 million); Phoenix ($25 million); Portland, Ore. ($20 million); San Antonio ($10 million); Seattle ($20 million); Southeast Energy Efficiency Alliance ($20 million); Toledo-Lucas County Port Authority ($15 million); and Wisconsin Energy Conservation Corp. ($20 million).

    Commercial and residential buildings consume about 40 percent of the nation’s energy and account for about 40 percent of its carbon dioxide emissions, according to DOE. Existing building retrofit technologies could slash residential buildings’ energy use by 40 percent and associated greenhouse gas emissions by up to 160 million metric tons annually.

    Edging Back to Nuclear Power

    FOR the first time since the 1970s, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission has announced a step that it once took routinely: appointing an inspector for a new reactor construction project.

    With 17 applications in hand from companies that want to build 26 reactors, the agency is likely to name a lot more inspectors; it also expects five more applicants in the next few years.

    Is this the long-awaited renaissance of the nuclear construction business, after years of being moribund?

    Certainly, some crucial ingredients are falling into place. Nuclear power provides 70 percent of the nation’s carbon-free electricity, important at a time when environmentalists track carbon in the atmosphere the way baby boomers check their cholesterol levels. And while Congress has not agreed on setting a price on carbon emissions, important people say we need more low-carbon power. President Obama said in his State of the Union address that it was time to build “a new generation of safe, clean nuclear power plants in this country,” and his budget plan would triple the pool of loan guarantees available for construction, to $57.5 billion.

    Near Augusta, Ga., where the Southern Company opened its Vogtle 1 and 2 reactors in 1987 and 1989, workers have cleared away storage sheds and are preparing a site for construction of units 3 and 4. Vogtle received the first loan guarantees, $8.3 billion, under a program enacted in 2005; the five years that have passed are an indication of the pace of the renaissance.

    Yet, undeniably, there is progress. Parts have been ordered from as far away as Italy and Japan, and there are stirrings in the supply chain here, suggesting that, while the United States can no longer manufacture all the key components, it can at least contribute to a global system. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission has approved the Vogtle site, and a legion of its engineers and those at Westinghouse, the designer, are hashing out details before a new kind of license can be issued — one that will allow cookie-cutter copies of the reactor around the country. Generic approvals for other designs are at various stages.

    Boosters of nuclear power want to repeat the 1970s, with dozens of orders a year; Senator Lamar Alexander, Republican of Tennessee, has called for building 100 plants, which would more than double existing capacity, just as the United States did from 1970 to 1990. And there appears to be bipartisan support for new reactors.

    Some longtime opponents, like Representative Edward J. Markey, Democrat of Massachusetts, said they still do not like the technology but would hold their noses and take a package that included some of what they want. Mr. Markey, who with Representative Henry A. Waxman, Democrat of California, wrote the climate bill that passed the House last year, has been an implacable critic of the industry for decades. But if support for new reactors is the price of getting Senate agreement to a carbon cap, he said in an interview, he would negotiate over that.

  • New app lets gamers watch MLB games on PS3

    Do you love your PS3? Do you also love baseball? You’ll be able to enjoy those two together thanks to a new PS3 app that’s going live on the PlayStation Store today.

  • Bush Was Actually Pretty Fiscally Conservative, If You Ignore His Policies

    If President Bush has any virtues, surely none of them rhyme with fiscal responsibility. But that’s exactly the argument David Brooks makes in this conversation with fellow New York Times columnist Gail Collins.

    David Brooks: It has become common on the right to
    blast Bush for being a big government conservative. It’s true the
    prescription drug bill was unpaid for, though I would mention the
    market elements in that reform have proven to be fantastically
    successful. Beyond that (and the small matter of the tax cuts, which
    Republicans are not complaining about) his administration was
    reasonably tight on spending.
    Deficits until the recession hit were
    less than 2 percent of G.D.P., not in the double digits as now. [My emphasis]

    In other words: “Besides that, Mrs. Lincoln, how was the play?”

    There are two problems with the last two sentences. First, the tax cuts are no “small matter.” They are fundamental to our long-term deficit crisis. In the next 10 years their yearly impact on the deficit is projected to grow from about $350 billion to $700 billion.

