Category: News

  • How The Housing Bubble Destroyed Our Future

    bubble green tbi

    Let’s face it.

    We are in something of an innovation rut.

    We’ve been hearing about the promises of everything from mapping the human genome to nanotechnology to clean-green tech for the better part of a decade, without seeing very much by way of results.

    The venture capital community seems torn between the feeling that there are not enough truly innovative ideas to fund and the idea that there aren’t enough funds available for innovative ideas.  In a sense both are probably true since hard to come by funding discourages innovation.

    Even some of the hottest ideas in the last couple of years seem like retreads. Or, at best, old ideas that have been improved. From Dodgeball to Foursquare, from Friendster to Facebook: these aren’t so much innovations as improvements on existing models.

    What’s gone wrong? Much of the lack of innovation can probably be blamed on the malinvestment that resulted from the housing boom. It’s not just that too much funding got directed into housing—too much human capital got directed into housing and finance during the boom.

    This is all too obvious on Wall Street these days. Most financial firms, stung by the tech bust and investor fears of tech companies, shrank their operations in this sector while pouring talent and funds into housing related sectors. Many of the big names who might have mentored the next generation of tech oriented financial professionals were driven out by legal troubles stemming from the dot com bust or by the fact that their firm’s just weren’t interested in keeping them around.

    The result is that most financial firms lack the in-house expertise to invest in innovative business ventures on any meaningful scale. The credit departments don’t know how to evaluate loans to these companies, the special executions groups don’t know how to make private equity investments, investment bankers stink at pitching acquisitions, and the capital markets desks do not know how to take companies public.
     
    What’s more, there was so much money to be made in derivatives and credit—largely arising from the underlying housing boom—that many of the smartest people got drawn into these areas rather than tech innovation. Basically, we got lots of questionable financial innovation instead of technological, medical, or environmental innovation.

    If all of this had worked out to make us fabulously wealthy, there might not be much to complain about. The tech, green and bio-tech communities would just sound like special interests complaining their favored projects weren’t capturing as much attention and wealth as the enthusiasts think is deserved.

    But that’s not what happened. The dearth of technological innovation is largely attributable to government regulations and a loose money policy that led to massive malinvestment. Sectors of the economy unrelated to housing were deprived of needed capital and talent, while the great quicksand of the housing boom sucked down everything.

    None of this is easily reversed. Economists point out that our economy is afflicted with what they call an “output gap”—a gap between the economic output we would be producing if growth was at normal levels and what the economy is actually producing. But this output gap isn’t only caused by “animal spirits” or temporary economic dislocations—it is the direct result of the prior “investment gap”—the gap between what we should have been investing our fortunes and time and what we actually invested in. In short, we can’t produce what we should be able to because we invested in the abilities to produce what we don’t need.

    Is there a way out? Of course.  The bursting of the housing bubble created a great opportunity to set the economy back on course. Unfortunately, our government engaged what amounted to Shock-and-Awe war against the liquidation of past errors, locking up even more capital in the errant bubble businesses. The greatest fortune of 2009 was made by a hedge fund manager who bet that all the old failures would rise again thanks to government support.

    Another couple of years like 2009 will guarantee that we keep talent and funding out of technological innovation for another generation.

    Join the conversation about this story »

    See Also:


  • Garmin announces record-your-own-voice feature for nav instructions, green driving system

    Filed under:

    The Computer Electronics Show (CES) is underway, and the first navigation item to hit the wires is this: the Garmin Voice Studio.

    The software enables Nuvi owners to record their own voice for basic navigation instructions. Garmin says the PC-based application will take about 20 minutes to complete, but when you’re done you can tell yourself when to turn instead of that computer generated voice that dominates directions. While the program will allow you to voice directions like “turn right in one quarter mile” but for obvious reasons you won’t be able to voice text-to-speech for specific directions like reading street names. Additionally, Garmin is releasing an ecoRoute cable that ties into your vehicles ECU to help you tread lighter on the gas pedal and record the results. Engadget tells us that both programs will not work for 3xx and 6xx series navigation systems, but other Garmins should work just fine.

    We’re guessing that the more creative types among us will find some unique ways to voice directions including some stuff that wouldn’t pass FCC guidelines. Borrowing someone else’s Garmin long enough to program your own unique version of directions could be a lot of fun, too, but that could get you into a bit of trouble. Press release after the break.

