Category: News

  • Did Obama Blow It On Northwest Terror Attack?

    Did Obama Blow It On Northwest Terror Attack?
    “The fact of the matter right now is that 100% of the Islamic terrorists who are coming against us are Muslims.” — American genius, Rep. Peter King (R-NY) It seems like there is lots of criticism of the President over…



    DetroitPresident of the United StatesTerrorismWarfare and ConflictAl Qaeda

    Neos Krauthammer, Kristol Start Year With Anti-Obama Screeds
    Always remember, when you find the stomach to read Charles Krauthammer, that he views every issue through the lens of “is it good to help Israel withstand American pressure?” He’s a Canadian who came down here because some ambitious Canadians…



    Charles KrauthammerUnited StatesIranWarfare and ConflictIsrael

  • Gun Rights and Tea Party Activists Encourage People To Bring Guns To New Mexico Protest

    Gun Rights and Tea Party Activists Encourage People To Bring Guns To New Mexico Protest
    Nearly 350 right-wing protestors crowded a New Mexico town’s busiest intersection yesterday to protest President Obama’s supposed anti-gun agenda and the “government takeover of our health care system.” While the event mostly looked like any other recent right-wing rally — complete with signs reading “replace the communists in DC” and “the sky is falling! A […]

    Nearly 350 right-wing protestors crowded a New Mexico town’s busiest intersection yesterday to protest President Obama’s supposed anti-gun agenda and the “government takeover of our health care system.” While the event mostly looked like any other recent right-wing rally — complete with signs reading “replace the communists in DC” and “the sky is falling! A black man is president!” — what set this protest apart was that there “were plenty of handguns and rifles displayed.”

    The local Tea Party and a group called the Second Amendment Task Force (2ATF, a reference to the ATF, which enforces gun laws) encouraged people to bring guns to the event in Alamogordo, NM, in order to “put a positive light on gun ownership,” said 2ATF’s founder Dan Woodruff. While the two protests were technically separate, they were planned together for the same day in adjacent locations. Otero Tea Party Patriots coordinator Don Omey said he was “proud” of the gun-toters. “That’s what we need to turn some minds around,” Omey said. Under New Mexico law, it’s legal for anyone over the age of 19 to open-carry a holstered firearm in most public places.

    And while there was no violence during the event, one protestor wearing a Tea Party shirt said his loaded gun was a “very open threat” to anyone who might “try to take over the country completely as a socialist communist [state].” Watch it:

    Apart from the obvious danger from introducing fire arms to a crowded, emotionally-charged environment, as Walt Rubel, the editor of the Las Cruces Sun-Times wrote in today’s paper, displaying guns at a rally is counter-productive to the protestors’ goals. “Nothing will ‘put a positive light on gun ownership’ quite like inviting every yahoo with a weapon in southern New Mexico to gather at the busiest intersection in Alamogordo and wave their firearms at the passing traffic,” he wrote.

    This was not the first right-wing protest to which people have brought guns or displayed offensive signs, but the hate-filled atmosphere at Tea Party rallies doesn’t seem to bother former House Speaker Newt Gingrich. In a guest-column in the Des Moines Register on Friday he wrote, “every American who is not corrupted by the secular-socialist left should be a member of the Tea Party movement.”

  • Obama aide defend trial for suspect in Christmas Day attempt to bomb plane

    Obama aide defend trial for suspect in Christmas Day attempt to bomb plane
    President Obama’s chief counterterrorism adviser on Sunday defended the administration’s decision to try in federal court the man charged with attempting to bomb an airliner on Christmas Day and indicated that he would be offered a plea agreement to persuade him to reveal what he knows about…

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    U.S., China locked in trade disputes
    BEIJING — Trade disputes between Beijing and Washington over exports of tires, chickens, steel, nylon, autos, paper and salt are multiplying and further damaging the already tense relationship between the two economic powers.

    Use of potentially harmful chemicals kept secret under law
    Of the 84,000 chemicals in commercial use in the United States — from flame retardants in furniture to household cleaners — nearly 20 percent are secret, according to the Environmental Protection Agency, their names and physical properties guarded from consumers and virtually all public officials…

    Fed chief Bernanke urges better financial regulation to prevent crises
    Better regulation is the key to avoiding future financial excesses, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said Sunday, arguing that the Fed’s low-interest-rate policies early in the decade were not a major cause of the housing bubble.


