Category: News

  • Michelle Obama PETA Ad Under Fire From White House

    A PETA anti-fur ad that went up in Metrorail stations around Washington last month has fallen under fire for using the First Lady’s likeness without permission from The White House.

    The animal rights group salutes Carrie Underwood, Tyra Banks, Oprah Winfrey, and Michelle Obama as part of its “Make DC Fur-Free” campaign. In the controversial ad, PETA praises the ladies as the “most stylish and influential women in America,” adding that “they all refuse to wear real fur. By rejecting fur, these style icons demonstrate to the world that fur is old-fashioned and cruel,”

    PETA President Ingrid Newkirk tells The Associated Press that her organization has done nothing wrong. Newkirk explains that PETA honchos didn’t seek Mrs. Obama’s consent because they know that she can’t make such an endorsement.

    The Obamas deputy press secretary confirmed that The First lady was fur-free after French first lady Carla Bruni made a similar announcement last summer.


  • Recipe Review: Canal House Cooking’s Serious Ragù

    2010-01-06-seriousragu.jpgIn November I reviewed — raved about! — The Canal House Cooking cookbook project by Christopher Hirsheimer and Melissa Hamilton. Read on for a review of one of my favorite (and seasonally appropriate) recipes from their latest volume: Fall and Holiday.

    Read Full Post


  • GigaOM Special Event: FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski to Talk Broadband Policy Wednesday at 10AM

    Broadband is the technology behind this era’s industrial revolution, driving the creation of new companies, the destruction of existing business models, and putting a world of information at consumers’ fingertips in the home or on the go. However, up until President Barack Obama made nationwide access part of his economic recovery plan, the regulatory side of broadband wasn’t something people paid a lot of attention to. But now net neutrality, disappearing landlines, cable disputes, the National Broadband Plan, Google Voice and Apple’s stance on app approvals are big stories, influenced partly by an activist Federal Communications Commission that is delving into broadband access, competition and innovation. Those stories are hot also because broadband plays more of a role in our day-to-day lives, which means people outside of the telecommunications lobbying world are taking notice.

    To help Silicon Valley learn more about these changes, we’re hosting FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski at our offices on Wednesday, Jan. 6 at 10 a.m. PT for an hour-long GigaOM forum. Doors for this limited-seating event will open at 9:30 a.m.

    Om and I will interview the chairman, as well as give members of our audience the opportunity to ask a few questions. We have a few seats left, so if anyone wants to attend you can send a note to [email protected] with “FCC FORUM” in the subject line. If we can accommodate your request we will. We are going to be live streaming the event as well.

    If you can’t make it to the event, tweet me your questions beforehand to @gigastacey or @om shoot me an email to my first name@ gigaom.com.

  • The world in 2020: China, the U.S., the global South, and the planet

    by Michael T. Klare

    This was originally published on TomDispatch and is republished here with Tom’s kind permission.

    As the second decade of the twenty-first century begins,
    we find ourselves at one of those relatively rare moments in history
    when major power shifts become visible to all. If the first decade of
    the century witnessed profound changes, the world of 2009 nonetheless
    looked at least somewhat like the world of 1999 in certain fundamental
    respects: the United States remained the world’s paramount military
    power, the dollar remained the world’s dominant currency, and NATO
    remained its foremost military alliance, to name just three.

    By the end of the second decade of this century, however, our world
    is likely to have a genuinely different look to it. Momentous shifts
    in global power relations and a changing of the imperial guard, just
    now becoming apparent, will be far more pronounced by 2020 as new
    actors, new trends, new concerns, and new institutions dominate the
    global space. Nonetheless, all of this is the norm of history, no
    matter how dramatic it may seem to us. 

    Less normal—and so the wild card of the second decade (and
    beyond)—is intervention by the planet itself.  Blowback, which we
    think of as a political phenomenon, will by 2020 have gained a natural
    component. Nature is poised to strike back in unpredictable ways whose
    effects could be unnerving and possibly devastating.   

    What, then, will be the dominant characteristics of the second
    decade of the twenty-first century?  Prediction of this sort is, of
    course, inherently risky, but extrapolating from current trends, four
    key aspects of second-decade life can be discerned: the rise of China;
    the (relative) decline of the United States; the expanding role of the
    global South; and finally, possibly most dramatically, the increasing
    impact of a roiling environment and growing resource scarcity.

    Let’s start with human history and then make our way into the unknown future history of the planet itself. 

    The ascendant dragon

    That China has become a leading world power is no longer a matter of
    dispute. That country’s new-found strength was on full display at the
    climate summit in Copenhagen in December where it became clear that no
    meaningful progress was possible on the issue of global warming without
    Beijing’s assent. Its growing prominence was also evident in the way
    it responded to the Great Recession, as it poured multi-billions of dollars into domestic recovery projects, thereby
    averting a significant slowdown in its economy. It spent many tens of
    billions more on raw materials and fresh investments in Africa, Latin America, and Southeast Asia, helping to ignite recovery in those regions, too. 

    If China is an economic giant today, it will be a powerhouse in 2020.  According to the U.S. Department of Energy (DoE), that country’s gross domestic
    product (GDP) will jump from an estimated $3.3 trillion in 2010 to $7.1
    trillion in 2020 (in constant 2005 dollars), at which time its economy
    will exceed all others save that of the United States. In fact, its
    GDP then should exceed those of all the nations in Africa, Latin
    America, and the Middle East combined. As the decade proceeds, China
    is expected to move steadily up the ladder of technological
    enhancement, producing ever more sophisticated products, including advanced green energy and transportation systems that will prove essential to future
    post-carbon economies. These gains, in turn, will give it increasing
    clout in international affairs.

    China will undoubtedly also use its growing wealth and technological
    prowess to enhance its military power. According to the Stockholm
    International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI), China is already the
    world’s second largest military spender, although the $85 billion it
    invested in its armed forces in 2008 was a pale shadow of the $607
    billion allocated by the United States. In addition, its forces remain
    technologically unsophisticated and its weapons are no match for the
    most modern U.S., Japanese, and European equipment. However, this gap
    will narrow significantly in the century’s second decade as China
    devotes more resources to military modernization.

    The critical question is: How will China use its added power to achieve its objectives?

