Category: News

  • Sheep marathon

    The loss of the old tradition of transhumance (seasonal movement of livestock from higher pastures to lower valleys) affects biodiversity status: when animals move to one place to the other, they bring with them microorganisms and seeds which enrich the ecosystems. A relay of sheep from the Czech Republic to Morocco can be organized to raise awareness of the need to protect and revive transhumance in Europe and beyond.

    For more information on this project, contact Hubert Beckmann at [email protected].

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  • Cotidianas de São Paulo – 19 fotos

    Olá queridos! Há dias não tenho postado novos threads e na verdade tive um final de ano conturbado e cheio de afazeres…

    Resolvi criar um thread mais solto, com poucas fotos sem um tema específico. Fotos tiradas fora dos passeios programados que faço, pois estava sem tempo, logo, as fotos a seguir foram tiradas durante o percurso para algum lugar que tive que ir para resolver algo pessoal.

    01 Vila Mariana

    1B Agência do banco Itaú ainda na Vila Mariana

    02 Entrada da estação do metrô Sta Cruz. A estátua na verdade casou com o nome da estação, porém pertence ao colégio católico situado em frente.

    03

    04

    05

    06 Foto tirada bem longe da Vila Mariana e do Metrô Sta Cruz. Esta foi tomada no final do Vale do Anhangabaú, na Praça da Bandeira, no começinho a Av. 23 de Maio no centro velho. O aeroporto está beeeeeem longe da indicação da placa.

    07 O quase nunca mostrado (aqui no SSC) túnel sob o Vale do Anhangabaú

    08 Vista da entrada do túnel do Anhangabaú para a Pça do Patriarca.

    09 Vista pouco mostrada do passeio embaixo do viaduto do Chá

    10 Ainda no Vale do Anhangabaú Este grafite é recente. Na verdade havia um prédio colado a esta parede cega e foi demolido para a construção do complexo cultural Praça das Artes que está a todo vapor.

    11 Pça do Correio no final do Vale do Anhangabaú. Subindo esta rua destes hotéis chage-se ao Lgo de Sta Efigênia e ao início da Rua Sta Efigênia, uma espécie de rua 25 de março de equipamentes eletrônicos, computadores, equipamentos em geral para casas noturnas, shows e festas.

    12 Este prédio circular fica próximo a entre a estação da Luz, rua Sta Efigênia e Cracolândia, alí funciona um batalhão da polícia, um instituto de identificação, onde são os registros do RG e CPF e o Poupa Tempo que é um órgão do governo do estado de São Paulo que serve para retirada rápida de documentos pessoais (Carteira de Trabalho, Atestados, CPF, RG etc)

    13

    14 Bem longe da foto anterior, aqui estou próximo a catedral da Sé.

    15 Ainda próximo a Sé

    16

    17 Próximo a Sé

    18 Oposto a foto anterior aqui estou próximo ao edifício Altino Arantes e ao Lgo de São Bento. Detalhe do Mosteiro ao fundo.

    19 ainda na região do lgo de São Bento, seguindo em frente por esta viela chega-se a Bovespa.

  • OVP Leads $9M Investment in Aggregate Knowledge, Gets Serious About Online Ads

    OVP Venture Partners
    Gregory T. Huang wrote:

    Kirkland, WA-based OVP Venture Partners is leading a new $9 million Series C financing round in Aggregate Knowledge, an online advertising and analytics firm in San Mateo, CA. Kleiner Perkins Caufield and Byers, DAG Ventures, and original angel investors are also participating. In connection with the deal, OVP managing director Lucinda Stewart is joining the board of Aggregate Knowledge.

    Although it’s a Series C investment in a company founded in 2005, Stewart says it was priced like an early-stage deal, with the existing investors cooperating in a recapitalization of the firm. (That means the previous investors’ stakes aren’t worth what they used to be.) “We came in to create a fresh new company,” Stewart says. The deal signifies OVP’s emerging interest in the online advertising and marketing sector, where it does not yet have many investments.