    Second, Brooks compares Bush deficits to Obama deficits as though each president was handed a blank slate and a piece of chalk and instructed to write down whatever deficit-GDP ratio he felt comfortable with. That is not how things work. The “Obama deficit” is basically a Bush deficit, with about $200 billion in counter-cyclical stimulus on top. There’s an argument to be had about whether that money was spent prudently, but even a President McCain (or Bush) would have passed some sort of deficit-widening stimulus.

    Where did our deficit come from? The Bush tax cuts accounted for about $350 billion of our deficit in 2009, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities; depressed tax revenue hit another $500 billion; the bailout fund shepherded by Sec. Hank Paulson and other mandatory spending contributed another few hundred billion. So right there, Obama’s deficit was $1 trillion even before it’s technically Obama’s.

    It’s one thing to pretend that Bush has nothing to do with the 2009 deficit. It’s another to compare the 2009 deficit to the 2004 deficit for the purpose of making Bush look like a fiscal conservative. It’s a bit like a mother who, after watching her son break a vase and hand the shattered shards to his sister, praises him for being so very careful around all the house’s glassware. David Brooks is smarter than that mom, so why is he making that argument?

    ______

    This graph (via the New York Times) is illustrative.

    Source: New York Times analysis of Congressional Budget





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  • Samsung Reality (Verizon) Unboxing by Sydney

    Sydney does a quick unboxing and gives her first impressions of the Reality from Verizon. It has a full QWERTY keyboard and access to mobile e-mail and Twitter.


  • iPad X-ray [Ipad]

    We already knew what was inside the iPad, but I must say, it’s still a bit of a letdown that zero gnome skeletons were revealed in this shot. [gigazine via CrunchGear] More »







  • Diabetes drug tied to reduced breast cancer risk

    NEW YORK (Reuters Health) – Women who have used the diabetes drug metformin for more than five years may have a lower risk of breast cancer than diabetic women on other treatments, a new study finds…

    Researchers at Harvard University are currently developing a large clinical trial to test whether using metformin after standard treatment for early breast cancer helps prevent cancer recurrence…

    Read more here

  • DOJ To Appeal National Day Of Prayer Ruling

    The Justice Department says it will appeal a federal judge’s ruling that deemed the National Day of Prayer unconstitutional.

    In a “Notice of Appeal” filed in the Western District of Wisconsin on Thursday, Justice Department lawyers said that, on behalf of President Barack Obama and White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs, they were asking the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit to overturn the judge’s ruling.

    In a 66-page opinion issued April 15, U.S. District Judge Barbara Crabb said the holiday violates the “establishment clause” of the First Amendment, which creates a separation of church and state.

    “I understand that many may disagree with that conclusion and some may even view it as a criticism of prayer or those who pray,” Crabb said in her opinion. “That is unfortunate. A determination that the government may not endorse a religious message is not a determination that the message itself is harmful, unimportant or undeserving of dissemination.”

    The opinion came in a case filed by the Freedom From Religion Foundation, a Wisconsin-based group of self-described “atheists” and “agnostics.”

    Crabb said her ruling was based on “relevant case law,” and it did not prevent religious groups from organizing prayer services or prevent the President from discussing his views on prayer.

    “The only issue decided in this case is that the federal government may not endorse prayer in a statute,” Crabb said.

    Within hours of the ruling, the ranking Republican on the House Judiciary Committee urged the Justice Department to “immediately” file an appeal.

    “The decision undermines the values of religious freedom that America was founded upon,” Rep. Lamar Smith, R-Tex., said in a statement. “What’s next? Declaring the federal holiday for Christmas unconstitutional?”

    Crabb said the ruling would not have any effect until any appeals are exhausted.

    She insisted her ruling was not a judgment on the value of prayer.

    “No one can doubt the important role that prayer plays in the spiritual life of a believer,” Crabb said in her opinion. “In the best of times, people may pray as a way of expressing joy and thanks; during times of grief, many find that prayer provides comfort. Others may pray to give praise, seek forgiveness, ask for guidance or find the truth. … However, recognizing the importance of prayer to many people does not mean that the government may enact a statute in support of it, any more than the government may encourage citizens to fast during the month of Ramadan, attend a synagogue, purify themselves in a sweat lodge or practice rune magic.”

    The National Day of Prayer was first established by Congress in 1952, with a more specific date for the holiday set in 1988. It is now observed on the first Thursday in May.