    Until now, China’s leaders have wielded its growing strength
    cautiously, avoiding behavior that would arouse fear or suspicion on
    the part of neighbors and economic partners. It has instead employed
    the power of the purse and “soft power”—vigorous diplomacy, development aid, and cultural ties—to
    cultivate friends and allies. But will China continue to follow this
    “harmonious,” non-threatening approach as the risks of forcefully
    pursuing its national interests diminish? This appears unlikely.

    A more assertive China that showed what the Washington Post called “swagger” was already evident in the final months of 2009 at the summit meetings
    between presidents Barack Obama and Hu Jintao in Beijing and
    Copenhagen. In neither case did the Chinese side seek a “harmonious”
    outcome. In Beijing, it restricted Obama’s access to the media and refused to give any ground on Tibet or
    tougher sanctions on key energy-trading partner Iran. At a crucial
    moment in Copenhagen, it actually sent low-ranking officials to negotiate with Obama—an unmistakable slight—and forced a
    compromise that absolved China of binding restraints on carbon
    emissions. 

    If these summits are any indication, Chinese leaders are prepared to
    play global hard-ball, insisting on compliance with their core demands
    and giving up little—even on matters of secondary importance. China
    will find itself ever more capable of acting this way because the
    economic fortunes of so many countries are now tied to its consumption
    and investment patterns—a pivotal global role once played by the
    United States—and because its size and location gives it a
    commanding position in the planet’s most dynamic region. In addition,
    in the first decade of the twenty-first century Chinese leaders proved
    especially adept at nurturing ties with the leaders of large and small
    countries in Africa, Asia, and Latin America that will play an ever
    more important role in energy and other world affairs. 

    To
    what ends will China wield its growing power? For the top leadership
    in Beijing, three goals will undoubtedly be paramount: to ensure the
    continued political monopoly of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), to
    sustain the fast-paced economic growth which justifies its dominance,
    and to restore the country’s historic greatness. All three are, in
    fact, related: The CCP will remain in power, senior leaders believe,
    only so long as it orchestrates continuing economic expansion and
    satisfies the nationalist aspirations of the public as well as the high
    command of the People’s Liberation Army. Everything Beijing does,
    domestically and internationally, is geared to these objectives. As
    the country grows stronger, it will use its enhanced powers to shape
    the global environment to its advantage just as the United States has
    done for so long. In China’s case, this will mean a world wide-open to
    imports of Chinese goods and to investments that allow Chinese firms to
    devour global resources, while placing ever less reliance on the U.S.
    dollar as the medium of international exchange.

    The question that remains unanswered: Will China begin flexing its
    growing military muscle? Certainly, Beijing will do so in at least an
    indirect manner. By supplying arms and military advisers to its
    growing network of allies abroad, it will establish a military presence
    in ever more areas. My suspicion is that China will continue to avoid
    the use of force in any situation that might lead to a confrontation
    with major Western powers, but may not hesitate to bring its military
    to bear in any clash of national wills involving neighboring
    countries. Such a situation could arise, for example, in a maritime
    dispute over control of the energy-rich South China Sea or in Central Asia, if one of the
    former Soviet republics became a haven for Uighur militants seeking to
    undermine Chinese control over Xinjiang Province.

    The eagle comes in for a landing

    Just as the rise of China is now taken for granted, so, too, is the
    decline of the United States. Much has been written about America’s
    inevitable loss of primacy as this country suffers the consequences of
    economic mismanagement and imperial overstretch. This perspective was present in Global Trends 2025,
    a strategic assessment of the coming decades prepared for the incoming
    Obama administration by the National Intelligence Council (NIC), an
    affiliate of the Central Intelligence Agency. “Although the United
    States is likely to remain the single most powerful actor [in 2025],”
    the NIC predicted, “the United States’ relative strength—even in the
    military realm—will decline and U.S. leverage will become more
    constrained.” 

    Some unforeseen catastrophe aside, however, the U.S. is not likely
    to be poorer in 2020 or more backward technologically. In fact,
    according to the most recent Department of Energy projections,
    America’s GDP in 2020 will be approximately $17.5 trillion (in 2005
    dollars), nearly one-third greater than today. Moreover, some of the
    initiatives already launched by President Obama to stimulate the
    development of advanced energy systems are likely to begin bearing
    fruit, possibly giving the United States an edge in certain green
    technologies. And don’t forget, the U.S. will remain the globe’s
    preeminent military power, with China lagging well behind, and no other
    potential rival able to mobilize even Chinese-level resources to
    challenge U.S. military advantages. 

    What will change is America’s position relative to China and other
    nations—and so, of course, its ability to dominate the global
    economy and the world political agenda. Again using DoE projections,
    we find that in 2005, America’s GDP of $12.4 trillion exceeded that of
    all the nations of Asia and South America combined, including Brazil,
    China, India, and Japan. By 2020, the combined GDP of Asia and South
    America will be about 40 percent greater than that of the U.S., and growing at
    a much faster rate.  By then, the United States will be deeply
    indebted to more solvent foreign nations, especially China, for the
    funds needed to pay for continuing budget deficits occasioned by the
    wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the Pentagon budget, the federal stimulus
    package, and the absorption of “toxic assets” from troubled banks and
    corporations. 

    Count on this, though: in an increasingly competitive world economy
    in which U.S. firms enjoy ever diminishing advantages, the prospects
    for ordinary Americans will be distinctly dimmer. Some sectors of the
    economy, and some parts of the country, will certainly continue to
    thrive, but others will surely suffer Detroit’s fate, becoming
    economically hollowed out and experiencing wholesale impoverishment. For many—perhaps most—Americans, the world of 2020 may still
    provide a standard of living far superior to that enjoyed by a majority
    of the world; but the perks and advantages that most middle class folks
    once took for granted—college education, relatively accessible (and
    affordable) medical care, meals out, foreign travel—will prove
    significantly harder to come by.

    Even America’s military advantage will be much eroded. The colossal
    costs of the disastrous Iraq and Afghan wars will set limits on the
    nation’s ability to undertake significant military missions abroad. Keep in mind that, in the first decade of the twenty-first century, a
    significant proportion of the basic combat equipment of the Army and
    Marine Corps has been damaged or destroyed in these wars, while the fighting units themselves have been badly battered by multiple tours of duty. Repairing this damage would require at
    least a decade of relative quiescence, which is nowhere in sight.