    Aggregate Knowledge, led by CEO and founder Paul Martino, currently has 26 employees. The company’s vision is to enable major publishers and retailers to personalize their display ads in real-time. Aggregate Knowledge does this with machine-learning algorithms that make sense of huge amounts of data that publishers and retailers have on their customers. The company counts The Washington Post, Cablevision, and Sam’s Club among its customers and partners. Aggregate Knowledge plans to use its new cash infusion to take its technology a step further, in part by offering it to advertising agencies and marketers who want to run more precisely targeted ad campaigns.

    The Seattle connection to this company came in the form of David Jakubowski, a former Microsoft veteran who joined Aggregate Knowledge about two months ago as its chief revenue officer and general manager. Jakubowski was most recently senior vice president at Specific Media, an Irvine, CA-based ad technology firm which has a Seattle office. He previously worked at Quigo Technologies, a search marketing firm, before becoming general manager of Microsoft adCenter and Search Strategy. Jakubowski has also been an advisor to Seattle-based Lucid Commerce, another OVP-backed startup in the analytics and marketing field.

    It took me a while to see how Aggregate Knowledge is any different from Seattle-area online ad firms like BlueKai, AdReady, and Mpire. As I understand it, BlueKai would sell its consumer data to companies like Aggregate Knowledge. AK (and other firms) then use that data to predict audience behavior, and help advertisers and publishers craft and place ads that change based on precise demographics like gender and age. One key difference is that Aggregate Knowledge is generally focused on bigger customers than AdReady is, for example, although both firms share the goal of making display ads as effective at generating sales as search-engine ads (like those from Google).

    “AK provides transparency into the value of inventory for the demand side, the guys who own the websites, the retail companies,” Stewart says. “For 30 years, the ‘buy’ side has never had these tools…Whoever has the data wins now.”

    As for the broader significance to OVP, Stewart adds, “We have a strong interest in deals that leverage ‘big data.’ That’s the thrust behind our entire computational biology strategy, and a lot of our cleantech and advertising and IT deals.”







  • Why America’s Retiring Boomers Doom Us To Bubble, After Bubble, After Bubble… (GS)

    baby boomers dog

    Following Ben Bernanke’s big speech in Atlanta (not to mention the perpetually rising stock market) there’s been a lot more talk about bubbles, how we can prevent them in the future, and whether we’re in a new one already now.

    On this question, David Goldman has been making a salient point that deserves more attention: What we’re experiencing is really an asset dearth.

    Gretchen Morgenson’s recent hit-job on Goldman Sachs (GS) and its synthetic CDOs kind of hinted at this, though she got the equation wrong.

    As she interpreted it, Goldman Sachs manufactured these real-estate backed synthetic CDOs, marketed them to pension funds, and then because of that, when it all came tumbling down, the effect of the collapse was magnified.

    In reality, there was incredible demand for higher-yielding assets, because with all the retiring boomers, there was a shortage of decent yielding non-synthetic assets.

    And we’re still in that exact same boat. As David Goldman notes, corporate issuance of all kinds of assets: IPOs, corporate debt, convertible debt, etc. has fallen off a cliff.

    Specifically, here’s total issuance for the past several years:

    2000: $1.2 trillion
    2001: $1.57 trillion
    2002: $1.48 trillion
    2003: $1.9 trillion
    2004: $2.2 trillion
    2005: $2.62 trillion
    2006: $2.98 trillion
    2007: $2.73 trillion
    2008: $1.1 trillion
    2009: $1.34 trillion

    So the number has fallen off a cliff, but the huge sums being socked away in 401(k)s, pension funds, (not to mention traditional savings), etc. has to go SOMEWHERE.

    So every time there’s a little bit of yield out there, all the money has to chase it immediately. There’s no choice. It’s not a matter of being greedy. It’s mandatory. And so the boom and bust cycle must go on.

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:

  • 2011 BMW 3 Series leaks out ahead of Detroit – special U.S. market performance model mooted

    Filed under: , , , , ,

    Don’t expect an official confirmation from BMW for another week, but some of the automaker’s anticipated updates to its 2011 E92/E93 (3 Series Coupe/3 Series Convertible) have already leaked into cyberspace. The team over at Bimmerfile is reporting that the exterior of both models will receive revised “sporty” front fascias, complete with LED lights and minor tweaks to the interior. Turbocharged 335i models optioned with either the M Sport Package or the standard Sport Package will be fitted with 19-inch alloys (a bump up from the current 18-inch offerings). Anthracite Bamboo trim will reportedly be a new interior option that will be joined by a new exterior color, and paddle shifters will be standard fare for vehicles without manual transmissions.