    [Source: Garmin via Engadget]

    Continue reading Garmin announces record-your-own-voice feature for nav instructions, green driving system

    Garmin announces record-your-own-voice feature for nav instructions, green driving system originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 05 Jan 2010 16:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • Cuiabá é a 3ª melhor cidade para se investir no Brasil

    Cuiabá é a terceira melhor cidade para se investir no Brasil. É o que revela uma pesquisa divulgada pela revista Pequenas Empresas & Grandes Negócios. A Capital de Mato Grosso aparece em destaque entre as cidades com população entre 500 mil e um milhão de habitantes.


    A pesquisa utilizou os dados do Produto Interno Bruto (PIB), Índice de Desenvolvimento Humano (IDH), geração de empregos, depósitos bancários, número de veículos e Índice de Potencial de Consumo.

    Segundo o levantamento, Cuiabá se tornou um dos grandes pólos de oportunidades de negócios pelos avanços conquistados nos últimos anos e por dispor de uma excelente estrutura no seu Distrito Industrial. Outro grande atrativo para empresas de várias regiões do País são os investimentos que têm sido feitos nas áreas de energia e transportes.

    A revista também projeta um futuro ainda mais promissor, citando a possível ligação ferroviária com o porto de Santos, litoral do estado de São Paulo, e a conclusão de uma via de acesso ao Oceano Pacífico.

    Pequenas Empresas & Grandes Negócios ressalta que a Capital de Mato Grosso tem um potencial de crescimento na área de serviços e especialmente no turismo. Com o advento da Copa do Mundo de 2014, as oportunidades de negócios nesse setor serão ainda maiores, o que deve atrair ainda mais investidores para Cuiabá.

    (Assessoria com Pequenas Empresas & Grandes Negócios)
    http://www.midianews.com.br/?pg=noticias&cat=2&idnot=14273

  • Gov. Quinn Signs Bill Reforming the State’s Health Insurance Industry

    AARP-backed Legislation Will Provide Critical Consumer Protections

    While the U.S. Congress continues to move forward on a comprehensive federal health care reform bill, Illinois has taken a positive step toward health care reform with legislation aimed at helping consumers in the private insurance market.

    An AARP-backed bill, the Individual Health Insurance Fairness Act, was signed into law today by Governor Quinn.

    The Individual Health Insurance Fairness Act (House Bill 3923), introduced by State Representative Greg Harris (D-Chicago), and State Senator Heather Steans (D-Chicago), addresses key barriers facing consumers who struggle with unfair and inconsistent industry practices.

    The measure was strongly backed by AARP and a coalition of health and consumer advocates.

    “At a time when Illinoisans are struggling to access affordable health insurance, this bill brings transparency to the health insurance industry and will help protect consumers in the individual market,” said Ruby Haughton-Pitts, AARP Illinois Executive Council member.

    “AARP commends Representative Harris and Senator Steans for their leadership on this critical issue, and Governor Quinn for signing the bill into law.”

    The Individual Health Insurance Fairness Act will allow consumers to see critical information regarding health insurance industry profits and premium increases.

    It will also establish an external review process for members of PPO plans and will simplify the complex application process for both individual and small group markets by creating a standard application, making it easier for them to get the coverage they need.

    “For the first time Illinois residents will have the right to an independent, outside review of insurance company decisions that deny treatment for their families. We will also be able to find out how much of our premium dollars actually go to healthcare. I salute AARP and other consumer advocates, the insurance industry and the Illinois business community for working together on this new law,” said Rep. Harris.

    “In the past, the lack of oversight of the insurance industry has lead to an unpredictable, unaffordable insurance market in Illinois for small businesses and families,” said Brian Imus, state Director for Illinois PIRG.

    “This new law will help fix that problem by allowing health insurance customers an opportunity to have an independent review when they are denied a claim by their insurance company.”

    Nationally, over 4 million people have lost their health care since the recession began, while roughly 17 million purchase their own coverage.

    In the private market, an average annual premium for a family of four has risen to nearly $5,500, while an individual premium costs $2,500 in Illinois.