    The growing constraints on American power were recently acknowledged by President Obama in an unusual setting: his West Point address announcing a troop surge in Afghanistan. Far from constituting a
    triumphalist expression of American power and preeminence, like
    President Bush’s speeches on the Iraq War, his was an implicit
    admission of decline. Alluding to the hubris of his predecessor, Obama
    noted, “We’ve failed to appreciate the connection between our national
    security and our economy. In the wake of the economic crisis, too many
    of our neighbors and friends are out of work and struggle to pay the
    bills … Meanwhile, competition in the global economy has grown more
    fierce. So we simply can’t afford to ignore the price of these
    wars.”   

    Many have chosen to interpret Obama’s Afghan surge decision as a
    typical twentieth-century-style expression of America’s readiness to
    intervene anywhere on the planet at a moment’s notice. I view it as a
    transitional move meant to prevent the utter collapse of an
    ill-conceived military venture at a time when the United States is
    increasingly being forced to rely on non-military means of persuasion
    and the cooperation, however tempered, of allies. President Obama said
    as much:  “We’ll have to be nimble and precise in our use of military
    power … And we can’t count on military might alone.” Increasingly,
    this will be the mantra of strategic planning that will govern the
    American eagle in decline. 

    The rising South

    The second decade of the century will also witness the growing
    importance of the global South: the formerly-colonized,
    still-developing areas of Africa, Asia, and Latin America. Once
    playing a relatively marginal role in world affairs, they were
    considered open territory, there to be invaded, plundered, and
    dominated by the major powers of Europe, North America, and (for a
    time) Japan. To some degree, the global South, a.k.a. the “Third
    World,” still plays a marginal role, but that is changing. 

    Once a member in good standing of the global South, China is now an
    economic superpower and India is well on its way to earning this
    status. Second-tier states of the South, including Brazil, Indonesia,
    South Africa, and Turkey, are on the rise economically, and even the
    smallest and least well-off nations of the South have begun to attract
    international attention as providers of crucial raw materials or as
    sites of intractable problems including endemic terrorism and crime
    syndicates.

    To some degree, this is a product of numbers—growing populations and growing wealth. In 2000, the population of the global South stood at an estimated 4.9 billion people; by 2020,
    that number is expected to hit 6.4 billion. Many of these new
    inhabitants of planet Earth will be poor and disenfranchised, but most
    will be workers (in either the formal or informal economy), many will
    participate in the political process in some way, and some will be
    entrepreneurs, labor leaders, teachers, criminals, or militants. Whatever the case, they will make their presence felt.

    The nations of the South will also play a growing economic role as
    sources of raw materials in an era of increasing scarcity and founts of
    entrepreneurial vitality. By one estimate,
    the combined GDP of the global South (excluding China) will jump from
    $7.8 trillion in 2005 to $15.8 trillion in 2020, an increase of more
    than 100 percent. In particular, many of the prime deposits of oil, natural
    gas, and the key minerals needed in the global North to keep the
    industrial system going are facing wholesale depletion after decades of
    hyper-intensive extraction, leaving only the deposits in the South to
    be exploited. 

    Take oil: In 1990, 43 percent of world daily oil output was supplied by members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting
    Countries (the major Persian Gulf producers plus Algeria, Angola,
    Ecuador, Libya, Nigeria, and Venezuela), other African and Latin
    American producers, and the Caspian Sea countries; by 2020, their share
    will rise to 58 percent. A similar shift in the center of gravity of world
    mineral production will take place, with unexpected countries like
    Afghanistan, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, Niger (a major uranium supplier),
    and the Democratic Republic of Congo taking on potentially crucial
    roles.

    Inevitably, the global South will also play a conspicuous role in a
    series of potentially devastating developments. Combine persistent
    deep poverty, economic desperation, population growth, and intensifying
    climate degradation and you have a recipe for political unrest,
    insurgency, religious extremism, increased criminality, mass
    migrations, and the spread of disease. The global North will seek to
    immunize itself from these disorders by building fences of every sort,
    but through sheer numbers alone, the inhabitants of the South will make
    their presence felt, one way or another. 

    The planet strikes back

    All of this might represent nothing more than the normal changing of
    the imperial guard on planet Earth, if that planet itself weren’t
    undergoing far more profound changes than any individual power or set
    of powers, no matter how strong. The ever more intrusive realities of
    global warming, resource scarcity, and food insufficiency will, by the
    end of this century’s second decade, be undeniable and, if not by 2020,
    then in the decades to come, have the capacity to put normal military
    and economic power, no matter how impressive, in the shade. 

    “There is little doubt about the main trends,” Professor Ole Danbolt Mjøs, Chairman of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, said in awarding the Peace Prize to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
    Change (IPCC) and Al Gore in December 2007: “More and more scientists
    have reached ever closer agreement concerning the increasingly dramatic
    consequences that will follow from global warming.” Likewise, a
    growing body of energy experts has concluded that the global production of conventional oil will soon reach a peak
    (if it hasn’t already) and decline, producing a worldwide energy
    shortage. Meanwhile, fears of future food emergencies, prompted in
    part by global warming and high energy prices, are becoming more
    widespread.

    All of this was apparent when world leaders met in Copenhagen and
    failed to establish an effective international regime for reducing the
    emission of climate-altering greenhouse gases (GHGs). Even though they
    did agree to keep talking and comply with a non-binding, aspirational
    scheme to cut back on GHGs, observers believe that such efforts are
    unlikely to lead to meaningful progress in controlling global warming
    in the near future. What few doubt is that the pace of climate change
    will accelerate destructively in the second decade of this century,
    that conventional (liquid) petroleum and other key resources will
    become scarcer and more difficult to extract, and that food supplies
    will diminish in many poor, environmentally vulnerable areas.

    Scientists do not agree on the precise nature, timing, and
    geographical impact of climate-change effects, but they do generally
    agree that, as we move deeper into the century, we will be seeing an
    exponential increase in the density of the heat-trapping greenhouse-gas
    layer in the atmosphere as the consumption of fossil fuels grows and
    past smokestack emissions migrate to the outer atmosphere. DoE data
    indicates, for example, that between 1990 and 2005, world carbon
    dioxide emissions grew by 32 percent, from 21.5 to 31.0 billion metric tons. It can take as much as 50 years for GHGs to reach the greenhouse layer,
    which means that their effect will increase even if—as appears
    unlikely—the nations of the world soon begin to reduce their future
    emissions.