    Keeping enthusiasts smiling, BMW will reportedly offer an “is” version of the refreshed two-door models. Exclusive to the U.S. market, the special variants are expected to be configured with either DCT or a Sport Automatic transmission. In addition, unique styling and special aerodynamic bits will differentiate them from the standard models. As expected, the interiors will be fitted with M Sport equipment as well. Best of all, the twin-turbocharged N54 under the hood will likely receive its own set of horsepower-boosting enhancements, much like those found on the recently announced Z4 sDrive35is.

    [Source: BimmerFile]

    2011 BMW 3 Series leaks out ahead of Detroit – special U.S. market performance model mooted originally appeared on Autoblog on Wed, 06 Jan 2010 08:01:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • New Study Shows Hereditary Factors Contribute to Aneurysm Formation in Twins

    Heredity for aneurysm much stronger among identical than fraternal twins

    A new study in the January issue of the Journal of Vascular Surgery(®), published by the Society for Vascular Surgery®, reveals robust epidemiological evidence that hereditary factors contribute to aneurysm formation in twins.

    Researchers in Sweden reviewed the data of 172,890 twins born in that country since 1886 and found 265 twins who had developed abdominal aortic aneurysms (AAAs). These individuals ranged from 48 to 94 years of age; 81 percent were male.

    Carl Magnus Wahlgren, MD, PhD, from the department of vascular surgery at Karolinska University Hospital in Stockholm, said that this was the largest AAA population-based twin study to date.

    “There were seven sets of identical (monozygotic) as well as five sets of fraternal (dizygotic) concordant pairs,” said Dr. Wahlgren. “Concordance rates represent the probability of developing AAA for an individual with an affected twin.

    The identical pairs had a 24 percent probability that an identical twin of a person with AAA would get the disease. Their risk was 71 times higher than that of the identical twin of a person without AAA. The probability rate for the concordant fraternal twins was 4.8 percent.

    In contrast, there were 44 identical and 197 fraternal discordant pairs in the AAA group.”

    Researchers also reviewed the data for twins with AAA ages 55 years and older, then possibly excluding genetic connective tissue disorders such as Ehler-Danlos and Marfan syndrome, the odds ratio still was significantly higher for identical as opposed to fraternal twins.

    Heritability of 70 percent of the total trait variance was estimated and the remaining variance was explained by non-shared environmental factors with no support for a role of shared environmental influences.

    “Our twin model provides a powerful means of examining the total genetic contribution to a given disease especially a complex trait such as AAA, and phenotypes (genetic makeup and environmental influences) can be defined to maximize chances of successful gene mapping,” said Dr. Wahlgren.

    “Unlike family or sibling studies, potential confounders such as the variability of disease prevalence with age are removed. This model relies on important assumptions including random mating, no interaction between genes and environment and equivalent environments for identical and fraternal twins.”

    The study had only one female concordant twin pair with AAA; researchers said they could not draw any conclusions about a possible stronger heritability in men or women.

    They noted that in other regions the proportions of type of effects could differ because of environmental factors; also in the cases of aneurysmal disease with several genetic and environmental factors, the liability model assumes that the disease will occur when there are enough contributory factors to push the individual’s liability above the threshold.

    According to the authors, this study emphasizes the importance of evaluating family history in patients with AAA and supports ultrasound scan screening of unaffected siblings. “The data can improve the information given to first-degree relatives of patients with AAA regarding the risk,” said Dr. Wahlgren.

    “However, many questions in the genetics of familial AAA remain unanswered. The understanding about how risk factors and genotype contribute to AAA development is important for patient selection, screening and more aggressive treatment.”

    About Journal of Vascular Surgery®

    Journal of Vascular Surgery provides vascular, cardiothoracic and general surgeons with the most recent information in vascular surgery.