    A recent AARP study found that adults aged 50-64 spend roughly 10% of their income on health coverage, and paying three times as much as their peers with employer-sponsored coverage.


  • Fortaleza (CE) | Dunas | Living Residencial | 25 andares | Colméia

    Living Residencial (Construtora Colméia)

    Fachada:

    Plantas:


    Localização:

  • 6-seater Suzuki R3 MPV debuts at Auto Expo 2010

    Suzuki R3 MPV

    Joining the Honda New Small Concept and the Toyota Etios, Maruti Suzuki showed its new R3 MPV concept at the Auto Expo 2010 in New Delhi. Suzuki says that the six-seater concept hints at a new multi-purpose vehicle that is being considered for the Indian market, which is changing rapidly with consumer lifestyles evolving fast.

    Suzuki also showed off its SX4 Hybrid and Eeco Electric Vehicle as a part of a Indian government project that promotes hybrid and electric vehicles.

    Click through for the press release for more info.

    Press Release:

    Suzuki Announces Exhibits for Auto Expo 2010 in New Delhi

    Suzuki Motor Corporation is pleased to announce that its Indian automobile production subsidiary, Maruti Suzuki India, will be exhibiting the following vehicles at Auto Expo 2010 in New Delhi (to be held from 5 to 11 January 2010*): Concept model: R3

    – The Indian market is changing rapidly and consumer lifestyles evolving fast.
    – To cater to one such market need, Maruti Suzuki has developed a concept car, R3.
    – The Concept R3 model is a Compact Multi Purpose Vehicle (MPV) for such people.
    – Designed by Maruti Suzuki India’s Research and Development Department, it combines compact dimensions with a stylish profiling.
    – The Concept compact MPV accommodates six people in three rows.
    – Reference exhibits (eco-vehicles): SX4 Hybrid and Eeco Electric Vehicle

    Maruti Suzuki India is taking part in an Indian government project that promotes hybrid and electric vehicles.
    It will be exhibiting two prototype vehicles that Maruti Suzuki has developed for the project: the SX4 Hybrid and the Eeco (Every+) Electric Vehicle.

    Production models and other reference exhibits

    Maruti Suzuki India will be showing 16 other automobiles including ten production models (13 units in total) and two reference exhibits: the Kizashi and SX4 Hatchback (three units in total).

    Maruti Suzuki pavilion will also be highlighting Suzuki’s two-wheel leadership by showing nine motorcycles: the Hayabusa, Intruder, and other large models; the Thai-produced Skydrive 125 scooter; and the Burgman Fuel Cell Scooter, which was last seen at the 2009 Tokyo Motor Show.

    – By: Kap Shah


  • Nobody Puts Boxee in a Box

    boxee_logo_nov08.pngNobody puts it in a square box, at least.

    Boxee, the software that brings Internet media to your television, has been seen in the flesh at CES today.

    We first heard about the Boxee Box in November, but the announcement was light on details. This time around, D-Link offered a list of specifications and media-format compatibilities at the oddly-shaped device’s unveiling.

    Sponsor

    boxee-box-d-link.jpg

    According to D-Link’s press release, the device will retail for under $200 and will come embedded with support for a number of web sites, including Netflix, Facebook, Pandora, Twitter and Flickr.

    As for media formats, the Boxee Box will handle a majority of file formats, including DiVX, MPEG1 through 4, VOB, Flash, and most standard video and image types. Most notably missing from the mix are GIFs and QuickTime files.

    The device comes prepared to handle RSS and XML feeds in order to keep its users up to date.

    Discuss


  • Sharon Stone Coming To “Law & Order: SVU”

    Sharon Stone is joining the cast of Law & Order: Special Victims Unit. This April, the Emmy & Golden Globe-winning Casino actress will step into the role of a former cop-turned-prosecutor on NBC’s long-running crime drama.

    “It is obviously a thrill and a delight to have a star of Sharon’s wattage and importance joining SVU,” Law & Order creator Dick Wolf says of Stone’s casting.

    This is quite a coup — any thoughts on this casting news, SVU fans?


  • There Are Many Different Procedures Used For Lip Enhancement

    There are many different types of Lip Enhancement and here are a few that I believe are the most effective ways of enhancing your lips.