    In other words, the early manifestations of global warming in the
    first decade of this century—intensifying hurricanes and typhoons,
    torrential rains followed by severe flooding in some areas and
    prolonged, even record-breaking droughts in others, melting ice-caps
    and glaciers, and rising sea levels—will all become more pronounced
    in the second. As suggested by the IPCC in its 2007 report,
    uninhabitable dust bowls are likely to emerge in large areas of Central
    and Northeast Asia, Mexico and the American Southwest, and the
    Mediterranean basin. Significant parts of Africa are likely to be
    devastated by rising temperatures and diminished rainfall. More cities
    are likely to undergo the sort of flooding and destruction experienced
    by New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina in 2005. And blistering
    summers, as well as infrequent or negligible rainfall, will limit crop
    production in key food-producing regions.

    Progress will be evident in the development of renewable energy
    systems, such as wind, solar, and biofuels. Despite the vast sums now
    being devoted to their development, however, they will still provide
    only a relatively small share of world energy in 2020. According to DoE projections,
    renewables will take care of only 10.5 percent of world energy needs in 2020,
    while oil and other petroleum liquids will still make up 32.6 percent of
    global supplies; coal, 27.1 percent; and natural gas, 23.8 percent.  In other words,
    greenhouse gas production will rage on—and, ironically, should it
    not, thanks to expected shortfalls in the supply of oil, that in itself
    will likely prove another kind of disaster, pushing up the prices of all energy sources and endangering economic stability. Most industry experts, including those at the International Energy Agency (IEA) in Paris, believe that it will be nearly impossible to continue
    increasing the output of conventional and unconventional petroleum
    (including tough to harvest Arctic oil, Canadian tar sands, and shale
    oil) without increasingly implausible fresh investments of trillions of
    dollars, much of which would have to go into war-torn, unstable areas
    like Iraq or corrupt, unreliable states like Russia. 

    In the latest hit movie Avatar, the lush, mineral-rich moon
    Pandora is under assault by human intruders seeking to extract a
    fabulously valuable mineral called “unobtainium.” Opposing them are
    not only a humanoid race called the Na’vi, loosely modeled on Native
    Americans and Amazonian jungle dwellers, but also the semi-sentient
    flora and fauna of Pandora itself. While our own planet may not
    possess such extraordinary capabilities, it is clear that the
    environmental damage caused by humans since the onset of the Industrial
    Revolution is producing a natural blowback effect which will become
    increasingly visible in the coming decade.

    These, then, are the four trends most likely to dominate the second
    decade of this century. Perhaps others will eventually prove more
    significant, or some set of catastrophic events will further alter the
    global landscape, but for now expect the dragon ascendant, the eagle
    descending, the South rising, and the planet possibly trumping all of
    these.

    Related Links:

    Is the Obama administration about to eat the foodies’ lunch?

    The melting of America

    The earth’s decade






  • Economics as pathology, part two

    by David Roberts

    The other day I complained about an article by Brookings economist Ted Gayer. So did Brad DeLong, Paul Krugman, Ryan Avent, and Ezra Klein. As I am a nobody writing on an obscure website, I was roundly ignored by all parties, but Gayer has responded to the others. His response only reinforces the impression that he sees the world entirely in terms of platitudes from Economics 101.

    Gayer’s basic shtick in his response is to set up a dichotomy: either people and businesses behave rationally or they don’t; either “firms are better at identifying profit-making abatements” or “regulators are better at identifying profit-making abatements”; either people do what economists predict or we might as well abandon capitalism. There are, after all, no gray areas in matters of faith.

    When DeLong points out that McKinsey gets paid lots of money to identify profit-making abatements for businesses (which, by definition, hadn’t identified the profit-making abatements prior to hiring McKinsey), Gayer responds that it isn’t “evidence against the profit-maximizing assumption” because … the companies paid McKinsey to help them maximize profits. Those who haven’t hired McKinsey presumably know, in advance of hiring McKinsey, that there are no profit-making abatements available to them. Efficiency consulting, like all resources, is optimally distributed in this best of all possible worlds!

    It’s handy: if your definition “what businesses do” is “profit-maximizing,” and your definition of “profit-maximizing” is “what businesses do,” then yes, it’s hard to find counter-evidence. Businesses do in fact do what they do, and not something else.

    Even better: Responding to Avent’s point about the housing bubble, Gayer warns against “abandoning economic principles” just because people mechanically applying those principles have been spectacularly wrong in the recent past at the cost of widespread suffering. Let’s not be hasty!

    What Gayer’s really concerned with, however, is nestled in this self-referential argument: If we accept that sometimes people and businesses don’t rationally maximize profit, then we must abandon the dogma that “market mechanisms” are always and everywhere more efficient than “prescriptive command-and-control regulations.” But we can’t abandon it; we know it’s true, because people and businesses always maximize profit. The assumption justifies the dogma, the dogma justifies the assumption, and around we go.

    There are two responses to this closed loop of an argument:

    1. Command-and-control regulations are sometimes more effective. In a perfect market peopled by Vulcans, market mechanisms … well, still wouldn’t be sufficient to capture public goods, but would be the best tool for most purposes. But as much as it may break Gayer’s heart, we do not live in perfect markets peopled by Vulcans. We live in flawed, distorted markets peopled by human beings. Sometimes to achieve our collective goals, we can’t rely on market mechanisms alone.

    2. The division between market mechanisms and command-and-control regulations is itself a false dichotomy. The government, alone or in partnership with the private sector, can help reduce the transaction and administrative costs of efficiency investments by spreading information, properly aligning incentives, scaling up fledgling markets, reducing the cost of efficiency technology, etc., etc. There are a panoply of means to this end: R&D, direct investment, tax incentives, performance standards, education/communication programs, innovative financing mechanisms, government procurement policies, removal of perverse regulations, and on and on. There are more policies in heaven and earth, Gayer, than are dreamt of in your economics.