  • Lithium in Argentina: Rodinia reports Phase II sample results at Diablillos lithium brine project RM.v, TNR.v, CZX.v, LMR.v, LI.v, SQM, FMC, ROC

    We are monitoring progress at another project in Salta, Argentina as well. Marina is under drill now and International Lithium Corp will be publicly trading in couple of months. This set of results from Rodinia Minerals looks very positive, particularly in Mg ratio and Li content. Electric Cars are coming on the road and Juniors are coming with Supply of Lithium.
    TNR Gold Corp has announced today very positive developments after released International Lithium Corp. spin out procedure: Mariana is under drill now and Nevada is next on exploration advance with size of the properties doubled according to the company.
    TNR Gold Corp.: Drilling Commences at Mariana Lithium Brine Project, Argentina/Nevada Project Area Doubles in Size Through Staking

    Wednesday , 21 Apr 2010
    TORONTO, ONTARIO–(Marketwire) –
    Rodinia Minerals Inc. (“Rodinia” or the “Company”) (TSX VENTURE:RM)(OTCQX:RDNAF), is pleased to report that it has received positive phase II sample results from its auger drill exploration program on its Salar de Diablillos lithium-brine project in Salta, Argentina (“Diablillos”). The Company believes the phase II results may be indicative of high concentrations of lithium and potash, and are encouraged to see results that exceed the initial sample results (see Press Release dated March 1, 2010). The phase II sample results were taken at depths between 3 and 5 metres below surface, whereas the previously reported results were taken between 1 and 3 metres below surface.
    Results from the phase II sampling of brines have returned lithium (“Li”) values of up to 1,000 milligrams per litre (“mg/L”) and favourable magnesium (“Mg”) to lithium ratios. The samples, all taken from within aquifers on the Diablillos property, averaged 895 mg/L Li with ratios of 4.44 Mg:Li, and 5.22 SO4:Li. These samples are from the aquifer that will be the focus of subsequent exploration programs and will be used to assess the feasibility of production in the future. The results represent the first batch of deep auger drilling samples currently being performed on a 300 metre by 300 metre grid over the Diablillos project. The Company expects more results over the next few months. The results from phase II aquifer sampling are summarized in the table and figure below.

    To view Figure 1, please visit the following link: http://vantagewire.lyris.net/t/2497/216145/562/0/
    The Company continues to employ a sampling procedure that is designed to ensure sample integrity by minimizing contamination of brine samples through the dissolution of overlying sediments and evaporates, that may be enriched in lithium. All holes were drilled to a depth sufficient to ensure penetration of the overlying clay layer, which varies in thickness between one and over three metres. Below the clays, a medium to coarse grained sand aquifer was encountered containing high-grade lithium brine in its porous space. As previously outlined, a historical drill hole in the south eastern margin of the salar indicates the presence of this aquifer to a vertical depth of at least 75 metres, with material coarsening at depth to a coarse basal conglomerate (SEGEMAR; http://vantagewire.lyris.net/t/2497/216145/563/0/).
    Sample integrity was maintained by pushing four inch casing down into the hole and pumping, where possible, the contents of the hole. The hole was then left to refill from the aquifer below, ensuring proper representation of brine geochemistry. This brine was then sampled and decanted before collection in sealed plastic containers that had been previously rinsed in the same brine. All samples were sent to ALS Laboratory Group, Environmental Division, in Fort Collins, CO, USA where Rodinia is sending both its Diablillos and Clayton Valley project samples.
    Rodinia’s auger drill exploration program is expected to continue on a 300 metre by 300 metre grid across the property, and gravity surveys and a reverse circulation (“RC”) drill program are planned. The gravity survey will be used to determine the basement depth of the prospective areas over the salar and will help generate the initial targets for a planned 32 drill hole RC program. The continuation of the auger drill program and the initiation of gravity surveys and RC drilling are expected to lead towards a resource estimate at Diablillos later in 2010.
    The project is supervised by William Randall MSc (Geology), the Vice President Exploration of Rodinia. Mr. Randall is a qualified person, as defined by National Instrument 43-101, and he has reviewed and approved the scientific and technical information in this release. According to the Company’s sampling protocol, sample size is to exceed 300 millilitres and be stored in clean, secure containers for transportation. The prepared samples are then forwarded to the ALS Laboratory Group, Environmental Division, in Fort Collins, CO (USA) for analysis. A rigorous QA/QC program is implemented consisting of regular insertion of standards and blanks to ensure laboratory integrity.
    About Rodinia Minerals Inc.:
    Rodinia Minerals Inc. is a Canadian mineral exploration company with a primary focus on lithium exploration and development in North and South America. The Company is positioned to capitalize on the expected increase in demand for lithium carbonate that is projected to result from the anticipated paradigm shift to mass adoption and use of key lithium applications like lithium-ion batteries as well as glass ceramics, greases, pharmaceuticals etc.
    Rodinia is currently exploring its Clayton Valley project in Nevada, USA, which surrounds the only lithium-brine producer in North America, and its Diablillos project in Salta, Argentina.”
  • Technology Alliance Showcases Five Companies in Sensors, Mobile Displays, and Drug Therapies: Investors Take Notice