    Injectables like Restylane which is an FDA approved hyaluronic acid filler that can enhance the fullness of the lip by injecting collagen along the lip border. This can also fill out flat areas across the vermillion border.

    Fat Transfer is another type of Lip Enhancement that is very effecting because it takes fat from your own body in places like your thighs and your abdomen then is processed and injected into the lips, giving them more volume.

    Implantables like Gore-tex are also very effective in enhancing your lips because the implants are surgically implanted into the lips and can last for many, many years.

    For anyone wanting to learn more about these procedures more information can be found on the ifcsutah.com website.

  • LWA – Diabetes Rising – Hurley

    Google "Diabetes Rising" and listen to today’s broadcast with Dan Hurley who wrote the book "Diabetes Rising."

    Interesting interview with a fellow type 1 expressing clear ideas about what we live with. He became type 1 30+ years ago at age 18 – very similar to my life. He expresses the awesome bad experiences of LWA – Low While Asleep – my newly invented term. That is an off-the-cuff new word invention – I’m sure there is a term that is used for that… tell me what the term is. You know – that bad experience of waking up to your 9 year old daughter spooning marshmallow goo in to your mouth, or the awful wake-up to the roar of an ambulance engine as it carries you to the ER after your family gives up trying to rouse you, etc.

    Some interesting ideas he expresses about the failure of the regulatory agencies to allow the tying of pump with CGMS to create a pancreas kludge device. I guess the failure mode of a pump continuing to deliver "stuff" when the CGMS knows you are going low can be a problem.

    He expresses numerous other ideas in the interview – tell us what you heard… if you care to listen to the ~35 minute interview. "Audio for this story from Talk of the Nation will be available at approx. 6:00 p.m. ET"

  • The Sun Is Vomiting Iron [Space]

    A series of solar eclipse—on 2006, 2008, and 2009—have allowed scientist to take these beautiful images of the Sun’s corona, the first ones in history that show a phenomenon called the Iron Line.

    The iron line is made of highly ionized iron, called Fe XI 789.2 nm. The iron spewing reaches an extremely far distance—an amazing three times the solar radii—and has regions in which there are more irons than in others. [NASA]







  • Will The Economy Be Stronger In A Year?

    I think so. And I certainly hope so. But not many Americans agree with me according to a new Rasmussen poll. Only 38% of respondents believe that the economy will be stronger in a year. Meanwhile 39% think it will be weaker. That’s up 8% from a year ago. I find these results quite surprising and rather troubling.

    I both love and hate polls. So often the results are so counterintuitive that I hardly know what to say about them. But they aren’t worthless. The thing to remember is that they’re just polls, nothing more. So what this says is just that 39% of respondents in Rasmussen’s poll believe that the economy will be weaker in a year. According to Rasmussen, this is generally representative of the U.S. population.

    But what exactly does this statistic mean? Will unemployment be higher? Will home prices be lower? Will Americans be spending less? Will manufacturing output dive? Will GDP plunge? There are so many measures of economic health and stability that I can’t be sure what those respondents had in mind when they said they believe the economy will be weaker.

    Yet, a general feeling of pessimism does mean something, particularly for spending. If that many Americans are still that gloomy about the nation’s economic prospects, then to me that indicates that they’re going to be very cautious with their wallets. And if spending doesn’t pick up much this year, then that could make for a self-fulfilling prophecy. U.S. GDP is very dependent upon consumer spending. Without its revival, the economy will have a hard time gaining its footing.

    This also may say something about unemployment. In theory, those polled should include a representative portion of business owners and management. Although we don’t know the exact breakdown, if that subset is also pessimistic at a 39% proportion, then this confirms the idea that employment growth will be quite slow. If management thinks things will be worse in a year, then they’re not going to be doing a whole lot of hiring in 2010.

    Don’t get me wrong: we can’t will ourselves into recovery. The financial crisis and the deep recession that followed exposed some real, fundamental structural flaws in the U.S. economy. They won’t be quickly fixed. But pessimism can gunk up a recovery. Psychology matters more in economics when consumers see the glass as half empty.

    I have a little trouble imagining that things on a whole will be worse in a year. That would almost certainly mean a double-dip recession is in the cards. If unemployment is over 10% in November 2010, then we’re in a lot of trouble. (And Democrats are really, really in trouble.)