    The thing is, when you’re living in the world of perfect markets and rational actors—the world of “basic principles of economics,” where human life behaves like the ideal gas of physics lore—intervention in the market is a net cost by definition. (That this neatly dovetails with conservative ideology and the interests of powerful industries is, um, worth noting.) You can point out ways that human life isn’t like an ideal gas, but some economists are religious believers: if facts contradict faith, it is facts that must give way.

    Related Links:

    Rationality, welfare, and public policy

    Economics as pathology

    Is the ‘climate debt’ discussion helpful?






  • On The Ground at the CES — ASUS Announcements

    I left Mobile Tech Manor at 4:30 this cold morning and headed to the airport to begin the big trip to the CES. A smooth flight later and I arrived in Las Vegas. There were no crowds and getting checked into the hotel was a short process.

    After an unsuccessful attempt to get Wi-Fi connectivity working in the room, it was time to head to the Sands Convention Center to pick up my press credentials. Those had to be my first priority as they are the grease that gets me into everything here at the CES.

    Press badge in hand, I headed over to the ASUS press event, wondering what new technology the creator of the netbook might have in store for us. The press event was like an hour-long advertisement, as the company only had a handful of new products to unveil. I will cover these more in detail later, but the major new notebooks coming from ASUS in 2010 are the G73, the Karim Rashid designer netbook collection, the U-series Bamboo notebooks, and the big NX90 notebook.

    The Karim Rashid Eee-PC collection contained the only netbooks ASUS announced at the event. They are taking a page from HP’s Vivienne Tam designer netbooks and producing a stylish netbook that “people will want to carry in their hand.”

    The Bamboo collection is interesting, as the casing is constructed from a combination of bamboo and aluminum. It is a stylish notebook that feels nice to touch.

    By far the biggest product that ASUS unveiled is the one they seemed to be the most proud of. The NX90 was designed with ASUS by Bang & Olufsen, and the 1080p-capable big display is flanked by two big speakers that side beside the chassis when closed. In the Q&A session ASUS CEO Jonny Shih was thinking that the pricing for the NX90 was a conceptual $2,499. Ouch.

    I’ll get some good pictures of these new products later in the week, ASUS did not have this set up where we could get close to the gear to get photos.

    Now it’s on to the CES Unveiled event, followed by an effort to get my connectivity issues straightened out. I hope.

  • Meet The BRAVIA XBR HX Series – Sony’s New LED Backlit LCD HDTV


    Sony has finally responded to the cries of consumers who wanted something different from the company then their usual CCFL or Edge-lit (LED) TV offerings with the introduction of the BRAVIA XBR HX900 series. This BRAVIA line is the first LED backlit BRAVIA since the XBR8, and will be available in 52″ (XBR-52HX900) or 46″ (XBR-52HX900) sizes. It’s also 3D-capable, and if you want to make the leap to 3D you’ll need to purchase the 3D (active shutter) glasses and emitter seperately.

    Consumers will enjoy silky smooth movement scenes with the integrated Motionflow PRO 240Hz Technology, which assures that no matter what scene that moving images are fluid and have crisp detail. BRAVIA Engine 3 ensures breathtaking picture quality with reduced visual noise, enhanced color and overall image detail. This is one of the first BRAVIA series to feature the Monolithic Design concept, which can be displayed at a six-degree upward slant, producing the most natural viewing experience, especially with lower TV stands. The new sets’ near-invisible bezel, concealed touch sensors, and combination of both glossy and matte finishes allow them to blend into any décor, adding state-of-the-art style to a home theater.

    Want to experience rich internet content? With a built in Wi-Fi connection, the XBR LX series can easily connect to your wireless network at home which allows you to enjoy BRAVIA Internet Video (YouTube, dozens of streaming content providers and more) and Widgets, such as Twitter, Netflix, and more. Physical connectivity is also covered – with many HDMI inputs, optical audio, and so much more. A USB  port and DLNA photo/music/video playback are also included.

  • RS2010 – Regional Strategy For England’s Northwest

    Crains.

    Quote:

    Regional strategy consultation starts

    A consultation exercise gets under way this week about the North West’s new regional strategy, dubbed RS2010.

    The consultation is being led by the Northwest Regional Development Agency (NWDA) and 4NW, which includes leaders of councils and people from the private and voluntary sectors.

    The NWDA said the strategy’s aims are to capitalising on the opportunities of moving to a low carbon economy and addressing climate change; Building on the region’s sources of international competitive advantage and regional distinctiveness; Releasing the potential of the region’s people and tackling poverty; and delivering the right housing and infrastructure for sustainable growth.

    A draft consultation document has been prepared, which can be viewed on the RS2010 website.

    Robert Hough, NWDA chairman, said: “The development of RS2010 offers a unique opportunity to bring economic, environmental and social priorities together into a single vision for the region’s development over the next 20 years. The start of consultation on draft 1 is a significant milestone in the development of this crucial strategy and, as the first region to reach this stage, demonstrates the Northwest once again leading the way.”

    Councillor Sir Richard Leese, chairman of 4NW, said: “We have a strong tradition of working in partnership in the Northwest and we are confident that the new strategy will build on this to play a pivotal role in driving investment and development in the region. Our objective must be excellent quality of life for all – and that to do this we must become more prosperous, more equitable and a lot less carbon dependent so that by 2030 the Northwest is a better place to live, learn, work, visit and invest.”


    Quote:

    THE NORTHWEST REGIONAL STRATERGY

    WILL BECOME THE BLUEPRINT FOR SUSTAINABLE ECONOMIC GROWTH IN ENGLAND’S NORTHWEST

    The Regional Strategy for the Northwest provides a unique opportunity to bring together its spatial, economic, social and environmental strategies and build a new long term vision for the region.

    Our goal is to produce an agreed strategy for the region which will guide action and investment by Business, National and Local Government and the Voluntary and Community Sectors.

    Part 1 sets out the high-level framework and outlines the overarching vision, priorities and action areas for the strategy that will enable Northwest partners to work together to maximise the region’s opportunities and address the challenges over the next twenty years. Draft Part 1 of the Regional Strategy is now available.