  • Bandes dessinées / Strips

    Les principales maisons d’édition de bande dessinée franco-belge :

    —–

    Quote:

    Décès

    Tibet: "Pluie ou beau temps, je dessine tout le temps "
    Francis Matthys

    Mis en ligne le 04/01/2010

    Un artiste qui aura diverti ses lecteurs jusqu’à son dernier jour. Qu’il en soit remercié.

    Pour avoir diverti ses innombrables lecteurs depuis un bon demi-siècle par des aventures d’humour pur (les "Chick Bill") ou des enquêtes policières (les "Ric Hochet" scénarisés par son infatigable et toujours souriant coéquipier André-Paul Duchâteau : "lui et moi sommes frères", disait-il), Tibet a droit autant à notre admiration pour sa prodigieuse fécondité (plus de cent cinquante albums) qu’à notre gratitude. Merci, Tibet, merci, pour les bons moments que vos livres sans prétention auront procuré à tant et tant d’entre nous. Cet homme – qui avait l’air d’un éternel jeune homme – reconnaissait qu’un rien le faisait rire. Ce qui ne veut pas dire que tout le faisait rire. Il raffolait des bonnes blagues : étant natif de Marseille, n’y était-il pas enclin plus que bien d’autres ? Pas donneur de leçons pour un sou : si des débutants lui demandaient conseil, Tibet leur en donnait, se gardant cependant d’imposer son style, lui-même se souvenant que certains jugements tranchants, fussent-ils muets, pouvaient déstabiliser un néophyte. Ses albums à l’humour bon enfant (les "Chick Bill", dont le 70e sortira dans une douzaine de jours), Tibet les dessinait en s’amusant comme un fou, ainsi qu’il nous l’avouait, un jour, dans l’atelier- grenier de sa villa d’Uccle.

    […]


    http://www.lalibre.be/culture/livres…-le-temps.html

  • Prescription: More Doctors

    Prescription: More Doctors
    Michael Johns & Edward Miller, Baltimore Sun
    18° FJanuary 1, 2010Copyright © 2010, The Baltimore Sun Comments: 01400 characters remaining Drs. Hohns and Miller are absolutely correct. In order to encourage more medical students to go into family practice and internal medicine, I would support a tax exemption on the first $50,000 of income for anyone in these fields, and extend this also to nurse practitioners and physician's assistants….

    It’s Payback Time for California
    Peter Schrag, San Francisco Chronicle
    It's a long list: the budget-process meltdown in Sacramento; the ugly combination of escalating fees and reduced programs and access at the California State University and University of California systems; the K-12 teacher layoffs and, along with them, the increasingly crowded classes; the Friday closings of state offices. Nor should we be surprised at the near-record voter-disapproval numbers for Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and the Legislature, or the predictions from the state legislative analyst that, barring major fixes, California faces a $20 billion deficit in the 2010-11 budget…

    Climategate: You Should Be Steamed
    Neil Frank, Houston Chronicle
    Now that Copenhagen is past history, what is the next step in the man-made global warming controversy? Without question, there should be an immediate and thorough investigation of the scientific debauchery revealed by “Climategate.”If you have not heard, hackers penetrated the computers of the Climate Research Unit, or CRU, of the United Kingdom's University of East Anglia, exposing thousands of e-mails and other documents. CRU is one of the top climate research centers in the world. Many of the exchanges were between top mainstream climate scientists in Britain and…

  • Mercedes-Benz’s new tractor trailer is powered by natural gas

    Mercedes-Benz-new-tractor-trailer.jpg
    Semi’s or tractor trailers, those long centipede like trucks we see rumbling down interstate highways and burning up precious fuel may be a sight of the past with Mercedes-Benz’s first production version of its tractor trailer powered by natural gas. Natural gas is gaining popularity over the use of petrol and diesel, especially for commercial vehicles like these which are usually parked and deployed from one depot. These trucks can be juiced up at those depots when
    needed. The Mercedes-Benz Econic NGT (Natural Gas Technology) has almost no particulate emissions and is ideal for urban areas. It also boasts of lower CO2 and NOx emissions. The truck can be optionally powered using biogas, making its operation carbon neutral. The Econic NGT uses a six speed transmission and meets the rigid EEV emission
    standard.

