Category: News

  • Giving Corporations an Outsized Voice in Elections

    ‘Corporations are pitching a bizarre
    product — a radical vision of the 1st Amendment. It would give
    corporations rather than voters a central role in our electoral process
    by treating corporate political spending as protected speech. If this
    vision becomes reality, businesses and other big-money players will
    spend billions either hyping their preferred candidates or running
    attack ads against elected officials who don’t support their preferred
    agenda. Voters will be forced into a couch-potato role, mere viewers of
    the electoral spectacle bought and paid for by wealthy companies.’

    Read more…

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  • 15 Government-Backed Lenders Have Double The Normal Default Rate

    family happy homebuyers

    The Federal Housing Authority (FHA) is investigating fifteen mortgage lenders whose loans it backs, due to their sky-high default rates.

    They’re afraid that the bad lending practices which led to the crisis are still going strong. We’re afraid that the FHA’s housing market support is encouraging it.

    WaPo: Each firm raised suspicion because its default rate was at least twice the average of peers in their area. Together, they originated about 100,000 FHA-backed loans in the two-year period ended Nov. 30 and the FHA paid claims on roughly 12,000 of them, according to a federal database.

    The agency does not make loans; it insures the lenders against default. The largest contributor to the volume of bad loans was the Memphis-based bank First Tennessee, which sold its mortgage division to MetLife in 2008 and has since focused its mortgage lending in Tennessee.

    The bank said in a statement Tuesday that just a few bad loans in the smaller pool of loans originated since then could have hurt its performance. The only Washington area lender served with a subpoena was Dell Franklin Financial of Millersville in Anne Arundel County. Richard Reese, the company’s president, said he is confident that fraud is not at the root of the troubled loans at his firm.

    “Many loans we do are in underserved areas that were hit by the poor economy,” Reese said. “We have done nothing wrong.”

    Read the full article here >

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Android Development: It’s Just Different

    As Android grows in visibility, more and more developers, particularly those coming from other mobile platforms, are starting to learn Android development. For example, there seems to be a growing influx of Windows Mobile developers starting to get involved in creating Android ports of their applications.

    If you are one of those people, welcome!

    One problem we encounter, though, is that some newcomers seem insistent upon Android necessarily supporting whatever sort of implementation patterns they are used to from past development environments. So, we get complaints about Android lacking thread-blocking dialogs, or ways to terminate the app, or whatnot. And, sometimes, when those complaints are met with “sorry, that’s just not the way things are done around here”, those lodging the complaints get nasty.

    Android development may be better than what you’re used to. It may be worse. More importantly, though, it is just plain different. This should be no surprise, since each development environment is different across the board: WinMo is different from iPhone, Ruby Web apps are different from Java Web apps, Visual Basic for DOS is different than FoxPro…

    (oh, wait, I’m showing my age on that last one)

    …and so on.

    Whenever you start developing for a new platform, you need flexibility in your mental model, particularly if you are trying to do a straight-up port of one app to a new platform. Things that you did in the original app just may not make sense in the new environment, and trying to force the issue is only going to cause you pain. Your goal should be to deliver significantly similar business logic on the new platform, not to replicate every last button or icon. So, while people “terminate” their Windows Mobile app, they don’t really “terminate” an Android app, any more than they “terminate” a Web app.

    Similarly, programming techniques you used in the old environment just might not make sense in the new one. Android, like many GUI toolkits, is highly event-driven. This means that some conveniences you may find in other platforms — such as displaying a dialog and blocking the thread that started the dialog until the dialog closes — just flat out aren’t available. Does this mean that event-driven GUI toolkits are inherently inferior? Not really. They are just different, requiring different code structures (e.g., event handlers instead of blocking threads).

    Whenever you move to a new programming environment, it is important to keep an open mind and find the right balance between your design models and the approaches that are most conducive to solid apps on the platform. In this respect, Android is no different.