    Technology Alliance
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Yesterday afternoon, I attended the Seattle-based Technology Alliance’s “Innovation Showcase” at the Rainier Square Conference Center downtown. This is a relatively new event—the fourth one so far, and the first open to the press—in which tech and life sciences companies from Washington state pitch their businesses to a small, select crowd of angel investors, entrepreneurs, business leaders, and service providers.

    The event had a strong University of Washington flavor, as several of the speakers and sponsors had UW ties. Linden Rhoads, vice provost and head of the UW Center for Commercialization, and her deputies, Rick LeFaivre and Tom Clement, each said a few words about the presenters.

    Similar to the NWEN First Look Forum last week, the five presenting companies cut across some very different disciplines, including hardware, wireless sensors, and biotech. Guess how many software or Internet companies presented? None.

    Well, none of the traditional Web 2.0, social networking, or business software, at least. Susannah Malarkey, executive director of the Technology Alliance, told me this was a conscious decision. Her team chose non-software companies for this event, in part because software startups tend to need less capital and can get off the ground more easily these days than other tech and life sciences firms. One of the goals of the Innovation Showcase was to highlight different kinds of companies compared to other events around town—though each was built on a strong technical idea.

    Here’s a quick rundown on the companies, and what stood out to me. No audience voting, no winners, just the facts. I’ll say a little more about some companies than others, but this is by no means comprehensive:

    1. Enravel (Seattle)

    Linden Rhoads introduced this startup by pulling out her iPhone and iPad (yes, one of those) and talking about the devices’ display capabilities. “These are great, these are fun, but they’re going to be so much more fun when there are projectors available for them,” she said. “That day is very, very close at hand.”

    Enravel is led by UW mechanical engineer Brian Schowengerdt, an expert in alternative displays, user interfaces, and human visual perception. He co-founded the company in 2009 to commercialize a laser-based “pico projector.” The idea, he says, is to “take a display of iPad size and compress it into the size of an iPhone.” More specifically, to shrink a projector to “the size of a grain of rice” and use it to project on-screen images, video, games, websites, e-mail—you name it—onto any larger surface.

    The core technology is a “scanning fiber” projector that uses fiber optics and a vibrating element to scan an image and blow it up, for example, to a size of 17 inches across from just five inches away. A matchbook-size assembly of laser diodes (off the shelf) provides the light source to project the image. You could imagine such a projector might be crammed into a smartphone and used …Next Page »

    UNDERWRITERS AND PARTNERS



























  • BMW confirms Megacity vehicle will launch in 2013 under a sub-brand

    BMW CEO – Dr. Norbert Reithofer

    BMW Group announced today that it will be bringing its first series-production electric-drive model to the market with the launch if its Megacity Vehicle in 2013.

    “With this innovative vehicle, designed from the ground up, we will be creating new benchmarks for electric mobility from 2013 on,” said Norbert Reithofer, Chairman of the Board of Management of BMW AG. “Our Megacity Vehicle will be significantly lighter than conventional cars and, in terms of sustainability, will set a new standard across the entire value-added chain.”

    The Megacity Vehicle will be a zero-emission urban vehicle for the world’s metropolitan areas and is currently being developed as a part of Project i and will be available under a sub-brand of BMW.

    BMW said that when producing the Megacity Vehicle it focused a lot of its attention on the choice of materials used to produce the electric-car since weight plays a pivotal role in the range achievable by electrically driven vehicles. The ultra-light yet high-strength composite CFRP (carbon fiber-reinforced plastic) plays a significant part in the materials mix, BMW said.