    Mercedes-Benz delivered the first truck of this kind to the company ALDI SÜD for food distribution to grocery stores, who opted for an environment friendly mode of transport. Hopefully, other automobile companies are inspired and start designing and producing trucks that kiss the environment instead of harming it.

    [Autobloggreen]

  • The Average Android User

    Android has become an increasingly active platform over the past year or so and 2010 promises to be its best year yet, but who is using the Android platform? Who is the average Android user? I asked the Android community to complete my short survey and they responded.

    So what has the survey shown? The average age of an Android user is 32 ½ with over 50% of responses to my Android User Survey aged 30 or over. Another statistic shows that 94% are male which begs the question, is Android out of reach for female users or do they just hate filling in surveys? 69% of Android users are from the US with 19% from Europe. Perhaps one of the most revealing stats is that 35% are using the G1 but there are already 24% using Droid/Milestone. This shows how quickly good Android devices get taken up. Who knows what the stats will be once the Nexus One gets into people’s hands. The survey also showed that 61% of users buy apps from the Android Market which shows that people are willing to spend money if the app is good enough. The average Android user spends around $5.30 a month on apps.

    So the average Android user is 32 ½ years old, male and lives in the US. They buy apps from the market and spend over $5 a month on them. They will probably use the G1 as their main Android device.

    So there you have it, now you know what to expect from an Android user. This survey was a great success and I want to thank everyone who completed it. Now the big question is would a more comprehensive survey be of use to anyone? Would it be helpful to know more about the average Android user? Please leave any suggestions or questions.

    To see all the stats visit my blog http://darrenrichie.blogspot.com for a more comprehensive breakdown of the survey.


  • Gorm bed hack

    Markus and Carmen hack a bed out of the Gorm shelving units. Looks sturdy enough. With loads of underbed storage.


  • If You Could Be Non-Diabetic For a Day…

    So I had this thought….. what if I could have just ONE day where I wasn’t diabetic. A day where I could eat whatever and do whatever without any of the worries of diabetes.

    I know what I thought of. But before I divulge that, I’m interested in what you all would do. What would that day be like for you? What would you do or eat differently on that day?

    It’s sort of fun to think about it….:)

  • The DiMora Natalia SLS 2 to use Granite Digital’s Save A Battery system to keep it alive and fresh

    dimora-natalia-sls2.jpg
    Squeeze a digital battery system in a $2 million luxury sedan and you are bound to have a great ride. And that’s exactly what Granite Digital has done by tying up with car manufacturer, DiMora. This gave birth to the Natalia SLS 2 luxury sport sedan, a car that lets you burn down the roads with style. The car will be equipped with the Save A Battery system that will continuously monitor the battery, test it and also charge it in the garage. So just incase Mister Millionaire needs to zip out of his garage, he can always rely on this car. The dashboard will be integrated with a system that will display the status of the Save A Battery 1702 Charging System. This works as a great option to trickle chargers used to the battery’s heart and brain alive. Also, the Natalia has a 110 or 220 volt AC cord that is retractable and can be connected to a power outlet. President of Granite Digital, Frank Gabrielli is excited about this new venture and states that the Save A Battery 1702 Charging System will help keep the cars battery fresh and alive for use any time.

    [PR]

  • Casablanca 2009/2010 by Filandon

    Casablanca is my new destination for this year so I´ll post some pictures of this city. Hope you enjoy!

    First, an introduction from wikipedia:

    Casablanca (in Arabic: الدار البيضاء ad-Dār al-Bayḍāʼ as well as کازابلانکا Kāzāblānkā; Spanish for white (blanca) house (casa) ; nicknamed by locals: Caza; Antique and original name in Amazigh: Anfa /) is a city in western Morocco, located on the Atlantic Ocean. It is the capital of the Greater Casablanca region.
    With a population of over 3 299 428, Casablanca is Morocco’s largest city as well as its chief port. It’s also the biggest city in the Maghreb. Casablanca is considered the economic capital of Morocco because it is the heart of Moroccan business; the political capital is Rabat.
    Casablanca hosts headquarters and main industrial facilities for the leading Moroccan and international companies based in Morocco. Industrial statistics show Casablanca retains its historical position as the main industrial zone of the country. The Port of Casablanca is one of the largest artificial ports in the world, and the largest port of North Africa.It is also the primary naval base for the Royal Moroccan Navy.