  • Charge your BlackBerry battery using Wi-Fi signal

    When I first saw the Energizer EnergiStick, I thought it was one of the coolest little gadgets around. No long would I have to fear my battery dying if there wasn’t an outlet available — or worse, if I forgot my charger, as I do so often. The device has an obvious limitation in that it can only provide a certain level of charge before needing a charge itself. Apparently, there was an even cooler BlackBerry charger on display at CES last week, though it went underreported. The folks at OhGizmo caught wind of it, though, and because of them we can now revel in the coolness of the RCA Airnergy. It charges your BlackBerry wirelessly.

    (more…)

  • Green Ink: Oil Slumps and T. Boone Punts

    paperCrude oil futures fell below $80 a barrel after Chinese banking rules raise fears the country might slam the brakes on growth. “The Chinese decision doesn’t affect physical oil demand, but it does affect sentiment, and that’s the most important thing for driving prices,” an analyst tells Bloomberg.

    In Washington, the fate of energy and climate legislation hangs in the balance. The question: Is it wiser to try to pass stand-alone energy legislation, without all the controversial climate-change bits, or push for the whole enchilada? In Politico and Green Wire.

    The U.S. Chamber of Commerce’s position is clear: Climate legislation now would strangle U.S. businesses still struggling with the recession, also in Green Wire. NASA’s James Hansen also hates cap-and-trade, and plans more acts of civil disobedience, in The Guardian.

    So what about geo-engineering? Scientists will convene a conference this March to study emergency options for checking temperature increases, also in The Guardian.

    More fallout post-Copenhagen: China’s Janus-faced approach to international affairs reveals a “dragon in sheep’s clothing,” says a NYT op-ed: “As Copenhagen revealed, China is not the self-touted rising superpower but a scheming power that uses poor states as a front to obstruct progress through procedural wrangling.”

    Either way, China and other developing countries will meet later this month to detail their voluntary actions on climate change, part of the follow-up to the much-attacked Copenhagen Accord, in Reuters.

    The NYT’s Room for Debate looks at “green civil war,” or the battle between preservation and the development of new clean-energy sources.

    T. Boone Pickens gets colder feet: The oilman-cum-wind maven halves his wind-turbine order and now says plans for a big Texas wind farm are shelved, in the Dallas Morning News.

    From the Detroit Auto Show, General Motors has a recipe for success: Build more trucks. China’s BYD has electric cars, but isn’t sure yet how to attack the U.S. market. And more video on Tesla’s electric roadster, all in the WSJ.

    Finally, Venezuela may be oil-rich, but it’s energy-poor. The country will start five months of rolling blackouts to deal with electricity shortages, in Bloomberg.


  • Intel Promotion Leaks Core i5 MacBook Pro? UPDATE [Rumor]

    Allegedly found on Intel’s Spanish Retail Edge Program site, this giveaway teases retailers winning two Core i5 MacBook Pros—which haven’t been announced yet. It’s either a marketing mistake or the most predictable leaked news ever. UPDATE

    UPDATE: The same promotion went out in the UK with a completely different graphics package. Such certainly points to a wider Intel promotion mistake (leak) than a single isolated incident.

    UPDATE 2: The promo hit in France as well.

    [faq-mac via AppleInsider]







  • Unica Buys Pivotal Veracity

    Wade Roush wrote:

    Marketing software provider Unica (NASDAQ: UNCA) of Waltham, MA, has acquired Pivotal Veracity of Phoenix, AZ, and Bradenton, FL, for $17.8 million in cash, according to an announcement today. Pivotal Veracity makes software that helps to ensure that marketing e-mails look the same across multiple devices and e-mail clients, and that they reach their intended recipients without getting diverted by Internet service providers’ filters or spam filters. “We believe that e-mail deliverability…is a mission critical technology for marketers,” said Unica CEO Yuchun Lee in a statement. “Acquiring Pivotal Veracity and integrating its technology into Unica’s leading marketing suite is a logical extension of our offerings.”