    “This vehicle will radically alter the motor industry as we know it. The BMW Group is currently the only company that will be launching a volume-production vehicle on the market that features carbon fibre-reinforced material,” explained Reithofer. “We were among the first manufacturers to pick up on the trend towards electric mobility and to act accordingly. More and more people around the globe are very keen on electric driving. Research shows, moreover, that more than half of the population around the world already live in conurbations.”

    BMW Concept ActiveE:

    – By: Omar Rana


  • Obama’s Speech at Cooper Union

    Watch live here. And here is the full text:

    It’s good to be back in the Great Hall at Cooper Union, where generations of leaders and citizens have come to defend their ideas and contest their differences. It’s also good being back in Lower Manhattan, a few blocks from Wall Street, the heart of our nation’s financial sector.

    Since I last spoke here two years ago, our country has been through a terrible trial. More than 8 million people have lost their jobs. Countless small businesses have had to shut their doors. Trillions of dollars in savings has been lost, forcing seniors to put off retirement, young people to postpone college, and entrepreneurs to give up on the dream of starting a company. And as a nation we were forced to take unprecedented steps to rescue the financial system and the broader economy.

    As a result of the decisions we made — some which were unpopular — we are seeing hopeful signs. Little more than one year ago, we were losing an average of 750,000 jobs each month. Today, America is adding jobs again. One year ago, the economy was shrinking rapidly. Today, the economy is growing. In fact, we’ve seen the fastest turnaround in growth in nearly three decades.

    But we have more work to do. Until this progress is felt not just on Wall Street but Main Street we cannot be satisfied. Until the millions of our neighbors who are looking for work can find jobs, and wages are growing at a meaningful pace, we may be able to claim a recovery — but we will not have recovered. And even as we seek to revive this economy, it is incumbent on us to rebuild it stronger than before. That means addressing some of the underlying problems that led to this turmoil and devastation in the first place.

    One of the most significant contributors to this recession was a financial crisis as dire as any we’ve known in generations. And that crisis was born of a failure of responsibility — from Wall Street to Washington — that brought down many of the world’s largest financial firms and nearly dragged our economy into a second Great Depression.

    It was that failure of responsibility that I spoke about when I came to New York more than two years ago — before the worst of the crisis had unfolded. I take no satisfaction in noting that my comments have largely been borne out by the events that followed. But I repeat what I said then because it is essential that we learn the lessons of this crisis, so we don’t doom ourselves to repeat it. And make no mistake, that is exactly what will happen if we allow this moment to pass — an outcome that is unacceptable to me and to the American people.

    As I said two years ago on this stage, I believe in the power of the free market. I believe in a strong financial sector that helps people to raise capital and get loans and invest their savings. But a free market was never meant to be a free license to take whatever you can get, however you can get it. That is what happened too often in the years leading up to the crisis. Some on Wall Street forgot that behind every dollar traded or leveraged, there is family looking to buy a house, pay for an education, open a business, or save for retirement. What happens here has real consequences across our country.

    I have also spoken before about the need to build a new foundation for economic growth in the 21st century. And, given the importance of the financial sector, Wall Street reform is an absolutely essential part of that foundation. Without it, our house will continue to sit on shifting sands, leaving our families, businesses and the global economy vulnerable to future crises. That is why I feel so strongly that we need to enact a set of updated, commonsense rules to ensure accountability on Wall Street and to protect consumers in our financial system.

    A comprehensive plan to achieve these reforms has passed the House of Representatives. A Senate version is currently being debated, drawing on the ideas of Democrats and Republicans. Both bills represent significant improvement on the flawed rules we have in place today, despite the furious efforts of industry lobbyists to shape them to their special interests. I am sure that many of those lobbyists work for some of you. But I am here today because I want to urge you to join us, instead of fighting us in this effort. I am here because I believe that these reforms are, in the end, not only in the best interest of our country, but in the best interest of our financial sector. And I am here to explain what reform will look like, and why it matters.

    First, the bill being considered in the Senate would create what we did not have before: a way to protect the financial system, the broader economy, and American taxpayers in the event that a large financial firm begins to fail. If an ordinary local bank approaches insolvency, we have a process through the FDIC that insures depositors and maintains confidence in the banking system. And it works. Customers and taxpayers are protected and the owners and management lose their equity. But we don’t have any kind of process designed to contain the failure of a Lehman Brothers or any of the largest and most interconnected financial firms in our country.