    So count me in the more optimistic — but only slightly optimistic — 38%. I think the recovery will be slow, but I can’t believe that things will be even worse in a year. Even with mixed economic indicators, we’re seeing enough green shoots to indicate that the economy isn’t experiencing much further deterioration.





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  • Rialto Towers

    City: Melbourne

    Basic Facts:

    Year: 1985
    Height: 251 metres
    Floors: 63
    Architects: Perrot Lyon Matheison Pty Ltd & Gerard de Preu & Partners
    Use: Office

    Key Facts:
    Sourced from Emporis.com

    *Rialto Towers is a member of the World Federation of Great Towers.
    *The structure consists of two adjoining towers, with a 43-story wing linked to the 63-story main tower.
    *The North Tower is 185 metres high.
    *The first tenants moved into the Towers in December 1984 while the upper levels were still under construction. The South Tower was topped out in March 1985 and completed in July 1986.
    *Tallest building measured to the roof in the Southern Hemisphere 1985 – 2004.

  • Ellen “American Idol” Promo Pictures

    FOX has released the first promotional photos of Ellen DeGeneres as a judge on the ninth season of American Idol.

    The comedienne and daytime hostess will be taking over the seat vacated by Paula Abdul, who opted not to return to the Idol judges panel in August. The new season of American Idol will feature appearances by guest judges Victoria Beckham, Mary J. Blige, Kristin Chenoweth, Neil Patrick Harris, Joe Jonas, Avril Lavigne, Katy Perry, and Shania Twain.

    The nation’s most-watched television talent show returns Jan. 12 in a two-night, four-hour season premiere on FOX. Ellen makes her Idol debut next month.



  • Think Picks Indiana for Electric Car Plant

    Think North America — a joint venture between Norwegian electric vehicle maker Think Global and U.S. venture firms Rockport Capital Partners and Kleiner Perkins — has just named Elkhart, Indiana as the location for its first U.S. manufacturing facility. According to a release from the Indiana Economic Development Corporation, which helped lure the project with […]


  • Rene Furterer RF 80 Concentrated Hair Loss Treatment – 12×15ml

    Product Description
    Rene Furterer RF 80 Strengthening Formula is an easy to use treatment for thinning, unhealthy and weak hair…. More >>

    Rene Furterer RF 80 Concentrated Hair Loss Treatment – 12×15ml

  • Dr. J on proving the doctor wrong

    Contributor: “Dr. J”
    Dr. J offers his irreverent, slightly irrelevant, but possibly useful opinions on health and fitness. A Florida surgeon and fitness freak with a black belt in karate, he runs 50 miles a week and flies a Cherokee Arrow 200.

    I have to say, I find it frustrating to read blogs, or talk to people, who a year ago, or 10 years ago, were talking about their New Year’s resolutions to lose weight and have a healthier lifestyle, and how they were going to change this or that, and then things would be different.

    However, instead of making any real changes, they kept doing what they were doing, and kept getting what they were getting, except with aging and usually putting on more weight, they got more of what they didn’t want and less of what they did. They were less healthy, less mobile, less disease-free and less happy.

    These are not bad people. In fact, most of them are wonderful people. Just wonderful people heading in a very poor direction, all the while, usually this time of year, talking about how they need to be different.

    The “secret” to motivation

    I’m always looking for that elusive secret to motivating people to achieve success when they claim to want to become healthier and fitter in the coming year. I believe that’s one of the most common resolutions on that ever-popular list, and usually the first one to fall by the wayside on that circuitous road of good intentions.

    Recently I noticed the headline of a story while looking through a well-known fitness magazine. It read, “Doctors Said I’d Never Run Again, But I Did!” Of course it’s more common to hear it expressed as “the doctor said I’d never walk again,” but this was a fitness magazine.

    It seems one way to really motivate someone is to tell them that they can’t do something and that they will fail if they even try. Then, it seems, people will work really hard to prove the naysayer wrong.

    I’m never quite sure what to make of this in regard to doctors, but people seem to love saying that their doctor was wrong. Perhaps this merely reflects a veiled respect of the profession couched in an oblique way. It’s not like doctors have some kind of Secret Lottery Club, where along with your MD comes a membership allowing you to bet the odds on a patient’s morbidity and mortality with the winner getting free malpractice coverage for the year. Really, we don’t like to all get together after work and compare our winnings over your losings!