    Read Draft Part 1

    Part 1 of the Regional Strategy was published on 4th January 2010 and will be open for an 8 week consultation throughout January and February 2010. Part 1 sets out the high-level framework and outlines the overarching vision, priorities and action areas for the strategy that will enable Northwest partners to work together to maximise the region’s opportunities and address the challenges over the next twenty years.

    http://www.nwregionalstrategy.com/fi…0_document.pdf

    The rest is here. (numerous info, PDF’s and link’s)

    http://www.nwregionalstrategy.com/


  • Exercise and Diet Derail Diabetes. NPR on Preventing Diabetes – How Small Changes Have Big Payoffs

    Timpaul2

    For Tim Daly (left), losing 14 pounds brought his blood sugar down from pre-diabetic to the normal range.  His identical twin Paul (right), works to manage his diabetes with exercise.

    “If it’s hard to imagine how small differences in lifestyle can make a big difference in your health, consider this story of identical twins Tim and Paul Daly.  They shared almost everything in childhood, including the same eating habits, the same love of basketball, and the same genes–some of which predispose them to diabetes.”

    “Preventing Diabetes: Small Changes Have Big Payoff”, by Allison Aubrey, NPR Morning Edition 1/04/10

     

    I heard this story while driving into work on Monday morning.  It put a big smile on my face!  Frankly, we all have one kind of disease or another in our family closet, and who doesn’t want to think we can have at least some control over our health.  Well here’s how to foil the diabetes gene!

    Turns out diet and exercise can trump the diabetes gene.  And diet and exercise was twice as effective as medicine in preventing diabetes!

    Here’s the story of the Daly Brothers of Massachusetts:

    • Tim and Paul Daly are 60 year old identical twins–born in 1949.
    • At age 24 they were both in excellent shape–5′ 10″ tall and both weighing 147 pounds.  From that point on their lives took a slightly different direction.
    • In their 30’s & 40’s they both started putting on weight–Paul gaining more than Tim.  At age 47 Paul weighed 220 pounds.  Tim weighed 200 pounds.
    • Since Paul’s wife worked nights, while he worked days, he ended up eating more fast-food and convenience food than was good for him, and he got zero exercise. Note added 1/6/10: Apologies if this sounds like wives are responsible for the health of their husbands–it wasn’t meant it. This was Paul’s take on why he was making “less healthy” choices.
    • Tim played basketball every Tuesday night with his buddies for 1 hour a week. 
    • By 1996, at age 47, Paul’s weight had climbed to 220 pounds.  He’d gone from 185 to 220 in a blink of an eye.  At his annual physical he was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes, with nary a symptom.
    • The complications of diabetes terrified him:  Loss of vision, kidney failure, amputations because of an effect on the nervous system, and a substantial increase in the risk of stroke and heart disease.

    “Because we know that type 2 diabetes is a genetic disease, and since he (Tim) is an identical twin, he has a risk of developing diabetes that’s about 95%.”

    -Dr. David Nathan, Director of the Massachusetts General Hospital Diabetes Center-

    How Tim Daly Beat the Curse of the Type 2 Diabetes Gene

    • Lucky Tim.  Soon after twin brother Paul was diagnosed with diabetes, Tim jumped at the chance to participate in a large 27-site national diabetes prevention study for people at high-risk of developing the disease. 
    • 3,234 volunteers were divided into 3 groups:  One group got intensive counseling from a dietitian and a motivational coach who helped develop a plan to eat less and exercise more.  A second group took the diabetes medicine Metformin twice a day.  A third group received placebo pills instead of Metformin.
    • Lucky Tim.  He got into the diet & exercise group.
    • Here’s what his dietitian & coach prescribed for him:  2 and 1/2 hours of exercise a week + he had to lose 14 pounds–7% of his body weight.  At the start of the study he weighed 200 pounds–too much for someone who’s 5’10”.  As for the exercise–since he was already playing basketball 1 hour a week, he added some brisk walks and jogging a couple of miles a week.  He also started walking the golf course instead of using a cart.
    • When Tim started the study back in 1996 his blood sugar test showed he was pre-diabetic–with blood glucose levels that were higher than normal–but not yet “worthy” of a diabetes diagnosis.
    • Adding more exercise into his week wasn’t the hard part for Tim.  The tough part was learning to eat smaller portions–all the time.  He had to turn that into a habit.  He learned the drill–a portion of meat is the size of a deck of cards.  When he wanted potato chips, he learned to pour a small amount into a cup–no more eating out of the bag.
    • Losing the 14 pounds moved Tim’s blood sugar into the normal range–out of the pre-diabetes state.  Nothing too daunting.  A small change made all the difference. 
    • 14 years after starting the study, Tim is still diabetes-free.

    Diet and Exercise or Metformin or the Placebo.  Which Group Fared the Best?

    • The study found that diet & exercise was twice as effective as taking the Metformin in preventing diabetes in the volunteers.
    • The point of the study was to encourage life-long habits and behavioral changes–not just put the volunteers on a short-term diet.
    • For the other volunteers, all with pre-diabetes, losing 7% of their body weight helped to cut the risk of diabetes by almost 60%.  Tim’s results were typical of the other diet/exercise participants.  Small changes–losing 14 pounds in Tim’s case–not 50 pounds, made all the difference.
    • According to Dr. Nathan, eating better and exercising is incredibly effective in helping to manage type 2 diabetes and pre-diabetes.  When people lose weight, their blood sugars respond favorably.
    • “Small steps can result in really large benefits.  Just doing a little more will help enormously to prevent this.  And that’s what the Diabetes Prevention Program showed,”  according to Dr. Nathan
    • Although Tim has dodged the diabetes bullet now for 14 years, Dr.
      Nathan says researchers are still studying whether or not it’s possible to keep
      diabetes at bay for the rest of his life.
    • With 1.6 million new cases of diabetes diagnosed per year in the U.S., Dr. Nathan hopes people will begin to understand how such small life-style changes can have such a tremendous effect on one’s future health.

    And What About Brother Paul?

    • Since Paul already has type 2 diabetes his battle is tougher, and he’s vowed to try harder.
    • He’s stepped up his exercise, and is kicking up his daily walks a notch.
    • Because Paul is exercising more, and eating better, he’s been able to manage his diabetes, and doesn’t need to take insulin.
    • There’s strong evidence that even exercise, without weight loss can help improve blood sugar.

    How Exactly Does Exercise Prevent Diabetes?