    Original, peer-reviewed articles cover clinical and experimental studies, noninvasive diagnostic techniques, processes and vascular substitutes, microvascular surgical techniques, angiography and endovascular management.

    Special issues publish papers presented at the annual meeting of the Journal’s sponsoring society, the Society for Vascular Surgery®. Visit the Journal Web site at jvascsurg.org.

    About the Society for Vascular Surgery®

    The Society for Vascular Surgery (SVS) is a not-for-profit professional medical society, composed primarily of vascular surgeons, that seeks to advance excellence and innovation in vascular health through education, advocacy, research, and public awareness.

    SVS is the national advocate for 3,000 specialty-trained vascular surgeons and other medical professionals who are dedicated to the prevention and cure of vascular disease.

    Visit its Web site at VascularWeb.org® and follow SVS on Twitter by searching for VascularHealth or at twitter.com/VascularHealth.

    MEDIA CONTACT:

    Jill Goodwin, 312-334-2308
    [email protected]


  • Mullen to Relinquish Biogen Idec Reins, Joule to Test Ethanol Tech, Dicerna to Team with Kyowa Hakko Kirin, & More Boston-Area Life Sciences News

    Rebecca Zacks wrote:

    I’ve got a couple weeks’ worth of New England life sciences news to catch you up on, so let’s dive in.

    —Shares of Watertown, MA-based pSivida (NASDAQ: PSDV) jumped more than 50 percent after the company reported its treatment for diabetic macular edema, an eye disorder, did well in a clinical trial. The treatment employs an implant that is placed in the back of the eye and releases a steady dose of the corticosteroid drug fluocinolone acetonide.

    —Ryan caught up with Bill Sims, the CEO of Cambridge, MA-based Joule Biotechnologies, which is out to produce fuels and chemicals with a process that mimics photosynthesis. Sims shared his firm’s plans to build a pilot ethanol production operation in the American southwest and to advance its process for making diesel without using food crops as feedstock or expensive refining techniques.

    —Boston Scientific (NYSE:BSX), the Natick, MA-based medical device giant, agreed to pay $22 million in a civil settlement with the U.S. Department of Justice. The settlement ends the DOJ’s investigation of post-marketing surveys conducted by a Boston Scientific subsidiary, Guidant, before it was acquired by the Natick firm.

    —Watertown, MA-based drug developer Dicerna Pharmaceuticals inked a potentially mammoth deal with Japan-based Kyowa Hakko Kirin. The agreement gives the Japanese firm access to use Dicerna’s RNA-interference-based drug technology against one undisclosed target on cancer cells, in return for $4 million upfront cash, $120 million in potential milestone payments, and royalties. Over time, the partnership could be expanded to cover as many as 10 more drug targets, each with the same financial terms.

    —Cambridge-based Biogen Idec (NASDAQ: BIIB) announced that its CEO, James Mullen, will step down in June after more than 20 years at the company. Mullen and the rest of the Biogen leadership have been the subject of blistering criticism from billionaire investor Carl Icahn, who launched a proxy battle for control of the company’s board last May. A spokesman said that pressure from shareholders was not a factor in Mullen’s decision to step down.

    Ryan profiled the efforts of Newton, MA-based AesRx to bring its experimental treatment for sickle cell disease into clinical trials. The startup’s founder, Stephen Seiler—the former CEO of Cambridge -based Idera Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:IDRA) has used his own money to support the company so far, and is now looking to raise about $10 million in venture capital.







  • The Quest for MIT’s Next Billion Dollar Idea

    Howard Anderson wrote:

    [Editor’s Note: The other day, upon checking Xconomy’s e-mail, we discovered the following message, encoded using quantum encryption. We ran it through our nifty decryption matrix, and at first all we could decipher was the reply-to address—MIT’s Howard Anderson. But then we realized that we’d intercepted the description for a new course that Anderson is teaching at MIT’s Sloan School of Management this spring.]

    You are Harrison Ford or Matt Damon and you’ve been dropped into an alien world. Your mission: find the Golden Key which will save the comely damsel and/or unlock the next Billion Dollar Idea from Fortress MIT. You know it’s hidden behind one of the 1,000 doors, each of which is virtually identical. Your time is limited…and evil competitors are racing against you for that exact Golden Key!