    And the pictures: this first set of Hassan II Mosque, Habous market and Park of the Arab League

  • Alder Rises From Ashes of Layoffs to Become Seattle Biotech Force

    alderlogo
    Luke Timmerman wrote:

    Nobody would have guessed the seeds for one of Seattle’s most promising biotech companies were being planted just before Thanksgiving in 2003. That’s when Randy Schatzman had the depressing task of firing all 90 people who worked for him, and closing the doors at Celltech R&D in Bothell, WA.

    Celltech’s headquarters back in the U.K. had decreed that research to discover new drugs was getting too expensive. Investors favored safer bets on treatments already in late stages of development.

    But during those dark days, Schatzman and three other senior managers who worked together at Celltech had a different idea. None had ever started a biotech company. They didn’t have a lot of money or connections to venture capitalists. But they saw an opportunity to make antibody drugs that were more effective against disease, faster to develop, and cheaper to manufacture than anything on the market. And they knew they worked well together as a team. So they sketched out ideas out a few cocktail napkins at McMenamin’s bar and restaurant in Mill Creek, WA for a new company they called Alder Biopharmaceuticals.

    Alder, as regular readers of this site know, burst onto the national biotech scene two months ago. The company, which is developing an antibody for rheumatoid arthritis and cancer, struck a deal with Bristol-Myers Squibb that brought in $85 million in upfront cash, as well as milestone payments that could be worth more than $1 billion over time. Alder’s lead antibody drug has completed a clinical trial of 120 patients with rheumatoid arthritis. While it hasn’t yet presented the results in a peer-reviewed scientific paper, they were compelling enough to clinch the Bristol deal, and set up a final-stage development plan designed to give Amgen’s breakthrough arthritis drug, etanercept, a “run for its money,” Schatzman has said.

    Randy Schatzman

    Randy Schatzman

    That’s impressive for any startup biotech, but it’s astonishing for a company that had zero support from venture capitalists in its first 20 months, and was essentially bootstrapped by the founders. Altogether, Alder’s four co-founders ran up $1 million of expenses from their personal savings, time, and credit cards to launch their company on its current trajectory. None of those four guys took a dime in salary for those initial 20 months, until the first big venture round arrived in August 2005.

    To hear Schatzman and another co-founder, Mark Litton, tell the story, they were only able to overcome those long odds against them because a village of people in Seattle biotech offered helping hands.

    “This is a small biotech community, and everybody knows everybody. I really don’t think we could have done this anywhere but Seattle,” Schatzman says. …Next Page »







  • Chinese Trader Thinks He Needs To Buy A House, Or Else Live Forever With His Parents

    Chinese Gamer

    There's a major dilemma facing any renter who lives in a skyrocketing housing market.

     

    Miss out on a historic rally and you could be priced out of your dream home forever, or that's at least the fear.

    Bloomberg: Li originally planned to buy his own place when he got married, but after watching Beijing real estate prices soar, he has been spending all his free time searching for an apartment. If he finds the right place -- preferably a two-bedroom in the historic Dongcheng quarter, near the city center -- he hopes to buy immediately. Act now, he figures, or live with Mom and Dad forever. In the last 12 months such apartments have doubled or tripled in price, to about $400 per square foot.

    “This year they’ll be even higher,” says Li in the Jan. 11 issue of Bloomberg BusinessWeek.

    Read more here.

    Join the conversation about this story »

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  • Europe’s first renewable energy grid will harness wind, water, hydro-electric and solar energy

    supergrid.jpg
    Wind, water, hydro-electric and solar energy from all over Europe will be laced together to form Europe’s first renewable energy grid. Nine countries have put their heads together and have planned to link their renewable energy resources around the North Sea to form this grid. The network is created using under sea cables spanning thousands of kilometers and probably costing around €30bn (£26.5bn). Nine countries, Germany, France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, Denmark, Sweden and Ireland and the UK plan to start working on this project in the next decade and will achieve their aim to produce 20% of Europe’s energy using renewable resources. Off shore wind energy projects that could provide 100GW of power are being developed. According to a study by the Greenpeace organization, this project
    could cost around €15bn-€20bn by the year 2025. This super grid will connect wind turbines, solar panels, hydro-electric dams around the North Sea area and will be the first of its kind.