  • Q&A: Hong Kong’s Air Pollution Problem

    The air pollution reached “life threatening” levels one in every eight days last year. A spokeswoman for the Environment Protection Department comments.

    Continue reading »

    Join the conversation about this story »


  • Reply To Article from Lord Monckton: The climate change sceptic’s Q&A by Fred Pearce of the New Scientist

    Article Tags: Comment, Lord Monckton, Reply To Article

    Many thanks to Lord Monckton for the reply to You Could Not Make It Up: The climate change sceptic’s Q&A by Fred Pearce of the New Scientist…. I made the following comment at the time……This is what I call plain stupid, we have an AGW supporter giving answers on our behalf. No wonder the public are confused about what is going on, why not have a Climate Realists giving answers to questions for AGW!

    Knocking down the extremists who set up straw men

    The Daily Telegraph, on 8 December 2009, produced what it called the “Climate Skeptic’s Q&A”, a piece written by Fred Pearce, a long-standing environmental extremist campaigner on the climate question. There was no attempt in the piece to produce balanced or scientifically-accurate answers. A reader has sent the “Q&A” to us and has asked us to put matters to rights. Mr. Pearce’s “straw-man” questions are in bold face; his answers are in italics, and my comments are in Roman face.

    Click to read FULL reply from Lord Monckton

    Source: sppiblog.org

    Read in full with comments »   


  • Pirate Bay Founders Ordered To Pay Up, Despite Claiming They’re No Longer Associated With The Site [The Pirate Bay]

    Thought the Pirate Bay saga was done and dusted? I’m sure you can spare a few more tears for Universal Music, EMI Music, Sony BMG and Warner Music, who are still chasing their money from the two Swedish escapees.

    Both Gottfrid Svartholm and Fredrik Neij moved outside of Sweden after the trial, and while The Pirate Bay site is still up and running, the law can’t exactly prove the duo are still behind it. Nonetheless, that hasn’t stopped the aforementioned labels trying their hardest to recoup 1m Kronor (USD$142,770).

    Neij is still adamant they’re no longer behind The Pirate Bay, and as he already owes 50m Kronor (which is around USD$7m), “a few million more or less doesn’t really affect me.”

    One day, they’re going to make a movie about all of this. Hopefully starring Johnny Depp and Keira Knightley. [TorrentFreak]







  • Big Pharma, Generic Competition and Cash

    Drug CostsRegulators don’t seem to like it much when big drug companies pay generics shops in deals that determine when branded drugs will face generic competition.

    Today, for example, the head of the FTC and a few lawmakers will call on Congress to crack down on the deals as part of the pending health-care legislation. (The House health-care bill does this; the Senate bill doesn’t.)

    The FTC will also release a report today that says there were 19 cash settlements in fiscal year 2009 compared with 16 in 2008 and none in 2004, according to Dow Jones Newswires. Settlements where payments are involved typically wind up delaying generic competition by 17 extra months, compared with settlements where there are no payments, according to the FTC analysis. The settlements typically occur after a generic manufacturer has gone to court to argue that a patent on a drug is not valid.

    A similar push is on in Europe. AstraZeneca, GlaxoSmithKline, Roche and Sanofi-Aventis, among others, have received new “information requests” in EU regulators’ ongoing investigation into these types of deals, the Financial Times reports this morning.

    Generics companies and branded drug makers may not agree on much, but both groups argue that the settlements are a valid way to resolve litigation. The deals often result in generic competition before patents expire, the president of the Generic Pharmaceutical Association told the New York Times.

    Image: iStockphoto


  • Campos – Teixeira Deal Imminent

    Campos Grand Prix is on the verge of securing its future as a team in the Formula One championship. Amid recent reports that the Spanish team is very close to financial collapse and is considering a sellout of their F1 operations to private investors, the team’s boss Adrian Campos insisted that he will never sell his majority stake in the team.