    What would you do first? Second? That’s exactly what Bill Aulet and I are exploring in an upcoming class at MIT’s Sloan School of Management, 15.390A: New Enterprizes. We’ve recruited Ric Fulop, co-founder of A123 Systems, to help, if only because he has actually done it. The alien world? MIT, and not much is more alien than that. 1,000 doors? That’s the 1,000 professors at MIT and their labs. Evil Competitors? Clearly, the venture capitalists and the snarly mega corporations.

    First eliminate as many doors as possible—maybe by bypassing the English and Latin Departments. Math? Music? Better not. Remember Akamai and Guitar Hero.

    Second, pay attention to the hirsute gaggle outside each of these doors. They are the starving, caffeine-hyped acolytes sometimes called Graduate Students, motto “Will Kill for Skittles.” They speak in semi-intelligent tongues, if only you can decipher them.

    As you frantically sprint down this Infinite Corridor, you are tempted to hire guides, but they speak in riddles. They can’t answer direct questions (”which door?”) but can tell you about patent applications. When you open a door, you can query the recalcitrants inside, asking which of their neighboring doors are potent. Beware! They often send you on goose chases—they have a special power called “tenure.”

    Behind each door comes encrypted noise, sometimes called Research Papers, most of which give boredom a whole new meaning. They are read only by the Chosen and their mothers—and they are about arcane processes that only give you a hint about the Billion Dollar ideas.

    You are tempted to stop and build the ultimate expert system… a supercharged ATM machine into which you could feed these formula heavy scientific papers, and, if you get exactly the right one, billions of dollars would spit out from the bottom. But don’t. It’s an endless sidetrack, and that damsel is starting to worry! Should she have put her faith in the HBS guy who keeps telling her how good it’s going to be…someday?

    Should you go to the exact same door that spilled Billion Dollar ideas before? No! That room is too crowded. Maybe look for solutions to The Big Problem…like curing world hunger or finding a parking space on that MIT lot when there are 10 times more permits than available spaces.

    Aha! Why not build a team of junior Harrison Fords—and send some only to those colored doors where they speak the Tongue…and reassemble at midnight and trade insights. Can you trust your team? Are there spies? Does someone have a key that was made for one door… but opens another?

    Sound like a fun class? Okay, alert the Hasbro boys that we have their next boffo new game, and cue Matt Damon that we have the sequel to Good Will Hunting and his next blockbuster!








  • BlackBerry PowerPoint Presenter Combines Corporate America’s Two Guiltiest Pleasures [BlackBerry]

    Nothing says business like a BlackBerry. Except, obviously, a swanky PowerPoint Presentation. Ok, let me try this again: Nothing says biz-ness like the BlackBerry Powerpoint Presenter, which lets you conduct PowerPoint presentations from your BlackBerry, without a computer.

    The BlackBerry PowerPoint presenter is a gadget with a singular focus: it stores up to 100 slides of PowerPoint presentation, which it can display through any projector or TV that can connect to a VGA or S-Video source, and which operates without the need for a PC running PowerPoint; nearly any BlackBerry handset can serve as a remote. Release date hasn’t been solidified yet, nor has pricing but hey, totally just expense that shit, brah! Right. More details forthcoming later today. UPDATE: It’ll cost $200, later this year. Youch. [BlackBerry]







  • Satellite T100 Series: Affordable Notebooks, But You Get What You Pay For [Toshiba]

    Toshiba’s new 11.6-inch Satellite T115 and 13.3-inch Satellite T135 won’t be the flashiest thin-and-light notebooks on the market, but they’re an economical entry point into the increasingly popular class of casual-use, ultraportable laptops.

    At less and inch thick and weighing in under four pounds, both new Satellites are portable, have 720p native resolution displays and cost as little as $450. The processor options aren’t anything to go crazy over, but with the optional Intel Pentium SU4100 the notebooks can achieve up to nine hours of battery life.