    That’s why, when this crisis began, crucial decisions about what would happen to some of the world’s biggest companies — companies employing tens of thousands of people and holding hundreds of billions of dollars in assets — had to take place in hurried discussions in the middle of the night. That’s why, to save the entire economy from an even worse catastrophe, we had to deploy taxpayer dollars. And although much of that money has now been paid back — and my administration has proposed a fee to be paid by large financial firms to recover the rest — the American people should never have been put in that position in the first place.

    It is for this reason that we need a system to shut these firms down with the least amount of collateral damage to innocent people and businesses. And from the start, I’ve insisted that the financial industry — and not taxpayers — shoulder the costs in the event that a large financial company should falter. The goal is to make certain that taxpayers are never again on the hook because a firm is deemed “too big to fail.”

    Now, there is a legitimate debate taking place about how best to ensure taxpayers are held harmless in this process. But what is not legitimate is to suggest that we’re enabling or encouraging future taxpayer bailouts, as some have claimed. That may make for a good sound bite, but it’s not factually accurate. In fact, the system as it stands is what led to a series of massive, costly taxpayer bailouts. Only with reform can we avoid a similar outcome in the future. A vote for reform is a vote to put a stop to taxpayer-funded bailouts. That’s the truth.

    And these changes have the added benefit of creating incentives within the industry to ensure that no one company can ever threaten to bring down the whole economy. To that end, the bill would also enact what’s known as the Volcker Rule: which places some limits on the size of banks and the kinds of risks that banking institutions can take. This will not only safeguard our system against crises; this will also make our system stronger and more competitive by instilling confidence here at home and across the globe. Markets depend on that confidence. Part of what led to the turmoil of the past two years was that, in the absence of clear rules and sound practices, people did not trust that our system was one in which it was safe to invest or lend. As we’ve seen, that harms all of us. By enacting these reforms, we’ll help ensure that our financial system and our economy continues to be the envy of the world.

    Second, reform would bring new transparency to many financial markets. As you know, part of what led to this crisis was firms like AIG and others making huge and risky bets — using derivatives and other complicated financial instruments — in ways that defied accountability, or even common sense. In fact, many practices were so opaque and complex that few within these companies — let alone those charged with oversight — were fully aware of the massive wagers being made. That’s what led Warren Buffett to describe derivatives that were bought and sold with little oversight as “financial weapons of mass destruction.” And that’s why reform will rein in excess and help ensure that these kinds of transactions take place in the light of day.

    There has been a great deal of concern about these changes. So I want to reiterate: there is a legitimate role for these financial instruments in our economy. They help allay risk and spur investment. And there are a great many companies that use these instruments to that end — managing exposure to fluctuating prices, currencies, and markets. A business might hedge against rising oil prices, for example, by buying a financial product to secure stable fuel costs. That’s how markets are supposed to work. The problem is, these markets operated in the shadows of our economy, invisible to regulators and to the public. Reckless practices were rampant. Risks accrued until they threatened our entire financial system.

    That’s why these reforms are designed to respect legitimate activities but prevent reckless risk taking. And that’s why we want to ensure that financial products like standardized derivatives are traded in the open, in full view of businesses, investors, and those charged with oversight. I was encouraged to see a Republican Senator join with Democrats this week in moving forward on this issue. For without action, we’ll continue to see what amounts to highly-leveraged, loosely-monitored gambling in our financial system, putting taxpayers and the economy in jeopardy. And the only people who ought to fear this kind of oversight and transparency are those whose conduct will fail its scrutiny.

    Third, this plan would enact the strongest consumer financial protections ever. This is absolutely necessary. Because this financial crisis wasn’t just the result of decisions made in the executive suites on Wall Street; it was also the result of decisions made around kitchen tables across America, by folks taking on mortgages and credit cards and auto loans. And while it’s true that many Americans took on financial obligations they knew — or should have known — they could not afford, millions of others were, frankly, duped. They were misled by deceptive terms and conditions, buried deep in the fine print.

    And while a few companies made out like bandits by exploiting their customers, our entire economy suffered. Millions of people have lost homes — and tens of millions more have lost value in their homes. Just about every sector of our economy has felt the pain, whether you’re paving driveways in Arizona or selling houses in Ohio, doing home repairs in California or using your home equity to start a small business in Florida.