    However, according to recent reports in the Spanish media, A1 GP owner and South African businessman Tony Teixeira will allegedly buy into the team in… (read more)

  • US Neocon Think Tank Seeks to Connect Iran, Yemen, Al Qaeda

    ‘A report says a high-profile
    neoconservative think tank in the United States is reportedly working
    to establish a link between Iran, the Yemeni opposition groups and
    al-Qaeda militants.
    The alleged
    connection between Iran, the Shia Houthi fighters in northern Yemen,
    the Yemeni separatists in the south and the militants has been the
    subject of discussions between Chris Harnisch and Frederick Kagan, two
    scholars at the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy
    Research (AEI).

    Harnisch and Kagan have been at work for the past six months to make the connection, the report said.’

    Read more…

    Cheney, Perle, Wolfowitz, Kagan and Gingrich are all based at the AEI so draw your own conclusions

    See here…

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  • A scientist chases penguins chased by climate change

    by Ashley Braun

    University of Washington researcher Dr. P. Dee Boersma has spent nearly 40 years following her passion to learn about and protect penguins.Courtesy of Dee Boersma/Penguin Sentinels www.penguinstudies.org

    There once was a Michigan schoolteacher who gave her little girl a butterfly net and a suggestion: Every kid should have a hobby, could collecting insects be yours?

    The little girl, driven by curiosity and a sense of duty, embraced her mother’s words so completely that, for a long time, the schoolteacher believed that her daughter had caused the crash of butterfly populations across the entire Midwest.

    Of course, the real threat was pesticides such as DDT.

    The little girl grew up and moved on. Now, she chases penguins, whose numbers are also spiraling downward. This time, climate change is one of the culprits.

    The butterfly-and-penguin chaser is Dr. P. Dee Boersma, a preeminent penguin researcher at the University of Washington in Seattle, where she holds the Wadsworth Endowed Chair in Conservation Studies. A 2009 winner of the prestigious Heinz Award, Dr. Boersma has spent nearly 40 years studying penguins from the Galapagos Islands to Argentina. I sat down with her to chat about penguin commute times, the human population problem, and why you should have a TV.

    People love penguins because penguins are like people

    Dr. Boersma first fell “madly in love with penguins” when she was doing her PhD research in the Galapagos Islands in the 1970s. Since then, she’s moved further south and for the past 27 years, she and her research crews have been following Magellanic penguins along the temperate southeastern coast of Argentina.

    Perhaps Dr. Boersma keeps these model penguins in her University of Washington lab as a reminder that penguins are a lot like people: both are struggling with climate change.Photo: Ashley BraunWhy bother studying the same group of penguins for so long? Because long-term research like Dr. Boersma’s comes in extremely handy when looking at what an increasingly warmer world does—if anything—to the creatures that live in it.

    Magellanic penguins, for example, can swim more than 100 miles each day in search of a nice fish dinner. After eating it (and hopefully leaving a good tip), they book it back to the nests to feed their fluffy chicks before the food is digested in their own stomachs.

    “It’s not that different than [human] parents that are trying to raise their kids,” noted Dr. Boersma. (Except that your parents probably didn’t regurgitate into your sippy cup.)

    Analyzing satellite data from tagged penguins Dr. Boersma discovered that climate change is forcing these penguins to swim twenty-five miles farther each foraging trip to find food than they were traveling a decade ago. A situation Dr. Boersma compared to a human family where mom’s office has moved from San Diego, where the family still lives, up to San Francisco, where mom now works. The longer commute means mom spends more money on fuel and less time and energy at home. It’s basically the same for a penguin family. Except penguins can’t store extra food in the fridge, and if papa penguin also leaves the nest for food, the kids might get eaten by an armadillo.

    “Penguins … [are] having to commute farther to be able to find fish,” said Dr. Boersma. “That’s the price they’re paying for the change and variability of climate.”