    They won’t be your best bet for a primary computer, and I wouldn’t ask them to do too much heavy lifting, but at the lower ranges the Satellite T100 series appears to offer better than average value.

    Toshiba’s thinnest and lightest Satellite laptops, T100 series laptops are ultrathin PCs built for everyday mobility. Delivering more performance than a netbook, and less weight and more battery life than standard laptops, Satellite T100 series laptops are design engineered for life on-the-go. With two screen sizes to choose from (11.6″ and 13.3″) and now equipped with a dual-core AMD processor plus ATI Radeon HD graphics, Satellite T100 series laptops offer full-range performance for productive multi-tasking and digital entertainment enjoyment in a sleek, thin and ultraportable package.

    Sleek, slim mobility
    Ultraportable form-factor with starting weights of 3.5 lbs and 3.9 lbs for T115 and T135 models, respectively
    Slim profile measuring less than one-inch thick
    Battery life rating up to 9 hours on Intel-based platforms; up to 6 hours on AMD-based platforms
    Fast resume functionality

    Laptop-class performance and premium features
    Choice of Intel or AMD processors:
    AMD Athlon™ Neo and Turion™ Neo X2 processors with ATI Radeon™ HD 3200 graphics configurations available
    Intel Pentium® SU4100
    Choice of 11.6″ or 13.3″ HD TruBrite® LED Backlit display with 16:9 aspect ratio and native 720p screen resolution
    HDMI output
    USB Sleep and Charge port
    TouchPad with Multi-touch Control
    Spacious hard drive configurations up to 320GB available
    All models come equipped with a Hard Drive Impact Sensor
    Toshiba apps: Media Controller, Bulletin Board, ReelTime and power-saving Toshiba eco utility™

    Premium style with a comfort-driven design
    Draped in Fusion™ Finish, available in Nova Black with Red and White color options available (T135 only)
    Full-size keyboard and TouchPad
    Advanced airflow technology keeps the laptop cooler when sitting on your lap

    Pricing: $449.99 – $699.99 MSRP







  • Provillus Hair Loss Complete Treatment for Men – 4 Month Supply

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    Provillus Hair Loss Complete Treatment for Men – 4 Month Supply

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  • TOP 100 Skylines!!!

    top 100 skyline, it’s my opinion

    1 New York

    2 Hong Kong

    3 Chicago

    4 Shanghai

    5 Toronto

  • Lady Gaga Polaroid Partnership

    Polaroid has inked an endorsement deal with singer Lady Gaga, the pioneering photo firm announced on Wednesday. The Grammy-nominated hitmaker has been named Creative Director for a soon to be released speciality line of Polaroid products. Gaga will officially unveil the partnership with an appearance at the 2010 Consumer Electronic Show in Las Vegas on Thursday.


    In October, the photography firm announced plans to bring back their classic cameras after discontinuing production in 2008. Now the Paparazzi hitmaker is coming aboard to create a new line of items for the brand.

    “I am so proud to announce my new partnership with Polaroid as the creative director and inventor of speciality projects,” Gaga said in a statement Wednesday. “The Haus of Gaga has been developing prototypes in the vein of fashion/technology/photography innovation – blending the iconic history of Polaroid and instant film with the digital era – and we are excited to collaborate on these ventures with the Polaroid brand,” she continued.

    “Lifestyle, music, art, fashion: I am so excited to extend myself behind the scenes as a designer, and to – as my father puts it – finally have a real job.”


  • skyscraper on higest and lowest place on earth

    whitch skyscrapers are build on the higest place on earth an the lowest place on earth?
  • Toast with Kumquat Marmalade and Goat Cheese Good Eats! A Weekly Roundup from Serious Eats

    2010_01_06-Eats.jpgDoesn’t this kumquat marmalade look cheery and bright? We couldn’t pass this one up in our weekly roundup of our favorite posts from Serious Eats. Read on for the link to the recipe, plus how to make your own fruit roll-ups, a British toaster with a window (perfect toast every time!) and tips for taking a fat hiatus.