    The experts:  Gerald Shulman of Yale University School of Medicine & Arthur Leon of the Univ. of Minnesota

    • Exercise can prevent and even reverse Type-2 diabetes
    • Again, it’s all about insulin resistance.  Too much body weight or
      a not-so-healthy diet & insulin-resistance develops–then the body
      can’t absorb all the glucose from your digested food. This leads to a
      build-up of fats in the body which further interferes with the whole
      glucose transportation system. If the body can’t absorb all the glucose
      in the blood, bad things can happen: like heart disease, nerve damage,
      blood vessel damage, stroke, or infections.
    • Exercise can reverse the whole process.  With vigorous exercise the
      muscles increase production of an enzyme called AMPK, which breaks down
      the fats that were interfering with the cells’ glucose transportation
      system. Bingo–the body starts responding to insulin and absorbing
      glucose just like it’s supposed to do.


  • ARTICLE: AT&T activates HSPA nationwide, with restrictions

    AT&T Logo

    Hot on the heels of T-Mobile’s HSPA announcement earlier in the day, AT&T was quick to announce the availability of an HSPA 7.2 Mbps software boost to their existing 3G footprint, beating their original deadline of 2010 by a year.  Upgrading is one thing, but the issue lies in AT&T’s non-upgraded back-end system.  Yes, you’re reading it correctly: the network is capable, but the back-end doesn’t support it just yet.  The nation’s second largest wireless carrier says that most of the data it handles will operate over the upgraded back end by the end of 2010.  Rollouts of true HSPA (front-end and back-end) continue in Charlotte, Chicago, Dallas, Houston, Los Angeles, and Miami.

    Think of it like a funnel – large at one end, small at the other.  In order for AT&T to improve their back-end, they have to turn the funnel into a cylinder – equal in size when it comes to the front-end and back-end.  That’s expected to happen just before 2011 in all 3G markets nationwide.  Considering Verizon’s claim to have LTE rollouts in progress then, it would be prudent to complete the back-end upgrades as quickly as possible.

    Via Engadget Mobile


  • Nissan to go at Titan pickup alone, successor on the way

    A deal between Nissan and Chrysler where the two automakers were to collaborate on a full-size pickup, fell through earlier this year after Chrysler filed for Chapter 11.

    Nissan, though, determined to stay in the pickup game, has decided to go at the project alone. They will continue to produce the Nissan Titan while they develop a successor.

    The Titan has sold 16,894 units for the first 11 months of 2009 in a segment that moved over 1 million units. The Ford F Series, the segment’s top mover, sold over 365,000 units for the same period.

    – By: Stephen Calogera

    Source: USAToday


  • Sony Adds DSC-HX5V To Its High Zoom Cyber-shot Digital Camera Line


    Just when you think you’ve read all the camera announcements from Sony, they debut yet another item – this time in their high zoom Cyber-shot range. The DSC-HX5V is an update to the popular DSC-HX1, and is upgraded slightly with the addition of a 10 megapixel “Exmor R” CMOS sensor, but still has the same 3” LCD and a slightly lesser 10x wide angle 25mm zoom lens (compared to last year’s 20x, 28mm). Like the HX1 of yesteryear, it also has the ability to record AVCHD, but this time in a higher quality 1920 x 1080 at 60i (full HD). Other useful specifications for image taking include Active/Optical Steady Shot, Intelligent Sweep Panorama (which allows you to take panoramic pictures in mere seconds), Backlight Correction HDR (High Dynamic Range), incredible low-light performance, and the ability to take 10 MP resolution images at up to 10 fps, helping to ensure you never miss the precise moment you’re intending to capture.

    A new feature this year is the addition of GPS and Compass capabilities, which adds location and direction information on photo files. Sony has also integrated Transfer Jet wireless technology into the camera, which allows you to send (at 560mbps) pictures and movies from your Cyber-shot camera to your Transfer Jet receiver, such as a computer. This allows for people to not worry about taking out the memory card or looking for the USB cord when they want to get the pictures off their camera. Some notable software additions include iAuto, which detects eight scenes and optimizes camera settings accordingly.

    Another nice surprise is the price – it will only cost about $350 and should be available in black this March. That’s not a bad deal considering the DSC-HX1 was nearly $500 when it debuted and has less features than this update.

  • San Salvador de Jujuy – Argentina

    —-

    San Salvador de Jujuy – Argentina

    2005

    —-

  • Will Recommendation Apps be the New iPhone App Hotness?

    healthapps_trends_jan10.jpgWhile maybe not the most visually compelling product, Healthful Apps represents an interesting new trend for 2010. Created by Apps for All, the product recommends customer-reviewed iPhone health applications in a variety of categories including autism, relaxation and memory. Although the company’s first effort is focused on health, the larger industry-wide question remains – will this year’s branded iPhone app be a recommendation app?

    Sponsor

    Last year ReadWriteWeb covered Appsfire as one service that allows users to bookmark and share their favorite iPhone apps. While it’s certainly a useful tool, recommendations are made by individuals rather than influential groups. As seen with Healthful Apps, there’s opportunity to extend these recommendation-based applications to special-interest and location-based communities.

    Imagine investment communities trading and reviewing stock and news apps, or Oprah Winfrey’s community recommending shopping and reading apps, or New Yorkers sharing transportation and amenity apps.

    The personalization of applications by politics, lifestyle, locale and community may prove more useful in making app recommendations than any automated Genius system that Apple could hope to cook up. Additionally, because providers can monetize recommendations through paid app referral fees, it’s entirely possible that influential communities can earn money simply by weighing in with their app preferences. It’s honestly so meta that it hurts, but if social media has taught us anything, it’s that community influencers are tastemakers.

    If this is in fact the future, then my question to you is this – Which communities would you take recommendations from, and would you pay for the app?

    Discuss


  • Google and Adobe Bringing Flash 10.1 To Nexus One [Flash]

    Google and Adobe are working together on the Open Screen Project to put Flash 10.1 on the Nexus One. It will be arriving on the super phone sometime in the first half of 2010. You can check out a video of their progress here:







  • IEMA Launches 12-Month Preparedness Effort; Year-long Campaign to Focus on Different Aspects of Preparedness During 2010

    As people throughout Illinois make resolutions for the New Year, the Illinois Emergency Management Agency (IEMA) is hoping many will resolve to become better prepared for emergencies during 2010.