    Courtesy of Dee Boersma/Penguin Sentinels www.penguinstudies.org

    Staring down a changing world without knowing it

    Dr.
    Boersma observed firsthand another deadly example of the effects of climate variation. On
    the Antarctic Peninsula, she saw a “rain-on-snow” event, an elusive
    phenomenon that occurs when sudden bouts of warm air cause falling snow
    to turn to rain or slush. Some experts think warmer temperatures could increase the frequency of these events.
    That is especially bad news for penguin chicks. Their downy feathers
    are adapted to keeping out the cold of frozen snow. However, when snow
    turns to rain, young penguins get drenched and freeze to death. 

    Not all the effects of—or research on—a
    changing global climate are so glaringly obvious to the general public.
    “As one guy said to me, ‘Well, you believe in climate change,’” Dr.
    Boersma mentioned. “And I said, ‘I don’t believe in climate change. The scientific evidence is overwhelming. Climate has
    changed. We’re continuing to see more rapid changes.’ He said, “Well, I
    don’t believe in climate change.’ And I said, ‘Well, you don’t have to.
    You can believe in how many angels dance on the head of a pin. That is
    a belief. But the scientific evidence is really very clear on all of
    these things.’”

    This evidence of global environmental changes often is “difficult
    for us to even see in our lifetime, but if we take an historical
    perspective, the changes have been monumental,” she said. “In the last
    two generations, we went from mostly having a wild world to mostly now
    having a human world.”

    Both a threat and a savior

    Indeed, though climate change presents a grave threat to penguins, “the greatest threat” of all, said Dr. Boersma, is the human race.

    “We have 6.7 billion people in the world, and we all want to consume more,” she said. “As long as people aspire to the standard of living of Americans, we don’t have enough resources. What we should really be talking about is how are we going to get a world population of about 2 billion, and how are we going to get the most consumptive countries to reduce their consumption.”

    Outside of mandated population controls, how does she propose we get from here to there?

    “It starts a person at a time,” Dr. Boersma said. “I have no children. And I have certainly done that intentionally because I think there are too many people in the world.”

    That’s what the Discovery Channel is for

    Dr. Boersma emphasized the importance of connecting with the natural world, something she and her graduate students get the chance to do at her research station in Punta Tombo, Argentina, where she’s been studying penguins the last 27 years. Recently, they befriended a lone male penguin they call “Turbo.” Turbo doesn’t have a mate to make him raise a chick or take out the trash and instead has taken to paying visits to their research station. He knocks on the door with his beak and waddles right inside.

    “I think people have to have that sort of experience with something that’s other than human,” said Dr. Boersma. “And if they do, it can change their life.” 

    That experience can even be vicarious.

    “It’s one of the reasons it’s important to have not only television so you have the Discovery Channel … but also zoos and aquariums,” Dr. Boersma said. “Not everybody’s going to be able to go to Africa, or to Peru.”

    A magazine can work toward that end as well. In 2001, she launched Conservation Magazine. Its mission, says Dr. Boersma, the magazine’s executive editor, is “to get the news out so that anybody who is interested in conservation can read interesting ideas, stimulating science that they can understand.”

    Scientists who do extra credit

    While Dr. Boersma has been an outspoken advocate of the Wildlife Conservation Society for years, she acknowledged that the type of passionate activism practiced by NASA researcher James Hansen is a step beyond what most scientists find comfortable.

    “I think Hansen’s been an amazing advocate for something he cares deeply about,” she said. “He’s taken on activism to try to alert the public to what he sees are fundamental problems. Sometimes scientists don’t want to go quite as far as he does, but I think we all have an obligation to communicate what the loss is going to be and what scientific experiments we’re running with humans as the guinea pig.”

    If penguin stalking were an Olympic event, Dr. Boersma would have taken home the gold.Penguins have clearly been the cause in Dr. Boersma’s life. Her devotion earned her a 2009 Heinz Award. Teresa Heinz established the award in honor of her late husband, U.S. Senator John Heinz. She bestows it on select individuals each year for their “extraordinary accomplishments” in areas that were particularly near and dear to him.