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  • Vegan Chocolate Banana Cake

    Vegan Chocolate Banana Cake

    In my previous post I mentioned about the Taste of Home website for a huge collection of baking recipes and how I like to linger around there. Another website I often visit is Weight Watchers. Whether your New Year’s resolution is to lose weight or not I think it is always better to look for healthy meal ideas and what better place to look for than Weight Watchers. They have a good collection of dessert, baking recipes too. I have tried a couple of recipes from that site as well with some tweaks here and there and have liked it very much.



    The following chocolate banana cake recipe too is my version of the Dark Chocolate Cake recipe in that site. The cake recipe is egg free already. All I did was to substitute a cup of pureed sauerkraut with a cup of pureed banana and made it vegan by substituting canola oil for the melted butter. I also used whole wheat pastry flour instead of all purpose flour. What is sauerkraut? I too was not aware of such a thing until I saw it mentioned in the cake recipe. I understand that it is fermented red cabbage pickle in laymen terms. For detailed information check this sauerkraut recipe, which has detailed instructions with pictures.

    Vegan Chocolate Banana Cake

    As for my chocolate cake with bananas, it came out very well. One of the reason I chose to bake this cake was, I recently purchased a bundt pan and was waiting for a chance to use it. I saw that this cake recipe too used one and was egg free too. Another reason being, I had very ripe bananas at home which I didn’t want to throw it away. So I decided to use it in this recipe and I’m not regretting it at all. The flavor of bananas in the cake is very mild. I was expecting that the banana’s flavor would be dominating but was surprised that it was not so. The cake was moist, had a very good texture; neither dense nor crumbly, perfect for decorating for birthdays and anniversaries. The only change I would make in that case is to use butter instead of canola oil to give it a rich taste.

    Note: There is a print link embedded within this post, please visit this post to print it.

    Vegan Chocolate Banana Cake

    Dry Ingredients:

    Whole Wheat Pastry Flour 2 cups

    Granulated Sugar (See Notes) 1 and 1/3 cup

    Cocoa Powder 2/3 cup

    Baking Soda, 1 and 1/2 teaspoon

    Wet Ingredients:

    Canola Oil 1/4 cup

    Hot Water 1 and 1/2 cups

    Vanilla Extract 1 teaspoon

    Bananas, mashed or pureed 1 cup

    Yield: 1 Bundt cake. (I think it will make two 8-inch layers or one 9×13 inch cake as well)

    Procedure:

    1. Preheat the oven at 350F/180C. Spray a bundt pan with non stick cooking spray.

    2. In a large bowl mix together the dry ingredients and keep it aside.

    3. I pureed 2 small size bananas with little water to measure 1 cup of puree.

    4. To the flour mixture add the canola oil, hot water and vanilla extract; mix well.

    5. Now add the pureed bananas and blend thoroughly.

    6. The cake batter is quite “water-y”. Pour the batter in the prepared pan and bake for approximately from 45-60 minutes or until a toothpick inserted comes out clean. The original recipe mentions 55-60 minutes, but mine was done after 45 minutes itself.

    7. At this stage I did see some cracks on the cake. Move the bundt pan to a cooling rack and let it cool for 10-20 minutes. Place a baking sheet on the pan and slowly invert the pan holding the sides of the sheet to remove the cake from the pan. Then carefully transfer the cake to the wiring rack and let it cool completely before you frost. I didn’t frost mine.

    My Notes:

    1. The original recipe used all purpose flour but we did not realize that the cake was made with whole wheat pastry flour. The cake had a wonderful texture; moist but not sticky and not gritty. This can very well be a birthday cake; but I would use butter in that case.

    2. You could also increase the quantity of sugar to 1 and 1/2 cups if you are not frosting this chocolate banana cake. You could also sprinkle some chocolate chips instead. Since I wanted to make a vegan cake I did not add any. I prefer mild sweetness so the 1 and 1/3 cup was perfect.

    3. The cake was surely moist but I felt that it did not taste rich. The original recipe uses 1/2 cup of melted butter for the fat which I replaced with 1/4 cup canola oil and some mashed bananas. So I think we could use 1/4 cup of melted butter or margarine instead to give that richness. If you want to use entire 1/2 cup batter, you can reduce the quantity of mashed bananas to 3/4th cup.