    To help with those resolutions, the agency today launched a year-long preparedness effort called the “12-Month Preparedness Campaign.”

    “People sometimes think emergency preparedness is too daunting, so they don’t do anything,” said IEMA Director Andrew Velasquez III.

    “By focusing on one aspect of preparedness each month, we’ll take people through preparedness step by step.  Hopefully, by the end of this year people will find it was easy to become better prepared for disasters.”

    Velasquez said IEMA will focus on a different preparedness topic each month in 2010, beginning with home preparedness in January.

    Throughout the month, the agency will feature personal and family preparedness tips and guidance on the Ready Illinois Web site (Ready.Illinois.gov), as well as photos, videos and additional preparedness information through the Ready Illinois Facebook page.

    Directions on assembling a disaster supply kit and information about family emergency plans are two of the subjects that will be featured during January.

    Other topics to be addressed during the year-long campaign include workplace preparedness, earthquake preparedness, children and preparedness, weather-related preparedness, cyber security, preparedness for people with pets and livestock and preparedness for people with functional needs.

    The Ready Illinois website (Ready.Illinois.gov) offers comprehensive information on steps people can take before emergencies happen, what to do once a disaster has occurred, and tips for recovery after the event.

    In addition, during large-scale emergencies, IEMA regularly posts current information about the situation on the site.


  • Parental Origin Important in Genetic Studies

    According to new research, it looks like individual genetic knowledge of the mother and father are important when it comes to genetically inherited diseases. The following is from a long and rather detailed article by Justin Petrone in the January 5, 2009 edition of Genomeweb.com.

    Nature

    A recent paper published in Nature by Decode Genetics discussed the discovery of a version of a common SNP correlated with susceptibility to type 2 diabetes.

    According to the team, which also included British researchers, the impact of the T2D variant, located on chromosome 11, depends on descent: If the SNP is inherited from the father, the risk of developing type 2 diabetes increases by 30 percent, but if it is inherited maternally, the risk is 10 percent lower compared to the version of the variant that is not associated with the SNP.

    The finding highlights the importance of taking parental origin into account when conducting genome-wide association studies, and could provide an approach for doing in other studies based on Illumina microarrays, genealogical data, and statistical tools that Decode has developed, according to the firm.

    The issue of what role path-of-descent plays in interpreting GWAS findings has been discussed both in scientific literature and at recent conferences…

    While researchers are aware of the potential role parent-of-origin plays, many simply do not have access to such data for the sample sets they wish to interrogate.

    Taking parent-of-origin into account “requires significant data and know-how to do so, capabilities that most research institutions simply do not have at present,” Stefansson said. “One has to have genotypic information not only on a large number of individuals, but also, by definition, to be able to determine which genotypes were inherited through the maternal and paternal lineages. This requires either deep cohorts or the ability to impute the missing data.”

    Read the full article.

  • Czy ktoś o tej porze doradzi mi dobór elektrod?

    jak w temacie. Czy ktoś orientuje się odnośnie konstrukcji metalowych? robie projekt na uczelnie na wczoraj..
  • Nexus One, buen marketing para Android

    Google Nexus One

    Google ha anunciado por fin su teléfono Nexus One, tras haber generado unas expectativas sólo al alcance de Apple. ¿El resultado? Satisfacción para los que esperaban un gran terminal a la altura de los mejores del mercado, decepción para los que pensaran que el movimiento iba a “revolucionar las telecomunicaciones”. Respecto a lo primero, hay análisis sobre las características del teléfono e información sobre su precio y comercialización en Xataka, TechCrunch, Engadget, Xataka Móvil. El veredicto es que Google Nexus One es el mejor terminal con Andorid del mercado y que gracias a la marca “Google” va a vender mucho más que si se ofreciese bajo la de HTC.

    No hay mucho más. El teléfono se podrá comprar subvencionado por operadora o libre directamente a Google, como casi cualquier otro (hay excepciones, por ejemplo iPhone en la mayoría de países). Nada de precio más barato por consumo de publicidad en el móvil, nada de precios de escándalo, nada que permita saltarse a los operadores imprescindibles para las comunicaciones de voz y datos. Un buen terminal Android que competirá con los de los fabricantes – a los que Google trata de cuidar ofreciéndoles fabricas los teléfonos que ofrece con su marca – y que también venderá también a través de los operadores, únicos capaces de ponerlos en el mercado a un precio accesible a cambio de contratos de permanencia.

    El Google Nexus One se queda en una buena operación de marketing: en la compañía del buscador quieren que Android suba su cuota de mercado y han puesto más carne en el asador. De momento, no va más allá de eso, quizás apuntar a una constante en algunos de los últimos movimientos de Google es su deseo de no depender de intermediarios: Chrome para saltarse a navegadores y sistemas operativos, Google Voice y Gizmo para intermediar a su vez a las operadoras, teléfono propio para que la marca visible y las aplicaciones preinstaladas para los clientes sean las suyas y no las del fabricante… a largo plazo esta estrategia es una amenaza para todos estos que ahora son socios comerciales suyos. Pero eso es pensando en un hipotético largo plazo, a día de hoy Nexus One es un teléfono sobresaliente a precio de mercado, sólo eso.

    Relacionados: Android como el Windows de los dispositivos móviles, La lucha por ser el interfaz en el internet móvil y la búsqueda por localización. Tendencia 2010.


  • Foursquare Goes Global


    Foursquare screengrab

    Foursquare, the addictive and yet slightly creepy location-based status updater/mobile game, has gone global. When it first launched, users were limited to checking in to stores, restaurants and other locations in select North American cities; Foursquare scaled out to 15 European cities last November, and now, there’s no limit to where users can check in from.

    At stake are the bragging rights for being the most far-reaching—and ultimately, most-utilized—mobile social location-tagging service, as well as potential local ad revenues from businesses that want to offer coupons and discounts to users. As CNET notes, Rival Gowalla is better-funded and had global capabilities before Foursquare did. Other challengers include Loopt and Brightkite.

    The catch is that newer cities and neighborhoods aren’t auto-populated in the Foursquare app, meaning people need to enter a name like “Valley Stream,” or “Playa del Rey,” to check in to a location in lesser-known locales. The company is “soft-launching” the global option, meaning not all users will see it yet.

    Related