    The prize comes with a $100,000 gift and a big, shiny medal—the part Dr. Boersma secretly is most excited about receiving. Her plans for the money don’t involve any trips to a magical children’s theme park. Instead, she’ll spend it on her three passion projects: The Penguin Sentinals, Conservation Magazine, and Global Penguin Society.

    “As I was kidding a friend, it’s not enough to buy a coastline in Oregon to retire to,” Dr. Boersma said. “So I think I’ll continue to try to work on changing the world.”

     

    ——————————————————

    Correction: This story originally stated that Magellanic penguins are swimming 25 miles farther to find food each day, rather than each foraging trip. The author regrets the error.

    Related Links:

    Everyone wants a piece of Belize

    Pesticides loom large in animal die-offs

    Science confirms that blowing up mountains harms mountains






  • “Avatar” Depression

    Avatar leaves audience depressed. James Cameron’s 3D sci-fi epic may have been a little too real for some fans, who say they’ve experienced depression –even had suicidal thoughts– after watching the movie Avatar. Thousands of Avatar fans are complaining that they are uncomfortable with the state of reality after seeing the film because they long to enjoy the beauty of Pandora, the enticing utopia featured in the movie, CNN reported this week.

    Thoughts on this?

    On forum websites, like “Avatar Forums,” throngs of fans express disgust with the human race and disengagement with life. A topic thread entitled “Ways To Cope With The Depression of The Dream of Pandora Being Intangible,” has received more than 1,000 posts from people experiencing depression after seeing Avatar and fans trying to help them cope. The topic has become so popular that forum administrator Philippe Baghdassarian had to create a second thread so people could continue to post their thoughts about the movie.

    A Naviblue user identified as “Mike” says he contemplated suicide after seeing the movie.

    “Ever since I went to see ‘Avatar’ I have been depressed. Watching the wonderful world of Pandora and all the Na’vi made me want to be one of them. I can’t stop thinking about all the things that happened in the film and all of the tears and shivers I got from it,” Mike posted. “I even contemplate suicide thinking that if I do it I will be rebirthed in a world similar to Pandora and the everything is the same as in ‘Avatar’,” he added.

    Avatar has grossed more than $1.4 billion at the international box office since its release last month and is on track to surpass Cameron’s Titanic as the Highest-Grossing Film of All-Time.


  • Canada Zinc Metals: Investing in China, Cars and Nano – peoples car. CZX.v, TNR.v, LUN.to, FCX, HUD.to, TTM, BYDDY, TM, BHP, TCK, BLS.to, F, NSANY,

    CNBC Video: America meets Nano

    How can this tiny, very basic car with a price tag of USD2500 in India change the world? It is changing lives in India already one family at a time. It brings freedom of personal mobility to second most populous country in the world and brings to us new investment opportunities.


    We do not know how Tata Motors can make money on these cars, but we know that every car will need steel treated with Zinc and battery with Lead. USD2500 opens doors to personal mobility for millions, with level of 25 cars per 1000 population – this market has a long way to go to Western standards. It is again our magic “Growth from Low Base” in action.


    One of our top picks Canada Zinc Metals CZX.v was moving up steadily all last year from below 0.2CAD to recent 0.66CAD level. Chinese Tongling has acquired 13% of the company and now will be close to 20% if will exercise its warrants. It is an important issue for us in our Lithium and REE plays as well – last summer CZX.v announced strategic investment into TNR Gold.

    Peeyush Varshney, Chairman and CEO of Canada Zinc Metals, commented, “This strategic investment into TNR and its proposed spinoff subsidiary, International Lithium Corp, will give our shareholders diversification into the growing opportunities that rare metal industries are offering. Furthermore, the investment gives us an interest in TNR’s stake in the significant Los Azules copper project in Argentina.”
    One day we can wake up with new shareholders in TNR Gold with a very deep pockets. Recent news on Tongling acquiring Copper assets in Ecuador with Chinese Railway Construction Corporation speaks for itself about place of this company in Chinese Government circles. It is no surprise that Los Azules has attracted their attention.
    China’s second largest copper producer, Tongling Nonferrous Metals Group Holdings Co, has joined with China Railway Construction Corp (CRCC) to make an agreed bid for Canada’s Corriente Resources Inc.”