    That’s why we need to give consumers more protection and power in our financial system. This is not about stifling competition or innovation. Just the opposite: with a dedicated agency setting ground rules and looking out for ordinary people in our financial system, we’ll empower consumers with clear and concise information when making financial decisions. Instead of competing to offer confusing products, companies will compete the old-fashioned way: by offering better products. That will mean more choices for consumers, more opportunities for businesses, and more stability in our financial system. And unless your business model depends on bilking people, there is little to fear from these new rules.

    Finally, these Wall Street reforms will give shareholders new power in the financial system. They’ll get a say on pay: a voice with respect to the salaries and bonuses awarded to top executives. And the SEC will have the authority to give shareholders more say in corporate elections, so that investors and pension holders have a stronger role in determining who manages the companies in which they’ve placed their savings.

    Now, Americans don’t begrudge anybody for success when that success is earned. But when we read in the past about enormous executive bonuses at firms even as they were relying on assistance from taxpayers, it offended our fundamental values.

    Not only that, some of the salaries and bonuses we’ve seen created perverse incentives to take reckless risks that contributed to the crisis. It’s what helped lead to a relentless focus on a company’s next quarter, to the detriment of its next year or decade. And it led to a situation in which folks with the most to lose — stock and pension holders — had the least to say in the process. That has to change.

    I’ll close by saying this. I have laid out a set of Wall Street reforms. These are reforms that would put an end to taxpayer bailouts; that would bring complex financial dealings out of the shadows; that would protect consumers; and that would give shareholders more power in the financial system. But we also need reform in Washington. And the debate over these changes is a perfect example.

    We’ve seen battalions of financial industry lobbyists descending on Capitol Hill, as firms spend millions to influence the outcome of this debate. We’ve seen misleading arguments and attacks designed not to improve the bill but to weaken or kill it. And we’ve seen a bipartisan process buckle under the weight of these withering forces, even as we have produced a proposal that is by all accounts a common-sense, reasonable, non-ideological approach to target the root problems that led to the turmoil in our financial sector.

    But I believe we can and must put this kind of cynical politics aside. That’s why I am here today. We will not always see eye to eye. We will not always agree. But that does not mean we have to choose between two extremes. We do not have to choose between markets unfettered by even modest protections against crisis, and markets stymied by onerous rules that suppress enterprise and innovation. That’s a false choice. And we need no more proof than the crisis we’ve just been through.

    There has always been a tension between the desire to allow markets to function without interference — and the absolute necessity of rules to prevent markets from falling out of balance. But managing that tension, one we’ve debated since our founding, is what has allowed our country to keep up with a changing world. For in taking up this debate, in figuring out how to apply our well-worn principles with each new age, we ensure that we do not tip too far one way or the other — that our democracy remains as dynamic as the economy itself. Yes, the debate can be contentious. It can be heated. But in the end it serves to make our country stronger. It has allowed us to adapt and thrive.

    I read a report recently that I think fairly illustrates this point. It’s from Time Magazine. And I quote: “Through the great banking houses of Manhattan last week ran wild-eyed alarm. Big bankers stared at one another in anger and astonishment. A bill just passed … would rivet upon their institutions what they considered a monstrous system… Such a system, they felt, would not only rob them of their pride of profession but would reduce all U.S. banking to its lowest level.” That appeared in Time Magazine — in June of 1933. The system that caused so much concern and consternation? The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation — the FDIC — an institution that has successfully secured the deposits of generations of Americans.

    In the end, our system only works  — our markets are only free — when there are basic safeguards that prevent abuse, that check excess, that ensure that it is more profitable to play by the rules than to game the system. And that is what these reforms are designed to achieve: no more, no less. Because that is how we will ensure that our economy works for consumers, that it works for investors, that it works for financial institutions — that it works for all of us.

    This is the central lesson not only of this crisis but of our history. It’s what I said when I spoke here two years ago. Ultimately, there is no dividing line between Main Street and Wall Street. We rise or we fall together as one nation. So I urge you to join me — to join those who are seeking to pass these commonsense reforms. And I urge you to do so not only because it is in the interests of your industry, but because it is in the interests of our country.

    Thank you. God bless you. And may God bless the United States of America.