    I then realized that perhaps I had an opportunity in the making. Since people seem to relish doctors being wrong, and I’m a doctor, why not give them this opportunistic pleasure? Why be positive or supportive this New Years? I’m going to try another approach.

    Dr. J says you can’t do it

    So here goes:

    You guys on a diet to lose weight, you guys trying to become healthier, eat healthier, exercise more, lower your cholesterol or blood pressure, increase your intake of fruits and vegetables. You guys listening?

    You are going to fail! You are not going to lose weight. You are going to gain weight. Yup, just like a snowball heading downhill, your waist line will be a growing. As for eating better or becoming healthier, in your dreams, no way, no how!

    You know how you always spell the word as “loose” instead of “lose?” Well, you may learn to spell, but none of your clothes will be getting looser!

    Diets don’t work, all the research shows that. And that friend of a friend’s sister’s cousin, who you know lost all that weight, well, she gained it all back and more! If you diet, so will you!

    Perhaps I can turn this into a full-time job! I could just go around and tell people that whatever it is that they have on their New Year’s resolution list, no matter how trivial or obtainable, “Forgetaboutit, you can‘t do it!” It doesn’t matter who the patient is or what the goal is, the diagnosis will always be the same, a modified version of “You’ll never walk again!”

    “You can’t do it” in action

    I had a 19-year-old patient who had a severe anaphylactic reaction to an IV drug I had given her. It was incredibly rapid, I had never seen anything like it before. Immediately after I had injected the medication, she looked at me and said, ”I can’t breathe,” and she was gone!

    After my initiating emergency treatment and with the Code Team’s help, she was in the ICU, alive but comatose. The consulting neurologist said at the bedside that she would never recover. Perhaps she heard him? I’m happy to report she recovered completely, without any deficit, a few days later.

    I suggest your first New Year’s resolution this year be to prove this doctor wrong.

    I dare you! It will feel so good!

    From the RSS feed of CalorieLab News (REF3076322B7)

    Dr. J on proving the doctor wrong

  • Met Office warns of 40cm of snow within hours in South East, The Times

    Article Tags: Met Office, UK Winter Forecast 2009/10, World Temperatures

    The Met Office tonight issued an emergency alert warning that London and the Home Counties could be buried by more then 40cm (16in) of snow overnight.

    As the Arctic cold snap was forecast to make this Britain’s coldest winter for 30 years, residents of counties including Hampshire, Oxfordshire and Wiltshire were advised to take action to avoid the worst of the snowfall.

    A Met Office meteorologist said the highest level of alert had triggered a warning for the emergency services advising them to prepare for the worst.

    “This kind of warning is very rare,” he said. “It’s the level of alert we put out for the floods in the summer of 2007.”

    Source: timesonline.co.uk

    Read in full with comments »   


  • Lessons on the food system from the ammonia-hamburger fiasco

    by Tom Philpott

    How much “pink slime” was in your last burger?

    In case you missed it last week, The New York Times ran an excellent article on a South Dakota company called Beef Products Inc., which makes a hamburger filler product that ends up in 70 percent of burgers in the United States.

    To make a long story short: Beef Products buys the cheapest, least desirable beef on offer—fatty sweepings from the slaughterhouse floor, which are notoriously rife with pathogens like E. coli 0157 and antibiotic-resistant salmonella. It sends the scraps through a series of machines, grinds them into a paste, separates out the fat, and laces the substance with ammonia to kill pathogens.

    The result, known by some in the industry as “pink slime,” is marketed widely to hamburger makers. The product has three selling points, from what I can tell: 1) it’s really, really cheap; 2) unlike conventional ground beef, which routinely carries E. coli, etc, pink slime is sterilized by the addition of ammonia; and 3) it’s so full of ammonia that it will kill pathogens in the ground beef it’s mixed with.

    In short, Beef Products’ is peddling a solution—and a cheap one at that—to the beef industry’s embarrassing food-borne-illness problem (see my Meat Wagon series of posts for more on this topic). No wonder that burger purveyors from agribusiness giant Cargill to McDonald’s, from Burger King to your kid’s public-school cafeteria, snap up 60 pound blocks of pink slime and mix it into conventional ground beef at doses of up to 15 percent.