    Meanwhile company continues its work on one of the largest Zinc-Lead deposits in the world in stable Canada. Results from exploration shows further extension of the mineralised zone at the deposit and new discoveries at North Lead Anomaly. With two deposits in the area with magnitude of 50 million tones, dominant land holding in the area by CZX.v provides opportunity to consolidate the area with 100 million tons exploration target, which will put this on par with the top 10 largest Zinc-Lead deposits in the world.
    10.78 Metres Grading 10.76% Zinc, 2.31% Lead, 17.88 G/T Silver And 8.50 Metres Grading 9.75% Zinc, 1.92% Lead And 14.79 G/T Silver
    Vancouver, B.C. – December 10, 2008 – Canada Zinc Metals Corp. (TSX Venture: CZX (“Canada Zinc” or the “Company) is pleased to report further assay results from its 2008 drill program on the zinc-lead-silver bearing Cardiac Creek (CC) deposit. The CC deposit is on the 100% owned Akie property in northeastern British Columbia, approximately 260 kilometres north-northwest of the town of Mackenzie.
    2008 Cardiac Creek Deposit Drill Program
    The primary objectives of the 2008 drill program were to determine both the updip and on-strike extent of the CC deposit as well as to better define it within key selective areas. Information gained from this work will assist in forward planning for future exploration programs that may include advanced underground drilling and sampling activities.
    Hole A-08-58 yielded an interval of 20.19 metres grading 9.35% zinc +lead (including 8.5 metres grading 11.67% zinc+lead). This intercept indicates that mineralization is still open in an updip direction from this hole. Holes A-08-64 (11.12 metres grading 9.03% zinc+lead) and A-08-66 (which includes 8.23 metres grading 6.96% zinc+lead) tested the southeastern extension of the deposit – these results are highly encouraging as they validate that mineralization remains open in this direction. Hole A-08-65 contains several high grade intervals (including 10.78 metres grading 13.07% zinc+lead) that confirm both the thickness and high grade of the CC deposit to the northwest. The high grade in hole A-08-60A (5.19 metres of 14.00% zinc+lead) supports the interpretation of a high grade core continuing to the northwest direction and highlights the value of some further drilling in this open area. In summary, the drilling completed to date indicates a strike length potentially exceeding 1 kilometer and a dip extent exceeding 550 metres.
    Compiled assay drill hole summary results derived from analytical data received from Acme Analytical Laboratories Ltd. of Vancouver, BC, for six additional holes are presented here.
    Exploration Elsewhere on the Akie Property
    ‘The Company also successfully completed 2 holes (1,114 metres) on the North Lead Anomaly, located some 2.3 kilometres northwest of the nearest drill hole to intersect significant CC zinc-lead mineralization. These were designed to further investigate the Gunsteel formation hosted massive sphalerite-galena-pyrite-barite mineralization encountered by Inmet Mining Corporation in 1996. Results of these holes and analysis of the area are documented in a separate press release dated November 18.
    Our 2008 exploration program, now completed, has provided valuable insights into new target areas which will allow us to better forward plan our 2009 exploration program. We are very pleased with this year’s drilling results and anticipate that they will result in an expansion of the defined resource. The completion of the road to the south eastern edge of the mineralization will allow a much more cost effective program to be implemented in the coming year and is a material component in our long range plans,” commented Jim Mustard, President of Canada Zinc Metals. “The CC deposit is one the most significant discoveries in Canada in the past several years.”Further details on these and previous results, including an updated long section plot of all drill holes is available on the Company’s new website: http://www.canadazincmetals.com/ .