    Though a far sighted project, when in use, this power grid will help Europe benefit from any shortages in power supply and reduce pollution caused due to coal power plants used today.

    [Guardian]

  • Fish robots recycled out of trash to educate Japan kids


    We may have learnt about fishes and sea life the hard way every time we accompanied our father fishing or in school, but kids in Japan can learn about life deep down under with robots! Alright, these aren’t just metallic bots shaped like fish. They have been made life-like and very realistic. The creator of these bot fish, Masamichi Hayashi is a marine ecologist and has a good knowledge about the bot world also. These marvels were hand crafted out of recycled materials, a plus point that helps educate children about recycling at the same time. They were made out of recycled raincoats and even windscreen wipers! The “fish” mimic the actions of their real life counter parts using complex internal servos and motors, and some bigger models are also capable of opening and closing their mouths, pretending to “eat”.

    In 2005, an aquarium in London had featured its own robo-fish. Hayashi also documented his inventions and has made videos to be shown to school children. Technology and nature together come alive with this Eco-friendly educative creation.

    [Technovelgy]

  • Here, There, & Everywhere: Brussels Sprouts

    2010_01_04-Sprouts.jpgOver at Serious Eats, they’ve declared Brussels sprouts the “ingredient of the year.” We’ll go one past that and call them the FOOD of the year! We could eat them right now with just about anything.

    Read Full Post


  • HSTi Wireless Media Stick nixes the need for dedicated storage drives

    The banners aren’t even officially up in Vegas yet, and already we’re catching a drift of what all will be unveiled in the days to come. Take this Wireless Media Stick for example, which is HSTi’s way of telling you that a dedicated storage drive beside your Blu-ray player or media player is completely unnecessary. Put simply, this device (and the accompanying software, we presume) plugs directly into any USB-enabled disc player or media streamer that’s connected to your television; from there, you can easily stream media that’s already shacked up within your main PC to your TV-connected device(s), which cures the problem of having your media fragmented between varying drives. We’re still waiting to hear exactly what kind of technology this thing relies on (we’re guessing 2.4GHz), but hopefully we’ll find out more (along with a price and ship date) real soon.

    HSTi Wireless Media Stick nixes the need for dedicated storage drives originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 04 Jan 2010 06:59:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • ASUS UL30Vt-A1 pops up on Amazon for pre-order: silver, 5600mAh battery, $849

    ASUS’ UL30Vt-X1 was largely hailed as the CULV machine to get when it finally went on sale just a few weeks back, and it has a Core 2 Duo CPU alongside a switchable graphics solution to thank. Still, the main two gripes on it were the inability to choose a color and the (comparatively) lackluster battery. Thankfully for those who managed to hold off, ASUS has quietly pushed its UL30Vt-A1 onto Amazon’s pages, complete with a silver paint job, a capacious 5,600mAh battery (good for “up to 12 hours” of usage) and an asking price that’s $50 higher than the X1. All other specs have seemingly remained constant, from the 1.3GHz Intel SU7300 CPU to the 4GB of DDR3 RAM to the 500GB hard drive. You’ll also get a 64-bit copy of Windows 7 Home Premium and an NVIDIA G210M (512MB) + GMA 4500MHD GPU setup, but there’s no telling when your order will actually ship. Here’s hoping for sooner rather than later, yeah?

    [Thanks, Paul]

    ASUS UL30Vt-A1 pops up on Amazon for pre-order: silver, 5600mAh battery, $849 originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 04 Jan 2010 06:13:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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  • The Lithium Rush

    Technology Review has a look at Bolivia, where the Andes contains “a vast salt flat that may shape the future of transportation” – The Lithium Rush

    Nearly four kilometers above sea level in the Bolivian Andes lies the Salar de Uyuni, the world’s largest salt flat. But there is more to this ­surreal, moonlike landscape than meets the eye. Flowing in salt-water ­channels beneath the surface is the world’s largest supply of lithium–and, possibly, the future of transportation. Lithium is the key ingredient in the lithium-ion batteries that will power the electric vehicles that will soon be rolling off production lines worldwide. Demand for the metal is expected to double in the next 10 years, and Bolivia, with an untapped resource estimated at nine million tons by the U.S. Geological Survey, is being called a potential “Saudi Arabia of lithium.”