    4. The next time I try this recipe I’m going to use cooked beet puree instead of mashed bananas. I’m pretty sure that its going to be so good.

    This vegan chocolate banana cake goes to:

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  • Obama Slams Intel Agencies for Christmas Day Attack Attempt

    Obama Slams Intel Agencies for Christmas Day Attack Attempt
    Barack Obama gave U.S. intelligence agencies the presidential equivalent of a knuckle-rapping Tuesday for their failure to connect the dots and nab Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab before a fellow passenger on Northwest Airlines Flight 253 was forced to foil his underwear bomb plot the old-fashioned way.  —KA The Washington Post: President Obama rebuked the U.S. intelligence community Tuesday for a “potentially disastrous” failure to detect an airline bombing plot, saying it ignored various “red flags” and failed to pull together pieces of information it already had. He called the intelligence breakdown intolerable and vowed that “we will do better” in the future. On his first full day back at the White House after an 11-day vacation in Hawaii, Obama briefly outlined preliminary findings in a review he has ordered of “human and systemic failures” that allegedly allowed a radicalized young Nigerian to smuggle explosive chemicals aboard a Northwest Airlines jet and attempt to bring it down as it approached Detroit on Christmas morning with nearly 300 passengers and crew. Declaring that “the system has failed in a potentially disastrous way,” Obama said elements of the U.S. intelligence community knew that Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab had traveled to Yemen and joined up with extremists there. Read more Watch Obama’s speech about the incident and its aftermath below:

    Obama

    Barack Obama gave U.S. intelligence agencies the presidential equivalent of a knuckle-rapping Tuesday for their failure to connect the dots and nab Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab before a fellow passenger on Northwest Airlines Flight 253 was forced to foil his underwear bomb plot the old-fashioned way.? —KA

    The Washington Post:

    President Obama rebuked the U.S. intelligence community Tuesday for a “potentially disastrous” failure to detect an airline bombing plot, saying it ignored various “red flags” and failed to pull together pieces of information it already had. He called the intelligence breakdown intolerable and vowed that “we will do better” in the future.

    On his first full day back at the White House after an 11-day vacation in Hawaii, Obama briefly outlined preliminary findings in a review he has ordered of “human and systemic failures” that allegedly allowed a radicalized young Nigerian to smuggle explosive chemicals aboard a Northwest Airlines jet and attempt to bring it down as it approached Detroit on Christmas morning with nearly 300 passengers and crew.

    Declaring that “the system has failed in a potentially disastrous way,” Obama said elements of the U.S. intelligence community knew that Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab had traveled to Yemen and joined up with extremists there.

    Read more

    Watch Obama’s speech about the incident and its aftermath below:

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    Sick With Terror
    The underwear bomber has reignited the debates about how best to protect the American people, while a killer that claims 45,000 lives annually—one dead American about every 10 minutes—goes unchecked. By Amy Goodman

    The underwear bomber has reignited the debates about how best to protect the American people, while a killer that claims 45,000 lives annually—one dead American about every 10 minutes—goes unchecked.

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    The tallest house now built, the Caliph Tower, has had an opening party; but all that was opened was a few restaurants and viewing platforms.

    The first of 144 Armani Residences are supposed to be delivered sometime in February, the first of 900 Residences and first Corporate Suites sometime in March, the Armani Hotel on 18th of March.

    When shall all 1044 residences and all offices have been completed and offered to recipients?

    When shall the Caliph Tower be "Completed"?

    What is supposed to go into the second tallest building, the 610 m Guangzhou View and TV tower? What shall define its "completion" and when is completion due?

    There have been rumours of installing functional radio transmitters in Ryugyong Hotel… what would define its "completion"? First paying guests of the hotel spending night there?

  • Steve Clemons: Losing Smith Bagley

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    It is not shaping up to be a pretty week for the Democrats. The all-but-assured Democratic nominee for governor in Michigan, Lt. Gov. John Cherry,…

    Amy Goodman: Sick with Terror: Inadequate health care kills 45,000 Americans per year
    The media have been swamped with reports about the attempt to blow up Northwest Airlines Flight 253 on Christmas Day. When Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, now…