    About the Akie Property
    The Akie zinc-lead property is situated within the southern-most part (Kechika Trough) of the regionally extensive Paleozoic Selwyn Basin, one of the most prolific sedimentary basins in the world for the occurrence of SEDEX zinc-lead-silver and stratiform barite deposits.
    Drilling on the Akie property by Inmet Mining Corporation during the period 1994 to 1996 and by Canada Zinc since 2005 has identified a significant body of baritic-zinc-lead SEDEX mineralization (Cardiac Creek deposit). The deposit is hosted by variably siliceous, fine grained clastic rocks of the Middle to Late Devonian ‘Gunsteel’ formation. The Company recently filed a NI 43-101 report supporting the estimated inferred resource of 23.6 million tonnes grading 7.6% Zn, 1.5% Pb and 13.0 g/t Ag (at a 5% Zn cut off grade). The complete NI 43-101 technical report, titled “Geology, Diamond Drilling and Preliminary Resource Estimation, Akie Zinc-Lead-Silver Property, Northeast British Columbia, Canada” and dated May 30, 2008, can be viewed on SEDAR.
    Two similar deposits, Cirque and South Cirque, located some 20 km northwest of Akie and owned under a joint venture by Teck Cominco and Korea Zinc, are also hosted by Gunsteel rocks and have a combined geologic inventory in excess of 50 million tonnes.
    Qualified Person
    John R. Fraser, P.Geo. (B.C.), Vice President of Exploration and a Director of Canada Zinc Metals is the Qualified Person for the Company, as defined by NI 43-101, and is responsible for the technical information contained in this release.”

  • My 19 yr old son’s hair is thinning. My father was bald. Are there new remedies for male pattern baldness?

    I know that male pattern baldness comes from a gene passed from the mother’s father. My father was bald. My son wants to know if there is anything he can do while he still has a full head of hair, rather than waiting until he is bald. Are there any new drugs or homeopathic remedies that help to slow or stop the hair thinning caused by male pattern baldness?

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  • What doctor do you see about female hair loss?

    I have a family doctor but I’d rather not go to him if he is just going to refer me to someone else. What doctor do you see if you feel like you are losing more than the normal amount of hair?

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  • Is Provillus a scam – Facts behind provillus

    Very often, folks who research about the hair restoration products ask – is provillus a scam and if you are one among them, continue to read and learn the solution. . Some folks keep wondering whether provillus is a scam, as the world of net is doubtful and many do not believe the statements given on the reviews and feedbacks published by the clients, since the product that is most popular in net market, often turns out to come under the scam list.

    Provillus work as natural DHT blocker and is accepted as top product among these categories of products, available in the market. Unlike the counterparts in the market, provillus do not lead to any adversary effects like fatigue, brain mist, depression and anxiety. Provillus is not a standard product for both ladies and men. If provillus is a swindle, it needn’t take pains to distinguish the products and scam the buyers. The product is focused on the result, regardless of the sex.

    The role of provillus in hair reconstruction treatment is two fold. It is immensely competent that even a bald head gets dense hair growth, after using provillus.

    When you read, scam in provillus sort of articles released by folks, you will know that they don’t seem to be written by the ones, who have hands on experience with the product. Actually , they might haven’t tried it for themselves. The ones who really have utilized the product will definitely exhilarate with the amazing result. Hence, only their first hand experience can answer the common query is provillus a scam?

    Ensure to enter into the official website of provillus, as there are several forged sites in the name of provillus, but offering you other fake products. Only real and reputed products will have duplicates in the market and not the fake ones.

    Is provillus a scam? Begin to know the first hand user, who has employed provillus to treat the hair fall. Within a month of usage, you may notice the improvement in the thickness of your hair. If at all, you are not happy with the product, you’ve got the money back promises for 90 days trial time. So you and your money is safe and therefore , you need not have to exert too much energy to get the answer for is provillus a scam?

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