    But as the Times story shows, the ammonia doesn’t always kill the pathogens in pink slime. Indeed, far from sterilizing a batch of burger mix, pink slime can actually add to the pathogen cocktail:

    School lunch officials said that in some years Beef Products testing results were worse than many of the program’s two dozen other suppliers, which use traditional meat processing methods. From 2005 to 2009, Beef Products had a rate of 36 positive results for salmonella per 1,000 tests, compared to a rate of nine positive results per 1,000 tests for the other suppliers, according to statistics from the program.

    Thus, of pink slime’s three chief selling points, only one holds up to scrutiny: it’s cheap.

    Note that the information unearthed in this important Times is new only to the public; the fast-food industry, the USDA, and the school-lunch program have long known about pink slime’s less than stellar food-safety performance. Indeed, pressure from buyers may have contributed to the pathogen load—as The Times reports, complaints about an overpowering ammonia aroma forced the company to ramp down the dose of the sterilizing agent, which may have upped its susceptibility to salmonella, etc.

    The pink-slime episode teaches us hard lessons about a food system that hinges on a few big companies churning out loads of cheap food. In a brilliant chapter in his book 2007 book The End of Food, Paul Roberts demonstrates how the profitability of large food companies depends completely on keeping costs as low as possible.

    As companies scramble to slash costs, you get the rise of vast environmental calamities, like massive, feces-concentrating hog factories. Yet get human atrocities, like slavery in Florida tomato fields and systematic worker abuse in factory slaughterhouses. And you get public-health nightmares, like soaring diabetes rates tied to the rise of cheap, highly subsidized sweeteners.

    The National School Lunch Program, which forces cafeteria administrators to feed students lunch for $2.68 per student per day, is a microcosm of our cheap food system. Two-thirds of that outlay goes to overhead and labor, leaving much less than a buck to spend on ingredients. No wonder the lunch program is such a massive buyer of pink slime—3.5 million pounds last year alone, the Times reports.

    School lunch officials said they ultimately agreed to use the treated meat because it shaved about 3 cents off the cost of making a pound of ground beef…. In 2004, lunch officials increased the amount of Beef Products meat allowed in its hamburgers to 15 percent, from 10 percent, to increase savings.

    Three cents off the cost of making a pound of ground beef. Under the severe fiscal austerity that school cafeteria administrators operate under, pinching those three pennies is a rational decision, even if it means subjecting children to ammonia-ridden slime that may contain pathogens.

    For its part, the fast-food industry has reacted to the Times revelations, not by renouncing the use of pink slime but rather defending it. Accroding to Associated Press, “Fast-food chains McDonald’s Corp. and Burger King Holdings Inc. and agricultural conglomerate Cargill Inc. all use the [Beef Products] meat in their hamburgers. All said they’ll keep using the meat and that their products are safe.”

    For them, billions of dollars in profits depend on pinching a few pennies per pound on inputs. As long as that economic structure remains in place, we can count on continued pathologies in the food system.

    Related Links:

    Russ Parsons on launching a civil, inclusive food-system debate

    Pollan on ‘The Daily Show’

    Ammonia-treated burgers, tainted with E. coli!






  • ARTICLE: Lotus Elite spotted in a billboard

    I was a fan of the original LG Lotus. (How could I not be? I’m a girl, and the thing’s shaped like a little makeup compact, fer cryin’ out loud!)

    A cute form factor plus an awesome qwerty keyboard? That’s a winner in my book and, no doubt, in Sprint and LG’s as well, since it looks like they’re releasing an updated version of the tiny messaging phone.

    There have been rumblings that a new Lotus (presumably the LX610 Lotus Elite) was coming, but this latest item seems to cement them pretty well: Engadget posted a big billboard mounted on the side of a Las Vegas hotel that promotes the Chocolate Touch, the eXpo, and — you guessed it — the Lotus Elite. Well, actually, there’s no official name listed there, but all rumors point to it being dubbed the Elite.

    No updates on specs or prices yet, but stay tuned.

    Via: Engadget